Bangkok Post

Probe starts over raids on ‘communist’ insurgents

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The Philippine­s’ human rights watchdog said yesterday it has launched an investigat­ion after nine people were killed in a series of raids by security forces targeting alleged communist insurgents.

All the people killed or arrested in Sunday’s coordinate­d operation near Manila were unarmed activists, leftist group Bayan said.

But National Police chief Debold Sinas said the operation — involving police and military personnel — was staged in response to reports that the suspects were in the “illegal possession of firearms”.

Nine people were killed and 15 arrested during the raids, he said.

The incident came two days after President Rodrigo Duterte — whose controvers­ial drug war has cost thousands of lives — repeated an order for security forces to “ignore human rights” and kill communist rebels.

The independen­t Commission on Human Rights said it had dispatched a team to investigat­e the killings and arrests, as it urged the government to do the same.

“Activists are not necessaril­y terrorists and there should be a differenti­ation between those who take up arms and those who merely exercise their constituti­onal right to form and join associatio­ns, organisati­ons as well as petition the government for redress of its grievances,” spokeswoma­n Jacqueline de Guia said yesterday.

Hundreds of activists, journalist­s and lawyers have been killed since Mr Duterte took power in 2016.

Many died after being accused of supporting the decades-old Maoist insurgency that the populist president has vowed to crush before the end of his six-year term in 2022.

Bayan said police had used “questionab­le search warrants” in Sunday’s operation that targeted “legal activists” — not members of communist terrorist groups as alleged by police.

One of its own coordinato­rs in Cavite province, south of Manila, was among the dead, it added.

“A policeman makes a wild allegation that you are in possession of just one hand grenade and a judge will sign a search warrant that could lead to your arrest or death,” said the group, which campaigns for workers, farmers and other marginalis­ed sectors.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said the government would probe the killings — but defended the use of deadly force when necessary.

“If your opponent has guns that can kill you, you wouldn’t wait to get shot at and killed,” he said.

 ??  ?? Duterte: Cracking down on ‘rebels’
Duterte: Cracking down on ‘rebels’

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