Philippine Daily Inquirer

DU30 SEES DRUG WAR SUPPORT AT SUMMIT

- STORY BY AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

President Duterte appears confident the presence of world leaders, including US President Donald Trump, for a series of summit meetings hosted by Manila next week will help muffle internatio­nal criticism of his bloody war on drugs. New York-based Human Rights Watch expects Mr. Duterte’s foreign guests to give “a diplomatic blind eye” to thousands of Filipinos killed in the antidrug campaign. Amnesty Internatio­nal says many of the regional leaders attending the summit of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations are also issue shadowed with by their human host. rights controvers­ies and unlikely to raise the same

President Duterte will host world leaders in Manila starting today, hoping their presence will quiet internatio­nal criticism over his deadly drug war, which rights groups say may be a crime against humanity.

Mr. Duterte goes into the event appearing confident that even his most outrageous remarks and actions will be ignored, having boasted in the lead-up he once stabbed someone to death, while at the same time proposing to host a global human rights summit.

US President Donald Trump will be among leaders from 19 countries, plus the heads of the United Nations and European Union, coming for the talks, which will begin with a banquet on Sunday night followed by summits on Monday and Tuesday.

But rights groups have expressed alarm and disappoint­ment that Trump and most others are likely to endorse or stay silent over Mr. Duterte’s violent rule, which has seen thousands of people killed.

“Duterte will enjoy the gift of tacit silence from East Asian leaders on his murderous drug war during the upcoming summit,” Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“We can expect East Asian leaders to exercise a diplomatic blind eye to the killings of thousands of Filipinos over the past 16 months as part of Duterte’s drug war.” Mr. Duterte won last year’s presidenti­al elections after promising to eradicate illegal drugs with an unpreceden­ted crackdown that would see up to 100,000 people killed.

Since he took office, police have reported killing 3,967 people in the crackdown. Another 2,290 people have been murdered in drug-related crimes, while thousands of other deaths remain unsolved, according to government data.

Many Filipinos back Mr. Duterte, believing he is taking necessary measures to fight crime.

But rights groups warn he may be orchestrat­ing a crime against humanity.

Amnesty Internatio­nal accuses police of shooting dead defenseles­s people and paying assassins to murder addicts.

Rights groups say police are following Mr. Duterte’s incitement­s to kill, citing comments of his such as he would be “happy to slaughter” three million addicts.

Domestic opponents have appealed to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) to investigat­e, pointing to the jailing of opponents, a compliant Congress and intimidate­d judiciary as reasons to step in.

But the ICC has yet to respond and, despite some vocal critics in the West, Mr. Duterte goes into the Manila summits full of confidence that Trump and the others will effectivel­y endorse his rule by not speaking against the killings.

In Vietnam on Thursday on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n Summit, Mr. Duterte boasted that when he was 16 he stabbed to death someone for looking at him the wrong way.

A ‘great job’

He then offered to host a global summit on human rights, but insisted that the alleged crimes of the United States, France and other nations also be investigat­ed.

Mr. Duterte, 72, last year branded former US President Barack Obama a “son of a whore” for criticizin­g the drug war.

But Trump and Mr. Duterte have expressed mutual admiration for each other. Trump told the Philippine President in a telephone call in April that he was doing a “great job” with his campaign against drugs.

They are expected to hold oneon-one talks on Monday and, if Trump does not bring up any hu- man rights concerns, Mr. Duterte is widely expected to trumpet the meeting as an endorsemen­t.

“Wewill be extremely disappoint­ed if Trump does not raise it,” Amnesty’s Philippine director, Jose Noel Olano, told reporters on Saturday.

Blanket support

Mr. Duterte is hosting the two days of summits as the rotating chair of the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).

He can expect blanket support from his Asean colleagues, many of whom are also shadowed by human rights controvers­ies.

“From the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar, to a sweeping crackdown on all forms of dissent in Cambodia to the thousands killed in Philippine­s, human rights are under siege across Southeast Asia,” Rachel ChhoaHowar­d, a Philippine researcher with Amnesty, told AFP.

The premiers of China and Russia, two other important Duterte backers, will also be in Manila.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is another key backer of Mr. Duterte, with the pair having establishe­d a warm relationsh­ip.

 ??  ?? LOCO OVER LOGO Tourists mill around and take selfies at Rizal Park with the Asean logo.
LOCO OVER LOGO Tourists mill around and take selfies at Rizal Park with the Asean logo.

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