The Philippine Star

Phl reaffirms commitment to human rights

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

Rule of law prevails in the Duterte administra­tion’s campaign against crime and other threats, Malacañang said yesterday, as critics decried what they described as the deteriorat­ing human rights situation in the country.

In a statement for the global observ- ance of the 70th anniversar­y of the adoption of the Universal Declaratio­n of Huagainst man Rights (UDHR), Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea said the administra­tion remains “unrelentin­g” in its crusade criminalit­y, corruption, terrorism, insurgency and illegal drugs that destroy families and the future of the young.

Medialdea added that the crusade seeks to protect the lives of innocent lawabiding citizens.

“In all these, the rule of law is upheld as the guilty are brought before the bar

of justice,” Medialdea said.

While critics claim President Duterte’s bloody war on illegal drugs has tarnished the Philippine­s’ global reputation, presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo maintained that the President respects human rights, citing the conviction of the policemen who murdered teenager Kian delos Santos last year.

“It was the President himself who ordered the arrest and detention and he categorica­lly stated that such conviction cannot yield to a pardon from him because it was done intentiona­lly and not in accordance with the duty imposed to the policemen by law,” Panelo said.

“Human rights, as depicted by the critics, as well as those critics from abroad, do not reflect what is happening on the ground. When they keep on saying that many have been killed, they make it appear as if the killings are state initiated. But we have repeatedly said the fact alone that policemen are killed during operations will already rebut the theory that this is state initiated,” Panelo said at a press briefing.

Panelo added that the killing of drug suspects has been happening even before Duterte assumed office.

“We’ve been saying that these killings are the result of people in the drug syndicate – they want to silence people from naming their accomplice­s, they want to silence people from pointing to them; and some of them could be deals or fraudulent deals between and among them,” the presidenti­al spokesman said. –

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