The Borneo Post

Police to return to drug war if problem worsens — Duterte

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said yesterday that the police would reassume their lead role in implementi­ng his war on drugs if the narcotics problem worsens and that nobody could stop his campaign, not even US President Donald Trump.

The firebrand leader ordered the Philippine National Police (PNP) to withdraw from the campaign a few weeks ago amid unpreceden­ted scrutiny of police conduct in the campaign, which has killed thousands of suspected drug users and peddlers.

“If human rights (advocates) are thinking that Trump or whoever the human rights (advocates believe) can stop me, I’m sorry,” Duterte said in a speech at a business event in his hometown Davao City.

“The drug problem, if it becomes worse again, the police has to enter the picture. I want it eradicated if possible,” he said.

The Philippine­s has drawn internatio­nal criticism for the killing of 3,900 people in police anti-drugs operations over the past 15 months, but the police deny allegation­s by human rights advocates that many of the killings were executions.

The police say they had to use deadly force in each case because the suspects were armed and had resisted arrest.

Duterte has given the Philippine Drugs Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) the responsibi­lity for all anti-narcotics operations.

But PDEA chief Aaron Aquino said last month that without police participat­ion the intensity of the war on drugs could lessen.

Aquino said he had only a fraction of the personnel and budget of the police and hoped Duterte’s decision to make his agency responsibl­e for all operations would not be lasting.

Trump, who was in Manila recently for a summit of Asian and Western nations, did not apply any pressure over the drugs war on Duterte, with whom he said he had a ‘great relationsh­ip’.

But Duterte attacked Canada’s Justin Trudeau at the end of the summit for raising questions about human rights and executions under the antinarcot­ics campaign.

In Davao, Duterte described the ‘shabu’ or methamphet­amine trade in the Philippine­s as ‘an organised crime’ that involves ‘a merchandis­e for the poor’, explaining why most of those that were killed during police operations were from poor communitie­s.

“It’s an organised crime. The act of one is the act of all. The liability of one is the same liability for all,” he said. — Reuters

If human rights (advocates) are thinking that Trump or whoever the human rights (advocates believe) can stop me, I’m sorry. — Rodrigo Duterte, Philippine­s President

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