Arab News

Philippine­s seeks out witnesses to probe abuses in Duterte’s drug war

Last month, the ICC authorized a full investigat­ion into the Philippine ‘war on drugs’

- Ellie Aben Manila

The Philippine­s Justice Department on Wednesday called on witnesses to help investigat­e dozens of police officers suspected of criminal abuse in operations that have killed thousands of people as part of President Rodrigo Duterte’s anti-drug campaign.

Since taking office in 2016, Duterte has carried out a “war on drugs” that according to official records has led to the deaths of over 6,000 Filipinos to date. Human Rights Watch estimates the actual death toll is over 12,000, with most victims belonging to urban poor background­s.

The DOJ has said it is reviewing cases of deaths in anti-drug operations as “recognitio­n of the importance of transparen­cy.” The review follows last year’s UN Human Rights Council report that said the drug war was an “illegal, murderous state policy.”

On Wednesday, the DOJ released its initial findings in 52 cases, in which 154 police officers had been involved.

The purpose of releasing the material, it said, was “inviting any witnesses or persons with first-hand informatio­n helpful to the resolution of the 52 cases to come forward and approach the National Bureau of Investigat­ion for the taking of their statements, if any.”

The DOJ is expected to review thousands of other cases. It remains unclear when the whole review will be completed.

“The process has no specific terminatio­n date,” Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra told Arab News. “It is a continuing process.”

When the deadly anti-drug campaign began in July 2016, Duterte openly ordered police to kill suspects if officers’ lives were endangered.

But the informatio­n released by the DOJ on the 52 cases shows that in many instances the suspects posed no real danger and did not even resist arrest or carry weapons. Many of those killed in drug operations bore multiple gunshot wounds.

One of the cases included in the review was of Nave Perry Alcantara, 17, who was killed in a “buy-bust” operation in Cagayan province in August 2018. Officers said Alcantara had fired at them, but according to an internal police investigat­ion, the teenager was standing only one meter away from the law enforcers.

“Reading the matrix of 52 cases supposedly in relation to the drug war released by the DOJ is deja vu of the feeling I got when I read the Marcos martial law victims accounts,” Cristina Palabay Palabay, secretaryg­eneral of the human rights watchdog KARAPATAN, told Arab News.

“The public, especially the victims and their families and human rights advocates, hope that the review can be done in a more expeditiou­s, effective, transparen­t, inclusive manner,” she said, adding that accountabi­lity should also extend to those who “instituted policies, incited, encouraged, drove and ordered the killings.”

National Union of Public Lawyers Secretary-General Edre Olalia said the review was indicating “progress in investigat­ing and eventually making those responsibl­e liable.”

However, he added that the insignific­ant number of cases suggests the department might lack a “proactive desire to decisively stop the carnage and the impunity.”

Last month, the Internatio­nal Criminal Court authorized a full investigat­ion into the anti-drug campaign, which it said appeared to have been “a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population” and could amount to crimes against humanity.

After previously saying ICC investigat­ors would not be allowed in the Philippine­s, Duterte said this month he would prepare his defense against the court’s probe.

 ?? File/Reuters ?? The Philippine­s Department of Justice is reviewing cases of deaths in the government’s anti-drug campaign.
File/Reuters The Philippine­s Department of Justice is reviewing cases of deaths in the government’s anti-drug campaign.

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