De Lima files resolutions probing weaponization of anti-terror laws

Mamamayang Liberal party-list Rep. Leila de Lima has filed two resolutions seeking a congressional inquiry into the implementation of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020 and the Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppression Act of 2012. This follows the denial of bail to community journalist Frenchie Mae Cumpio and lay worker Marielle Domequil. The aim is to ensure these laws protect citizens rather than suppress dissent.

In Manila, Mamamayang Liberal party-list Rep. Leila de Lima has filed House Resolutions 786 and 787, urging the House committees on justice and human rights to conduct a joint investigation into Republic Act 11479, or the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA), and Republic Act 10168, or the Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppression Act (TFPSA). De Lima stated, "These laws should not be used as a license to put pressure on people, to red-tag or jail people with trumped up charges, much less to kill innocent people."

In January, after spending six years in a crowded provincial jail, Frenchie Mae Cumpio and Marielle Domequil were convicted of terror financing and sentenced to 12 to 18 years in prison. They were acquitted on a lesser firearms charge. De Lima added, "Our objective is clear: to ensure that our laws protect our people instead of suppressing dissent. Counterterrorism measures erode their core purpose if they are weaponized by the State to promote a climate of fear, harassment and intimidation among human rights defenders, activists, youth leaders, humanitarian workers and civil society organizations."

HR 786 seeks to determine whether the ATA's implementation complies with constitutional guarantees of due process, freedom of speech, freedom of expression, freedom of association, peaceful assembly, and the right to privacy, as well as the country's international human rights obligations. It also aims to examine the adequacy of institutional safeguards against possible overreach. The resolution notes that international human rights bodies have cautioned that the ATA contains overly broad provisions and vague definitions that may be susceptible to abuse.

Meanwhile, HR 787 calls for a review of the TFPSA's enforcement to assess whether it has disproportionately targeted civil society actors and dissenters rather than high-risk money-laundering and corruption networks. It seeks to evaluate the adequacy of safeguards on due process, judicial oversight of asset-freezing orders, evidentiary standards for terrorism-financing prosecutions, humanitarian and civil society exemptions, transparency and accountability mechanisms, and anti-de-risking guidance under RA 10168.

De Lima described the bail denial as "a serious setback in the fight for press freedom." She said, "Junk all the fabricated charges (and) end the weaponization of laws to suppress press freedom and fundamental liberties." The report is by Jose Rodel Clapano.

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House Justice Committee votes 54-1 to advance impeachment complaints against VP Sara Duterte, gavel striking amid documents and vote tally.
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House Justice Committee finds Sara Duterte impeachment complaints sufficient in substance

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The House Committee on Justice ruled on March 4, 2026, that the two impeachment complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte—filed in early February and transmitted to the Speaker's office—are sufficient in substance, voting 54-1 to advance proceedings. Duterte has 10 days to respond. Separately, she filed a perjury complaint against former intelligence officer Ramil Madriaga, whose affidavit supported the complaints.

A Tacloban court has convicted community journalist Frenchie Mae Cumpio and lay worker Mariel Domequil of terror financing after six years in preventive detention. The ruling, carrying sentences of 12 to 18 years, has drawn sharp criticism from press freedom advocates as an assault on journalism and human rights. Groups warn it exemplifies the misuse of anti-terrorism laws against government critics.

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A court convicted community journalist Frenchie Mae Cumpio and human rights worker Marielle Domequil of terror financing based on testimony from rebel returnees. The accused claim the P100,000 they provided was for communities displaced by militarization in Leyte and Samar, not for the New People’s Army. This case highlights the weaponization of anti-money laundering laws against activists amid the Philippines' gray list status with the FATF.

The House of Representatives’ committee on justice has voted to adopt its February 4 report declaring the impeachment complaints against President Marcos insufficient in substance. The vote was 39-4, led by chairperson Representative Gerville Luistro of Batangas. It was added to the plenary session agenda and forwarded to the rules committee.

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The House committee on justice has subpoenaed National Bureau of Investigation Director Melvin Matibag to submit documents on its probe into Vice President Sara Duterte’s threats to kill top government officials. The move relates to impeachment complaints against her. With no temporary restraining order from the Supreme Court, hearings will proceed as scheduled.

House senior deputy minority leader and ML party-list Rep. Leila de Lima said the Commission on Elections should have referred Sen. Rodante Marcoleta’s statement of contributions and expenditures case to the National Bureau of Investigation and Office of the Ombudsman. She noted Comelec absolved him because the offense under Section 109 of the Omnibus Election Code was decriminalized by Republic Act 7166. Still, she said perjury and graft charges could apply.

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The House of Representatives has formally initiated impeachment proceedings against Vice President Sara Duterte after forwarding four verified complaints to the justice committee for deliberation.

 

 

 

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