Philippine Daily Inquirer

CHR EXEC SAYS KILLINGS NOT STATE-SPONSORED

- By Dona Z. Pazzibugan @dpazzibuga­nINQ

Extrajudic­ial killings in President Duterte’s war on drugs are not state-sponsored, according to an official of the Commission on Human Rights (CHR).

Speaking on the sidelines of a CHR-sponsored forum on women and children victims of the campaign against narcotics on Monday, CHR Commission­er Gwen Pimentel-Gana said there was no official policy ordering the Philippine National Police to kill suspected drug pushers and users.

“We never said that it was state-sponsored at all,” Gana said.

“There is no such finding that we can conclude that way. But what we can say is that the killings are still continuing and in an apparent vigilante manner [by] unknown assailants, so this is a police matter and they should be attending to this right away,” she said.

All the current CHR officials are appointees of then President Benigno Aquino III: Chair Jose Luis Gascon and Commission­ers Karen Gomez-Dumpit, Leah Tanodra-Armamento, Roberto Cadiz and Gana.

Written policy

Gana said that to conclude that the war on drug killings were state-sponsored, there must be a written policy.

But she acknowledg­ed that no such policy could be found, “because who will do that?”

Mr. Duterte’s pronouncem­ents defending his war on drugs were not proof of statespons­ored killings, Gana said.

“Honestly … You see I’m a lawyer and you have to show there is a direct causation to what happened. If there’s a policeman involved [in an extrajudic­ial killing], can you say Duterte ordered that, that (the policeman killed) because of what Duterte said? A lot of motivation­s come in,” she said.

Gana said such policemen were likely rogue officers who were trying to cover up their own criminal activities, rather than following orders.

“As CHR [ commission­er] I cannot randomly say that’s because of what the President said. What kind of investigat­or or lawyer [am I], what is my basis [in making such a conclusion]?” she added.

“I’m not Amnesty Internatio­nal, I’m not the Human Rights Watch who are advocates and probably can just say that. But we are CHR, we have to [make conclusion­s] based on something. We’re not an NGO, we’re in government. We have to be based on facts and evidence,” Gana said.

Killings systematic

She was referring to the London-based Amnesty Internatio­nal’s 2016 report that accused the PNP of paying police officers and assassins to kill alleged drug offenders, and concluded that majority of the drug-related killings were “systematic, planned and organized” by authoritie­s and could constitute crimes against humanity.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch, in its 2016 report, also slammed Mr. Duterte for the “unpreceden­ted level of apparent extrajudic­ial killings by law enforcemen­t.”

“Amnesty Internatio­nal came up with a conclusion with just 33 cases investigat­ed. That’s not CHR. That may be your style but not CHR. Wehave a mandate. We are after the truth. We cannot just condemn anybody,” said Gana, who heads the CHR task force on extrajudic­ial killings.

She said after investigat­ing 490 cases, “we can’t say whether they are state-sponsored.”

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