The Freeman

Palace hits UN rights official

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MANILA — Malacañang yesterday slammed the United Nations human rights chief for his “uncalled for” remarks urging President Rodrigo Duterte, who has launched verbal attacks against UN rapporteur­s, to seek “psychiatri­c evaluation.”

Citing Duterte’s profanity-laced diatribes against the UN and its officials, rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein said "it makes one believe that the president of the Philippine­s needs to submit himself to some sort of psychiatri­c evaluation."

In response, presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said Zeid’s statement was an “affront on the sovereignt­y of the Republic of the Philippine­s.”

Roque also urged the UN rights official to respect Philippine democracy, adding that the remarks were perhaps made by Zeid because “they do not have democracy in his home state of Jordan.”

Zeid is a Jordanian prince and former diplomat who served as a UN political officer during the Bosnian war.

“I'm very tempted to respond in similar language but I have opted to restrain myself, opting not to respond in the same ad hominem used by the UN High Commission­er,” Roque told a press conference.

“Your language was not just an insult to the Philippine­s and the Filipino people; it is an insult to all countries who have democratic­ally elected their heads of states,” he added.

Duterte, who is notorious for his defiance of internatio­nal pressure, was elected by a landslide in 2016 on a brutal law and order platform.

Human rights monitors say most of the fatalities in the war on drugs are extrajudic­ial killings committed by cops, adding that Duterte could be liable for crimes against humanity for giving police the "license to kill."

In a recent speech, Duterte told elite armed police units to dodge any drug war probe by UN rapporteur­s, who he slammed for supposedly interferin­g in the way he runs his country.

Agnes Callamard, the UN special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial killings, has become a target of Duterte’s vitriol over her criticism of his signature drug war.

Meanwhile, the Philippine government recently filed a petition in a Manila court seeking to declare 600 alleged communist insurgents, including a Filipina UN special rapporteur, as “terrorists.”

"These attacks cannot go unanswered," Zeid was quoted as saying in a report by the Agence France-Presse.

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