Arab News

Manila slams UNHCR chief over human rights criticisms

- ELLIE ABEN

MANILA: The aim of President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs is “to preserve the lives of the Filipino people, to prevent the destructio­n of Filipino families, and to protect the Philippine­s from becoming a narco-state,” said his spokesman Ernesto Abella.

Abella was responding to criticism from the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein that Duterte lacked respect for Filipinos’ right to due process.

In a speech delivered at the 36th session of the Human Rights Council on Monday, Al-Hussein identified the Philippine­s as among 40 countries where the human rights situation has become “darker and more dangerous.”

He added: “In the Philippine­s, I continue to be gravely concerned by the president’s open support for a shoot-tokill policy against suspects, as well as by the apparent absence of credible investigat­ions into reports of thousands of extrajudic­ial killings, and the failure to prosecute any perpetrato­r.”

Al-Hussein cited the case of 17-yearold Kian Loyd Delos Santos, a student who was dragged into an alley and shot in the head by plain-clothed policemen during an anti-drug operation in Caloocan City on Aug. 16.

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre described the killing as “an isolated case.” But Al-Hussein said suspicion of extrajudic­ial killings in the country has become so widespread that the initials EJK have reportedly become a verb in some communitie­s, as in “he was EJK’d.”

He added that even as hundreds of people turned out for the teenager’s funeral, “the president again told police they would not be punished for killing suspects who resist arrest. This lack of respect for the due process rights of all Filipinos is appalling.”

Al-Hussein also expressed shock at Duterte’s threat to bomb schools for indigenous children in the southern Philippine­s, which the president accused of teaching children to revolt against the government.

Al-Hussein said Duterte’s order to police to shoot any human rights workers who “are part of” the drug trade or who “obstruct justice” is yet “another blow to his country’s reputation and his people’s rights.”

The UN remains concerned about the case of Sen. Leila De Lima, a staunch critic of Duterte who is in jail for alleged involvemen­t in the illicit drug trade, Al-Hussein added.

Many human rights activists face a growing number of death threats. Al-Hussein urged the government to ensure they are accorded full protection and the right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly without reprisals.

Measures taken toward reintroduc­ing the death penalty threaten yet another step back, he said.

He urged the government to “uphold the Philippine­s’ internatio­nal human rights obligation­s, amid deeper reflection about the values that the Philippine­s stands for.”

The presidenti­al palace said it is deeply concerned by Al-Hussein’s sweeping statements and their lack of basis in fact.

Duterte has “categorica­lly and repeatedly said there is no shoot-to-kill order. All drug killings are subject to investigat­ions,” Abella said.

“On the issue of indigenous schools, it would be better to focus on the Duterte administra­tion’s efforts to educate the indigenous people,” Abella added.

“On the issue of human rights workers who are part of the drug trade or human rights workers who obstruct justice, the president is referring to human rights activists who aid or abet acts of violence during legitimate police operations where authoritie­s have the right of self-defense.”

Abella said De Lima’s incarcerat­ion is due to criminal, not political, issues, adding: “It is the court, which is independen­t from the executive, which ordered the arrest of Sen. De Lima for drug traffickin­g charges and for allegedly receiving money from drug dealers at the national penitentia­ry.”

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