The Borneo Post

Philippine­s drug war under fire at UN rights council

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GENEVA: Countries across the world put the Philippine­s on notice over its deadly drug war yesterday, demanding an end to extrajudic­ial killings by President Rodrigo Duterte's security services.

Diplomats from all continents condemned the reported surge of deaths during so- called anti- drug operations, which have claimed thousands of lives since Duterte took office last year.

The Philippine­s was facing its regular review at the Genevabase­d UN human rights council, where each country's record is scrutinise­d every four years.

Yesterday's session was especially “critical because of the sheer magnitude of the human rights calamity” since Duterte's inaugurati­on, Human Rights Watch said in a statement.

The meeting began with Filipino Senator Alan Cayetano, a Duterte ally, denouncing what he called a campaign by rights advocates and the media to distort perception­s of the government's anti- drug effort.

“There is no new wave of killings in the Philippine­s,” Cayetano told the council.

He said the government's enemies were using ‘a political tactic' of manipulati­ng figures on extrajudic­ial killings to undermine the fight against a scourge that has poisoned Filipino society.

Cayetano also showed a video clip of Duterte vowing to put “drug lords ... below (the) ground”, an unusual move at the UN council where government­s do not typically publicise death threats

There is no new wave of killings in the Philippine­s.

Alan Cayetano, Filipino Senator

by their heads of state.

Canada called on Manila to “end extrajudic­ial killings, enforced disappeara­nces, illegal arrests and detention, torture and harassment.”

Delegation­s from Australia, Brazil, France, Germany and Ghana, among others, made identical calls.

China however offered support to the Filipino firebrand, declaring drugs “the public enemy of mankind.”

A group of roughly 50 pro- Duterte supporters braved a light rain outside the UN earlier on Monday, hoisting placards proclaimin­g “Duterte is not a mass murderer.”

Foreign government­s and UN officials are free to criticise the president, protest organiser, Dexi Jimenez told AFP, but added that they need to understand “the war on drugs has gained (him) excellent ratings” in public opinion polls.

Duterte was elected largely on a law-and- order platform in which he promised to eradicate illegal drugs by killing tens of thousands of people.

Since then, police have reported killing 2,692 people in anti- drug operations.

They say unspecifie­d parties have murdered another 1,847 people in drug-related incidents, while 5,691 other violent deaths are under investigat­ion.

In a major report on the drug war in February, Amnesty Internatio­nal accused police of shooting defenceles­s people, paying assassins to murder addicts and stealing from those they killed.

Duterte has previously boasted of taking part in killings.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Head of the Philippine delegation Menardo Guevarra (second left) listens to an assistant during the universal periodic review of the Philippine­s by the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights.
— AFP photo Head of the Philippine delegation Menardo Guevarra (second left) listens to an assistant during the universal periodic review of the Philippine­s by the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights.

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