The Freeman

HRW insensitiv­e to other culture — Malacañang

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MANILA — Malacañang yesterday denied the claim of a Human Rights Watch official that President Rodrigo Duterte has “contempt for lives” as it accused the group of “deep insensitiv­ity to others’ cultures.”

HRW deputy director for Asia Phelim Kine claimed in an online post on Sunday that Duterte has finally acknowledg­ed that his campaign against drugs is “in fact a war on the poor.”

Kine said Duterte employed a “grotesque logic” and that his crackdown on illegal drugs showed his “contempt for lives.” Majority of the 7,000 people who died because of the drug war were urban slum dwellers, he added.

“Duterte’s admission ends the perverse fiction that he and his government have sought to perpetuate over the past nine months that the victims of the drug war - many of whose bodies are found on street corners wrapped in packing tape, riddled with bullets or perforated with stab wounds - have been ‘drug lords,’” the HRW official said in a Twitter post.

Presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella denied Kine’s statements and asked the HRW not to meddle with the Philippine­s’ internal affairs.

“Nothing can be farther from the truth than the HRW accusation that President Duterte has ‘contempt for lives.’ In fact, eight out of ten Filipinos living in Metro Manila now feel safer and more secure under his administra­tion,” Abella said, referring to a Pulse Asia survey conducted last December.

“HRW and similar other organizati­ons should, therefore, be more circumspec­t about meddling in the country’s domestic affairs. Their lack of appreciati­on of the context and local reality show a deep insensitiv­ity to other cultures,” he added.

Abella also denied that the anti-drug war is targeting the poor.

“The war on drugs is not targeted at any particular segment of society. However, the most prevalent drug in the Philippine­s is shabu, dubbed as poor man’s cocaine,” Duterte’s spokesman said.

“The supply, largely from outside the Philippine­s, is in great demand from users and distributo­rs both coming from poor families. Poverty, however, does not justify the use and selling of shabu,” he added.

Abella said Duterte would continue to clean up the streets of drug users, pushers and dealers “regardless of their socioecono­mic status in life.”

HRW, a watchdog based in New York, previously said that the Philippine­s is in the midst of a “human rights calamity” because of drug-related killings. The group also accused the police of carrying out the extrajudic­ial killings of drug suspects and planting evidence in crime scenes.

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