It involves making false accusations against people, saying that they are linked to the New People's Army, which is the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines and has been in an insurgency for some 40 years. These accusations are made against clergy, lawyers, activists, human rights defenders. In fact, many women human rights defenders are accused in this way. I am thinking, for example, of Maria Ressa, with whom we work and who has just been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and Cristina Palabay, who received the 2021 Franco‑German Prize for Human Rights and the Rule of Law. Without these two prizes, these two women would have been murdered, like most of the people we interviewed.
That's why the people we work with, although they are pro‑trade, would like Canada to prohibit Canadian mining companies from moving into areas where there is opposition from indigenous communities, intimidation, harassment or red tagging, as well as in areas targeted by military personnel to combat terrorism. In the Philippines, human rights violations are unbelievable. When mining companies want to set up in a place where there are aboriginal communities, whether in the north or the south, there will often be a cleanup. You can understand that it then becomes easier to do mining exploration. So the people we work with want to establish very specific areas.
It's important to remember that, because of the application of anti‑terrorism legislation, some 347,000 people in the south of the country have been displaced because the government bombed villages.
In the southern part of the country, we work with the Lumads. We help them establish schools where indigenous people can teach their language and culture, and promote their way of life. For example, the land represents gold for the mining companies, but for indigenous people, it represents access to water, food, and a certain standard of living. According to an article in The Guardian, President Duterte himself accuses these schools of teaching indigenous children to rebel against his government. He even threatened to order air raids on those schools, and—