Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palace hits Amnesty Int’l for ‘demonizing’ PDEA

- By Leila B. Salaverria @LeilasINQ

Malacañang yesterday slammed Amnesty Internatio­nal for “demonizing” the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency after it was tasked to lead the government’s war on drugs.

“The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency … is now being demonized by Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI),” said presidenti­al spokespers­on Ernesto Abella.

On Friday, Singaporea­n academic and former politician James Gomez, who is now AI internatio­nal director of Southeast Asia and the Pacific, expressed concern that the designatio­n of PDEA may just be a public relations move to appease public indignatio­n.

But Abella noted AI has always been disparagin­g of the government’s antidrugs campaign and was only shifting its attention to the PDEA.

“PDEA is the new object of AI’s, and similar groups’, ire and vilificati­on,” Abella said.

Abella hit the British nonprofit organizati­on after President Duterte himself criticized European diplomats in the country for not speaking up about the supposed misreprese­ntation of the Progressiv­e Alliance and the Party of European Socialists, which also criticized the government’s war on drugs.

Belatedly disowned

The President said European ambassador­s only belatedly disowned the delegation.

“Why did you not say it immediatel­y? You kept your silence when they were yakking here,” he told the diplomats, who were not present, in a speech in Dumaguete City on Friday.

Neverthele­ss, Abella said the government would proceed with its drive to make the Philippine­s a crime, corruption and illegal drug-free nation.

“We are hopeful that operations of this agency will not be jeopardize­d by the interferen­ce of outside agencies that fail to appreciate our desire, not for a drug-tolerant, but [for a] drug-free nation,” Abella said.

Moreover, the President also conceded on Friday that the designatio­n of PDEA as the lead agency in the drug war was a concession to public opinion and may not be the best move.

Leaving PDEA to lead the drug war is fraught with “grave consequenc­es,” the President said in Dumaguete.

Grave consequenc­es

“Maybe PDEA can do it,” Mr. Duterte said. “Anyway, the law says the PDEA [should] be the lead agency… But that is fraught with so many grave consequenc­es.”

“But [the move is] being appreciate­d by priests, by human rights [groups],” he said, adding in a later interview that former police general Aaron Aquino is “really good.”

“But whether his organizati­on can cope is something else,” he said in an interview on state television.

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