The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Furore erupts over killing of teen in drug crackdown

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MANILA: The Philippine­s police came under pressure yesterday to explain the killing of a highschool student after the 17-yearold became one of at least 80 people shot dead this week in an escalation of President Rodrigo Duterte’s ruthless war on drugs.

Television channels aired CCTV footage that showed Kian Loyd Delos Santos being carried by two men to the place where his body was later found, raising doubt about an official report that said he was shot because he fired at police officers first.

Witnesses told the ABS-CBN channel that the teenager did not have a firearm and police officers at the scene handed him a gun, asked him to fire the weapon and run.

National police chief Ronald dela Rosa said that if the Grade 11 student did not pose a threat, the officers who shot him on Thursday night would be held accountabl­e.

“Just think about it, he is just a kid. If that happened to your sibling?” he said on GMA TV. “We will investigat­e it, I assure you.”

Metro Manila police chief Oscar Albayalde said the three policemen involved had been relieved of their duties and an investigat­ion would be launched into the incident, which took place in the Caloocan district in the northwest of the capital.

Police killed at least 13 people in Manila on the third night of a new push in Duterte’s war on drugs and crime, taking the toll for one of the bloodiest weeks so far to 80, Reuters witnesses and media reported.

Earlier this week, 67 people were gunned down and more than 200 arrested in Manila and provinces adjoining the Philippine­s capital, in what police described as a ‘OneTime, Big-Time’ push to curb drugs and street crimes.

The term has been used by police to describe a coordinate­d drive in crime-prone districts, usually slums or low-income neighbourh­oods, often with additional officers.

The spike in killings drew condemnati­on from Vice President Leni Robredo, who belongs to a party opposed to Duterte.

Branding it “something to be outraged about”, she has been a constant critic of the crackdown that has killed thousands of Filipinos and caused internatio­nal alarm since Duterte took office over a year ago.

Several senators raised concerns yesterday over the rise in the number of deaths, calling for an impartial investigat­ion.

“Killing the poor and powerless is not the solution to the drug problem when tonnes of methamphet­amine are smuggled in,” Senator Francis Pangilinan said in a statement.

An ally of the president, Senator Jose Victor Ejercito, said he was “worried that these intensifie­d killings are being used by some rogue police officers, knowing that the president will protect them”.

Police say there has been no instructio­n from higher authoritie­s to step up their antidrug operations and they are only doing their job.

Duterte indicated this week that the escalation had his blessing, saying it was good that 32 criminals had been killed in a province north of Manila and adding: “Let’s kill another 32 every day. Maybe we can reduce what ails this country.”

On Thursday, he said he would not just pardon police officers who killed drug offenders during the anti-narcotics campaign, but also promote them.

“I don’t think they are simply acting based on the president’s endorsemen­ts,”

Duterte’s spokesman, Ernesto Abella, told reporters. “It just so happens they are taking active steps in addressing the drug situation in Philippine­s.”

Critics maintain that members of the Philippine National Police (PNP) are executing suspects and say it is likely they have a hand in thousands of unsolved murders of drug users by mysterious vigilantes. The PNP and government reject that.

Although the violence has been criticised by much of the internatio­nal community, Filipinos largely support the campaign and domestic opposition to it has been muted.

“Again and again we hear people say it is safer ... they appreciate the fact that the Philippine­s is being made safe again,” Abella said. — Reuters

Killing the poor and powerless is not the solution to the drug problem when tonnes of methamphet­amine are smuggled in. Senator Francis Pangilinan

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? The body of an alleged drug dealer killed during a police anti-drug operation is seen on the ground in Manila.
— AFP photo The body of an alleged drug dealer killed during a police anti-drug operation is seen on the ground in Manila.

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