PREDA NEWSLETTER March 2003
Dear friends and defenders of
children's rights,
This
letter can open with some good news- a court victory against a cruel abuser who
was found guilty of raping a 7-year old child Anabel and sentenced to life
imprisonment. He was the live-in partner of the mother, Aniline, who was herself
battered by him. He whipped the child with electric wires and a metal tube and
sexually abused her several times. After five years of trying to get justice in
a creaking judicial system, known for endless postponements and delays, and
having bravely and courageously given testimony in court, the decision came down
in her favor. PREDA social workers traveled the three-hour journey to Manila
many times and doggedly persisted in having the case heard and not dismissed.
This is typical of the justice system, there is a lack of judges and lawyers. A
new bill in congress is proposing to double the salary of judges to ease the
shortage.
There are 37 children in the
PREDA Children's Home, 22 of them have now found the emotional and spiritual
strength to testify against their abusers and their cases are on going. There
are another 17 cases frozen and archived because the police can't find the
suspect to arrest him. The police are woefully incompetent. There have been two
convictions this year, Anabel is one. Four were dismissed and the suspect went
free.
Testifying in court can be emotionally stressful and could be traumatizing. But
the children are asking to do it. Before giving testimony and being
cross-examined in court they have a training experience at PREDA in a play
court. They go through the motions of attending court hearings, giving their
sworn testimony, being cross-examined before an audience (the other children and
staff) and in this way they are encouraged and affirmed and praised and helped
to overcome the nervousness and fear they feel. This is in no way coaching or
telling them what to say. The presence of the abuser in the courtroom is
intimidating, the worst fear they have. PREDA social workers ask the courtroom
to be cleared of the public. Then they sit in front of the abuser to block his
angry stare. The child is instructed not to look at him. Most family court
judges are very child friendly. In the future we
hope
to help
the family
court get
a video conference
system to make it unnecessary for the child to give testimony in public.
Campaign Against Child Pornography
We have been busy, too, trying to get a blatantly child pornographic comic strip in a tabloid banned. Our protestations got coverage on television and this helped win the outright support of the government social service director who threatened to file charges against the tabloid if they don't drop the strip.
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Success
Stories of Child Advocates
A
big success story is that of Marlyn and Pia, former prostituted children, who
were both placed under the custody of PREDA. They then testified against their
abusers in Holland and Germany who
fled the Philippine Court. PREDA filed charges against them in their respective
countries and they were found guilty. Marlyn is an empowered young lady now and
in her second year college taking up social work. She wants to help children
abused as she was. Marlyn went to Germany last February as a guest of the stars
of a TV detective series and together they promoted the PREDA Fair Trade
projects and distributed PREDA dried tropical fruits during the street carnival.
She returned after three weeks.
Pia, also an active children's rights activist, will graduate from high school
this March. Pia has traveled to Germany and Japan and is an active public
speaker about the prostitution of children and her own experiences at the hands
of paedophiles and pimps. Another former prostituted child, Gemma, is graduating
too. She is a good public speaker and wants to work for abused children. She has
been selected for the PREDA Youth Advocacy Theater this year and will tour
Germany and Switzerland this May and June presenting the musical drama about the
trafficking of children.
Spiritual Upliftment
Six of the children at PREDA Children's Home received confirmation in the
local parish and in the absence of their parents (several are abandoned
children) the PREDA staff were their acting parents and sponsors. They attended
life in the spirit seminars, where five of them won top prizes in a Bible quiz.
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The children also visit the
Missionaries of Charity Home for the Sick and help the old and the abandoned
babies every week. The education department continued visiting schools,
colleges, women's groups, and youth forum to deliver their children's rights and
HIV-AIDS Prevention training, responsible parenthood and reduction of family
violence. They also brought the PREDA youth to a slum area in Manila on the
Payatas dumpsite and presented short drama, puppet shows, gift giving and group
dynamics and games to the delight of over a hundred children. The children
recovering at PREDA were there too, to sharing their talents with the slum kids.
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Clamp Down on Bars and Clubs, Owners and Operators
Charged
When six minors, two of them only 13 years old, were brought to the PREDA
Children's Home a few months ago from Angeles city, 60 miles from here, with the
help of PREDA and the International Justice Mission the children brought
criminal charges against the bar owners- an American and an Australian and three
of their pimps who prostituted them and made them work as sex dancers. The
suspects have all been arraigned in court and the trials are ongoing. PREDA
staff working with the social welfare authorities were instrumental in bringing
about the closing of nine sex bars and clubs in Angeles City as a result of our
protest to the city authorities. The court also granted full legal custody of
the children to PREDA under the child protection law as 'Ad Litem', that is in
direct responsibility of their legal welfare. This is one of the first times
this has been granted under Philippine law. It prevents the parents or the
suspects from getting control of the children by filing habeas corpus cases
against PREDA.
Another Court Victory
In
another strong decision by the highest legal office of the Philippines, the
Presidential Legal office, PREDA and Fr. Shay was again totally exonerated and a
previous decision dismissing another false charge was upheld. The decision dated
5 February 2003 upheld the truth that a 7-year old child rescued by PREDA and
stated that the real abusers were her half-brother and a house boy and the
child's father was neglecting her and protecting the two boys.
This landmark decision by the Acting Deputy Executive Secretary for Legal Affairs of President
Macapagal -Arroyo stated:
". . . Asst. Prosecutor Lasam in his order dismissing the complaint,
Ronald Payumo and Oliver Edmonds were the ones the victim originally accused of
sexually abusing her for at least twelve (12) times. The victim even said that
her father, herein appellee, did nothing when she told him about these abuses in
the hands of Ronald Payumo Oliver Edmonds. Appellee's apparent inaction was the
precise reason why the DSWD and PREDA took protective custody of the victim
beginning January 29, 1998."
He
also dismissed the other arguments of the accuser as unsustainable and of no
merit. This counter charge against Fr. Shay by the American non-biological
father of the child was an attempt to shield his 'adopted son' and his friend
from the accusation of the half-sister, a 7-year old little girl, by blaming Fr.
Shay. It was an outrageous frame up and the false charge has now been exposed
and repudiated four times by different investigating prosecutors in their
resolutions to dismiss.
The
two abusers are presently charged before the Olongapo Regional Trial Court. The
charge that tried to shift the blame from the two twelve year-old boys to Fr.
Shay was based on fabricated evidence manufactured in a bar at a sex resort
where three members of the sex mafia are known to frequent. One masquerading as
a bar and restaurant operator, another a disgraced priest and the third, the
American non-biological father of the child. They enlisted the help of two
alleged bent field officers from a government human rights office to make the
unbelievable counter charge appear credible. These three non-Filipinos are part
of the group who campaigned for the release from prison of a convicted
Australian paedophile and paid his bail.
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Advocacy Theater Tour 2003
The
PREDA youth group, called AKBAY, will tour with the musical drama 'The Truth
Behind the Masks" in Germany and Switzerland. This tells the powerful but
harrowing story of exploitation and the trafficking of children into
prostitution. The advocacy theater group traveled in Canada last year and
participated to the Klondike Fair Trade days and had more than 26 presentations.
More
Children Released from Jails
Members of the theater group are also part of the Jail Monitoring and Rescue
Team assisted by two volunteer lawyers from Ireland, Darach MacNamara and Barry
Mansfield. They have already found in the past few months a total of 160 minors,
all boys some as young as 13 years-old. Forty-four have been released as a
result of PREDA Rescue Team's intervention and 17 have been transferred to
rehabilitation centers for youth. Sixteen prisons were visited for a total of 41
visits made to date. The work is continuing daily.
International Volunteers
The international volunteers and intern students at PREDA are active and
contributing very much to the PREDA programmes. Peter Donnelly is researching
the background to the Davao Death Squads and Kelly Wugalter, a social worker
from Canada is busy reorganizing the files of the children. Mary Hensley from
the US is a great help in
> the fair trade department helping us produce a new CD with
the latest products from the handicraft producers we help. The volunteers and
interns find their own financial support through sponsors
and so they don't exhaust any funds that are serving the needs of
children. Many more have applied and we have volunteer openings for a craft
designer, lawyer, agriculturist, social worker, and computer technician and a
detective.
World Fair Trade Day
The alternative trade and education
programme hosted a group of seven from Germany who's interest in PREDA
and fair trade was well catered for as they visited many handicraft producers
and the PREDA-assisted organic farmers. PREDA is presently working hard to
promote the production of organically grown tropical fruits especially mangos. A
workshop will be given by representatives from the Germany-based Naturland, an
international certification group working with our German partner Dritte Welt
Partners.
PREDA will also launch a local fair trade produce, mango-guarana drink, on World
Fair Trade Day, May 17th. This is in cooperation with our Italian
partner Comalt in Italy that assists natives in the Brazilian rain forest to
produce guarana, a medicinal herbal plant that gives a special taste and lift to
the mighty mango drink. Comalt imports the hugely popular drink from PREDA to
Italy where it has taken off in the supermarkets. They supply us with the
guarana from Brazil. The PREDA dried mangos are a big hit in the world shops and
in supermarkets such as the Super Quinn
and Dunnes stores in Ireland, Sainsburys and Waitrose in the UK. The
earnings help us to improve the lives of the poor farmers and abused children.
A Sad Ending for Amerasian Kid
We
were very sad with the violent death of Hakim, a young boy fathered by a US
sailor and abandoned. He was cared for by PREDA when only 8 years old through
the Filipino-American Child Project in 1993. When he was 15, he went to live
with a foster family. He was stabbed to death last week on the street by a
suspected drug addict and pusher. The area near Olongapo City is notorious as a
haven for drug pushers and dealers.
Hakim's sister is a scholar at the PREDA Center and will graduate from college
with a degree in hotel and restaurant management this year. Hakim was one of the
four Filipino-American children brought to the United States in 1993 as
complainant in a class action suit taken by PREDA and the children against the
US Navy claiming that they had been abandoned and deprived unjustly. The case
was heard in Washington D.C. in the International Court of Complaints but was
dismissed. The mothers of the children, the judge, said were all prostitutes and
had no rights to file a complaint in court as the children were the result of
illegal prostitution.
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Children Voice Opposition to War in Iraq
The
PREDA staff and children and youth members traveled in convoy to Manila with
streamers, banners and flags demanding peace and not war. One banner made by the
youth leaders said, "Use Brains not Bombs, Make Peace not War".
Thousands gathered
in Manila for the rally led by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the
Philippines and leaders of all religious denominations and faiths. Muslim
clerics delivered strong message for peace. The rally is in consonance with a
worldwide movement denouncing a US-led war in Iraq.
With every best wish,
Fr. Shay, the PREDA Team and the children




