Watchmen Daily Journal

DOJ drops 29 extrajudic­ial killing, torture cases

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MANILA – Twentynine cases of extrajudic­ial killings and torture have been stricken from the list by the Department of Justice (DOJ) due to lack of witnesses, Secretary Menardo Guevarra said yesterday.

“Those were very old cases where no witnesses could be found despite diligent efforts of our special investigat­ion teams. And there were many cases where the complainan­ts desisted from pressing charges,” Guevarra told GMA News Online.

He said many of the cases predate Administra­tive Order No. 35.

Under AO 35, the Inter-Agency Committee On ExtraLegal Killings, Enforced Disappeara­nces, Torture, and Other Grave Violations of the Right to Life, Liberty and Security of Persons (IAC) was created.

The oldest case was in 2002, according to Guevarra.

Meanwhile, Guevarra said inter-agency special composite teams from the Department of National Defense, Armed Forces of the Philippine­s, Department of the Interior and Local Government, Philippine National Police, National Bureau of Investigat­ion, and Commission on Human Rights looked into the cases.

The DOJ has reviewed 352 cases where individual­s have been killed during the police’s anti-drug operations since 2016.

In October 2021, the agency published its review of 52 drug war cases that showed that several suspects who were killed after allegedly firing first at police officers were negative for gunpowder nitrates.

The agency said the release of the results of its review of the remaining cases needs the approval of outgoing President Rodrigo Duterte.

Duterte, accused of human rights violations because of his bloody war on drugs, earlier said he would prepare his defense on possible Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) indictment after he steps down from office on June 30, 2022.

 ?? ?? Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra
Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra

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