The Phnom Penh Post

Amnesty Internatio­nal fires back at Duterte’s spokesman

-

AMNESTY Internatio­nal fired back at presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo on Tuesday, a day after he accused the human rights monitor of politicisi­ng the thousands of killings in President Rodrigo Duterte’s brutal war on drugs.

“We suggest next time before the honourable presidenti­al spokespers­on makes a response, he should at least do his homework first by reading our report,” said Butch Olano, Amnesty Philippine­s section director.

“Accusing Amnesty Internatio­nal of politicisi­ng the issue of extrajudic­ial executions is just another way of muddling the Duterte administra­tion’s accountabi­lity and its complicity in the gravity of this problem,” Olano said.

Template

Panelo on Monday slammed the London-based human rights group as “incorrigib­le” for insisting on a UN probe of the drug war killings, saying the basis for its call for an internatio­nal investigat­ion was factually wrong.

But in an inter v iew with the Inquirer on Tuesday, Olano said the government’s response was a template for countering opposition to abuses in the war on drugs.

“That has been their automatic response when t his issue arises,” he said. “But our t wo reports belie t heir response and our reports are based on facts.”

Olano said the figures that Amnesty’s report had cited, which placed the extrajudic­ial cases at 27,000, came from the government itself, particular­ly from the Philippine National Police.

“Therefore we cannot produce the basis for any data that was made public by the PNP,” he said. “The burden of the proof is on the government.”

Amnesty released its second report on the drug war, They Just Kill, on Monday, a follow-up to a 2017 report that also investigat­ed the killings and abuses in Duterte’s take-no-prisoners crackdown on illegal drugs.

Both reports underscore­d patterns that have defined the bloody campaign since 2016, including the repeated claims of the police that warranted the use of lethal force, the widespread use of drug “watch lists” that have turned into “kill lists”, and the reported abduction of civilians by plaincloth­es police.

‘New killing fields’

The new report identified Bulacan province as the “new killing fields”, as opposed to the initial report that zeroed in on Metro Manila.

Amnesty cited the promotion and transfer of senior police of ficers t hat oversaw the bloody campaign in Metro Manila to Bulacan and the Centra l Luzon region as the reason for the sharp rise in deaths.

Bulacan local and police officials on Tuesday rejected Amnesty’s report.

Prov incia l governor Daniel Fernando said the report saddened him but promised that the prov incia l peace and order council would look into t he rights monitors’ findings.

“Based on our tally, we’ve had more peaceful [than fatal] arrests during our [antinarcot­ics] operations,” Col Chito Bersaluna, Bulacan police director, told the Inquirer, without giving figures.

Police reports sent to reporters since January showed an average of three drug suspects killed in drug operations every month.

Gen Oscar Albayalde, chief of t he Philippine National Police, on Tuesday said internatio­na l bodies and ot her countries should focus not only on the number of casualties in the drug war but a lso on t he sincerit y of t he PNP in keeping the crackdow n within lega l bounds.

“We do not tolerate abuses [committed by] our people,” Albayalde told reporters. “We rebuke our own policemen. In fact, we even send them to jail if they make mistakes or commit abuses.”

Unlike its first investigat­ion, Amnesty this time strengthen­ed its call for an internatio­nal investigat­ion of the killings.

Despite Panelo’s claims that the Philippine­s’ own judicial system is open to investigat­e the cases, Olano said the prevailing fear amid a culture of impunity hindered victims to actually seek justice from local courts.

“The judicial system cannot begin unless there is a complaint from the family or affected member. Except this does not happen because the process cannot start in the first place because most of the victims are poor,” he said.

“Even if there is the Public Attorney’s Office, that office itself handles too many cases already,” he said, adding that seeking help from private lawyers, on one hand, would incur too much expenses.

“And in these cases where ev idence is tampered with and there are no credible and rea l police reports because t hese a ll appear as templates, what can you use when you actua lly get to court? ” Olano said.

The report noted that since 2016, there has been only a single case of prosecutio­n related to the drug war killings, citing the high-profile case of 17-year-old Kian delos Santos in August 2017. Officers involved in his killing were caught on video dragging him away moments before he was shot.

Nicholas Bequelin, Amnesty’s regiona l director for East and Southeast Asia, said the government’s continuous effort to thwart any internatio­na l investigat­ion was consistent with Amnesty’s v iew that the Duterte administra­tion had something to hide.

“If the government has nothing to fear, t hen it should welcome t he investigat­ion,” Bequelin told reporters on Monday.

Senator Leila de Lima, detained on what she calls trumped-up drug charges for investigat­ing the drug war killings, on Tuesday supported calls for a UN probe of President Duterte’s crackdown on narcotics.

In a statement, De Lima said the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) must look into the bloody campaign.

“While [Amnesty] has called Duterte’s war on drugs a ‘large-scale murdering enterprise’, I labelled it a monstrous ‘killing machine’ whose continued rampage with almost no accountabi­lity within the national system requires the focus and concrete actions from such global instrument­s of justice as the UNHRC and the [Internatio­nal Criminal Court],” she said.

 ?? NOEL CELIS/AFP ?? An alleged drug dealer is handcuffed after a drug bust operation conducted by Philippine police in Manila in May last year.
NOEL CELIS/AFP An alleged drug dealer is handcuffed after a drug bust operation conducted by Philippine police in Manila in May last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia