What is Wellness Pilipinas?

The Philippines' response to the call of World Health Organization (WHO) in 2009
to lessen the augment of Lifestyle Diseases of stroke, cancer, diabetes, etc, and the country's compliance to United Nations Climate Change Peace Building Campaign in 2007. Wellness Pilipinas! was conceived by "Wellness for Peace" Author, Public Speaker & former Peace Ambassador Zara Jane Juan. It consists of pep talks, workshops, symposiums & fora meant to achieve wellness in mind, body, spirit & economics as tools for peace & nation-building. Wellness Pilipinas aired as a live TV show at GNN via G-SAT Asia from 2009-2010 supported by private and public corporations

Innovating Peace by Amb Zara Jane Juan

Innovating Peace by Amb Zara Jane Juan
Wellness for Peace Education

WELLNESS PILIPINAS INTERNATIONAL

Translate

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Women Issues Update: Internet and social media – as [new] sites and tools for violence against women

Women Take Back the Tech - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos: "The massively popular social networking website is no longer just a place to connect with friends and family. Socio-civic groups and the police have warned of its growing use in the Philippines as a means to perpetrate violence against women.

Facebook and other information and communication technologies (ICTs) have made women more vulnerable to abuse, reported Terret Balayon, executive director of the Women’s Crisis Center (WCC), during the “Take Back the Tech vs eVAW” forum, held at the UP Diliman on the occasion of International Women’s Month last March.

“We view ICTs – Internet and social media – as [new] sites and tools for violence against women,” she explained."

Balayon said the WCC, the first crisis center in the country that works with women survivors of physical and sexual violence, has begun looking into how electronic media intensify or compound violence against women.

“Abuse happens faster and is more damaging through electronics, because the abusers are protected by anonymity,” she said in Filipino. “There are so many negative effects on the victims, and you can’t just say, ‘then switch it off,” because the Internet is part and parcel of life today.”

Cases of electronic violence against women (eVAW) have ranged from harassment through text messaging to prostitution transacted online.

Emmeline Versoza, acting executive director of the Philippine Commission on Women, explained the various ways eVAW is perpetrated.

“We’ve heard about cyber-mobile harassment, or sending unwanted text messages or multimedia that contain sexual or threatening messages and we do not even know who sends them,” she said.

Cyber-mobile stalking happens through the hacking of personal accounts on social networking sites and using location trackers on cell phones, she added.

Versoza said eVAW was also promoted through some computer games. “There are other indirect forms of eVAW like stereotypes and sexual representations of women in online games. In these games, women are portrayed as prostitutes and sexual objects and players earn points when they kill a prostitute or those depicted as victims.”

Other major issues in the fight against eVAW are “cyber-prostitution, pornography, and unauthorized production and distribution of images,” she said.

Chief Inspector Efren Fernandez II of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) for northern Metro Manila police also cited the use of Facebook and cell phone messaging to set up meetings between sex workers and clients.

“If you’re a regular customer, you can send messages through SMS," he said. "And likewise, women who are trafficked often have Facebook accounts where predators communicate with them using the technology for sexual trade or sexual satisfaction,” he added.

Fernandez, former head of the police’s cybercrime unit, warned of cybersex dens posing as legitimate Internet shops to lure the unwitting, as well as various forms of online fraud such as the use of software to hide or change identities on online dating sites. The software can alter faces and voices, even changing a user’s gender to fool others.

“Are you sure it’s really your friend that you are chatting with online? If not, then you might have a problem,” he said. “This is one of the considerable dangers of online dating.”

Adding to the problem are “gaps” in existing laws to combat eVAW. While laws such as the Anti-Violence Against Women and Children Act (Republic Act No. 9262) exist, the Women’s Legal and Human Rights Bureau (WLB) said cyberspace is still beyond their reach. The WLB is an NGO that provides legal assistance for women and promotes feminist legal advocacy in the country.

“The laws don’t include ways in which ICTs are used, so how can they be effective?” asked WLB program officer Chang Jordan. She pointed to the recent dismissal of the case against former doctor Hayden Kho as an example of how existing laws can fail in protecting women’s rights. Kho was a key figure in a 2009 controversy along with actress Katrina Halili and several others over sex videos that were distributed online without the women’s consent.

Under RA 9262, only the direct perpetrator can be charged, she noted, and since Kho claimed it was not he who had uploaded the sex videos, no case could be filed against him. The controversy, however, spurred the passage of RA 9995, or the Anti-Photo and Video Voyeurism Act of 2009 last year.

With government support lacking and legal resolutions absent, women and the youth have learned to use the same technologies to help heal themselves and fight back.

Through grants given by the Association for Progressive Communications and the Foundation for Media Alternatives, various NGOs have launched projects that seek to empower women and children using ICTs. The grant winners were announced last December.

Present during the forum were representatives from the Center for Migrant Advocacy (CMA) and the Women’s Education, Development, Productivity and Research Organization Inc. (Wedpro).


#ASEAN2017:

#ASEAN2017:
Presidential Communications Operations Office – Committee on Media Affairs and Strategic Communications (PCOO – CMASC) in partnership w/ Asia Society Philippines & Asian Institute of Management (AIM) hosted the ASEAN 2017 Dialogues held 11 July 2017 at AIM, Makati, Philippines. Attending the dialogue is Amb.Zara Jane Juan, Convener , Climate Change Peace Building for United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNDSG) of sailing for peace United Nation's International Day of Peace Vigil MALUSOG ANG PINOY! United Nations Friends Photo Credit: Aloy Menez

Senator Angara with Ambassador Zara Jane Juan

Senator Angara with Ambassador Zara Jane Juan
@NCCA