The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Duterte tells Philippine police to shoot dead lockdown troublemak­ers

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has told security forces they should shoot dead anyone causing ‘trouble’ in areas locked down due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

About half the country’s roughly 110 million people are currently under quarantine — including millions in deep poverty, left jobless by tough restrictio­ns on movement.

Hours before Duterte gave the order in a speech late Wednesday, nearly two dozen people from a slum community in the capital Manila were arrested for holding a protest that accused the government of failing to provide food aid to the poor.

“My orders are to the police and military, also village officials, that if there is trouble or the situation arises that people fight and your lives are on the line, shoot them dead,” Duterte said.

“Instead of causing trouble, I’ll send you to the grave,” he said, adding that the outbreak is getting worse more than two weeks into the lockdown.

The Philippine­s has so far detected 2,311 cases and reported 96 deaths, but the country has only begun ramping up testing and so the number of confirmed infections is expected to keep rising.

Duterte, who came to power in a landslide 2016 election victory, is known internatio­nally for his foul-mouthed tirades and deadly crackdown on drugs, which is overwhelmi­ngly supported by Filipinos.

But critics allege that Duterte’s drug war targets the poor and leaves the rich and powerful untouched, while reinforcin­g a culture of impunity.

The president’s latest comments drew immediate rebuke from rights groups who urged the government to provide much-needed relief supplies instead of issuing threats of violence.

“It is deeply alarming that President Duterte has extended a policy of shoot-to-kill... Deadly, unchecked force should never be referred to as a method to respond to an emergency such as the Covid-19 pandemic,” Amnesty Internatio­nal Philippine­s said in a statement. — AFP

 ?? Photo — AFP ?? Health workers attend to a Covid-19 patient at the intensive care unit of the Vall d’Hebron hospital in Barcelona. Spain’s death toll surged over 9,000 as infections passed the 100,000 mark, but the rate of new cases continued to slow, suggesting the epidemic may be peaking, health chiefs said.
Photo — AFP Health workers attend to a Covid-19 patient at the intensive care unit of the Vall d’Hebron hospital in Barcelona. Spain’s death toll surged over 9,000 as infections passed the 100,000 mark, but the rate of new cases continued to slow, suggesting the epidemic may be peaking, health chiefs said.

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