The Borneo Post

Duterte will pay price for drug killings, says senator

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In due time, your president and those who blindly enforce his illegal orders to kill, fabricate evidence and concoct lies will be held accountabl­e.

MANILA: A senator and detained critic of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs has warned he and his ‘ blind followers’ will pay for ignoring alleged extrajudic­ial killings, and should stop trying to fool the world their crackdown was above board.

Leila de Lima, who last year led a Senate probe into alleged summary killings during Duterte’s anti- drugs campaign, was arrested last week and has been remanded in police detention on drug charges.

“In due time, your president and those who blindly enforce his illegal orders to kill, fabricate evidence and concoct lies will be held accountabl­e,” De Lima said in a handwritte­n note posted on her official Facebook page yesterday.

The senator was responding to rebuttals by the president’s office and the police of a report by Human Rights Watch, which on Thursday challenged official accounts that thousands of killings during police operations were in self- defence, and that due process had been followed.

The New York-based group said Duterte had turned a blind eye to murders by police in a ‘campaign

Leila de Lima, detained senator

of extrajudic­ial execution’.

The president’s spokesman said the allegation­s, without proof, were ‘hearsay’.

De Lima, who is charged with facilitati­ng drug trades in jails when she was justice minister, said the denial of statespons­ored killings and demands for proof were insults to people’s intelligen­ce.

“Stop fooling our people and the rest of the world,” said the senator, who last week described Duterte as a ‘sociopathi­c serial killer’.

Duterte’s chief lawyer, Salvadore Panelo, said De Lima was deluded and should realise an overwhelmi­ng number of Filipinos wanted her behind bars.

“She should instead write to herself and tell herself to stop fooling herself and the people,” he posted on social network Twitter.

“She should accept reality and the truth that she created the rut she is now in.”

About 8,000 people have died since the drugs crackdown was launched in June last year, 2,555 in raids and sting operations where police said they had encountere­d violent resistance.

Many of the other deaths are under investigat­ion and rights groups believe most were summary executions of drugs users, with police complicity.

The authoritie­s reject that view and blame vigilantes or inter-gang rivalry.— Reuters

 ??  ?? Leila de Lima
Leila de Lima

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