Sun.Star Cebu

AMNESTY REPORT ALLEGES HR VIOLATIONS IN MARAWI

Military says no formal complaints of rights abuses filed against security forces

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But Major General Restituto Padilla, spokespers­on, said that the Armed Forces has yet to receive formal complaints.

Human rights watchdog Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) released Friday a report accusing government troops in Marawi City of violations of the internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

In its report titled “The Battle of Marawi: Death and Destructio­n in the Philippine­s,” AI said securi- ty forces committed extrajudic­ial killings, illegal detention, looting, and other violence during the fivemonth battle in Marawi.

The military was quick to deny the allegation­s.

Major General Restituto Padilla, AFP spokespers­on, said that to date, they have not received formal complaints against any government troops who purportedl­y committed violations during the five-month battle in Marawi.

Padilla also quoted AFP chief-ofstaff General Rey Leonardo Guerrero that the military’s actions during the Marawi crisis “were guided by the rules of conflict, which provides for the necessity and proportion­ality in the use of force.”

He was also confident that the troops “respect and follow all the provisions under internatio­nal humanitari­an law and laws of conflict.”

“I want to remind everyone that what had been said and found in the report were currently allegation­s. You have seen the commitment or focus of our soldiers and the armed forces to uphold human rights in that area and the rest of Mindanao while martial law is being implemente­d,” the military spokesman told Palace reporters.

“If these are allegation­s, they will remain allegation­s unless there are concrete and formal report that come our way and we will act on it,” he added.

The report stressed the need to look into the soldiers’ alleged violations of internatio­nal human law.

“Philippine government forces violated the prohibitio­n of torture and other ill-treatment of people in their custody. These violations were often carried out against civilians who were escaping from Marawi City and were seeking protection of the military,” the report said.

“Members of the armed forces detained numerous people and accused them, without evidence, of being militants. Detainees were allegedly then subjected to various forms of ill-treatment, including sustained beatings and threats of execution,” it added.

Padilla, on the other hand, urged the public to remember the Marawi soldiers’ efforts to save the lives of the civilians by setting aside their primary needs.

Fighting broke out between government troops and militants inspired by global terror group Islamic State in Marawi on May 23, after a government raid failed to arrest militant leader Isnilon Hapilon.

The battle lasted five months, displacing Marawi residents and destroying properties.

The conflict led to the killing of 920 Islamist extremists, 165 government troops, and 47 civilians. Some 1,780 hostages were rescued.

Defense officials terminated the war on October 23, exactly five months after it erupted and less than a week after President Rodrigo Duterte declared the liberation of Marawi from terrorists.

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 ?? AP FILE FOTO ?? AT WAR. In this June 9, 2017 photo, soldiers ride a military vehicle on the outskirts of Marawi City, Lanao del Sur.
AP FILE FOTO AT WAR. In this June 9, 2017 photo, soldiers ride a military vehicle on the outskirts of Marawi City, Lanao del Sur.

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