Events & Updates
Learn more about Brandon, his work and what he is up to through his writings, speeches and interviews.
For media inquiries, please contact Justice4BrandonLee@gmail.com
The forces that nearly murdered me are meeting in San Francisco today
In 2019, members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines attempted to assassinate me in response to my efforts to defend Indigenous Philippine lands from environmental and governmental degradation. Bullet fragments from the attack are still lodged in my body, and I am paralyzed from the chest down.
But it was not only those specific soldiers who were responsible for my near-murder. It wasn’t even only the Philippine government. The global neoliberal economic model that prioritizes endless profiteering and exploitation over peace, equality, and environmental stewardship helped load the gun.
Now, four years later, and back in my hometown of San Francisco, I am surrounded by the leading symbols of that global order—because my city has been chosen as the site of this year’s Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit. For the first time in 12 years, the United States is hosting the APEC Heads of State meeting, a gathering of national leaders from 21 member economies—including Joe Biden, Xi Jinping, and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., all of whom have arrived in San Francisco—and the business executives of some of the largest multinational corporations in the world.
These ‘No 2 APEC’ Activists Know the High Price of Free Trade
Brandon Lee knows all too well that when communities resist the kind of neoliberal policies that APEC and IPEF promote, they face escalating surveillance, harassment, violence, and repression.
The US Is Complicit In War Crimes in the Philippines
In August 2019, I survived an assassination attempt by the 54th Infantry Battalion state security forces, or elements of the Armed Forces, of the Philippines for my advocacy work with Indigenous communities in the Cordillera region of the Philippines. I was shot in front of my home in the presence of my daughter and family. The attack has left me scarred, nearly dying from eight cardiac arrests, and now permanently paralyzed without the use of my legs or my hands. After being medically evacuated back to the United States, it horrifies me to think that the bullet fragments still lodged in my body have been funded through American tax dollars.
Until now, there has been no accountability for this brazen attack against an American, sanctioned by the Philippine government in an atmosphere of total disregard for human rights and the lives of its people. Such attacks are not simply human rights violations but are war crimes.
US military assistance is aiding the Philippine government in its war crimes against its own people.