'Without freedom of expression, right to health is at risk,' say health workers
Representatives from health civil society organizations underscored the critical link between "freedom of expression" and the "right to health" during a meeting with United Nations Special Rapporteur Irene Khan on her official visit to the Philippines.

In a meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 23, Health Alliance for Democracy (HEAD) chairperson Edelina De la Paz and Alliance of Health Workers (AHW) national president Robert Mendoza emphasized that the ability to express opinions in a democratic society is integral to the work of community health workers and hospital staff.
“Without the guarantee of holding and expressing an opinion in a democratic society, the role of community health workers and health workers in hospitals in easing pain and suffering, protecting the sick and distressed, and being a source of credible information is placed at an immense risk,” said De la Paz.
The groups highlighted concerns about the “militaristic approach” taken during the Covid-19 pandemic, where law enforcement and military forces were deployed instead of empowering health workers and community-based responses.
“To date, there has been no acknowledgment from the Duterte and Marcos Jr. administrations of the violations committed as a result of the militarist approach to the pandemic, which repressed the people’s right to know and right to express,” De la Paz added.
Mendoza shared instances of health workers facing vilification and threats, particularly through the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), putting them at risk of harassment or even extrajudicial killing.
The groups also called for the abolition of NTF-ELCAC, the rescinding of the Anti-Terror Law, the removal of terrorist designations, and an investigation into human rights violations against healthcare workers.
“From the time of then-President Duterte to the current Marcos Jr. administration, anyone is a target,” Mendoza added.
Moreover, it stated that the health organizations submitted a comprehensive report to Khan, providing crucial information on the intersection of freedom of expression and the right to health and urging action to protect healthcare workers and promote human rights in the Philippines.