Khaleej Times

Philippine­s to go slow on drug war amid ICC probe

- AFP

manila — Philippine police said on Wednesday they have adopted special measures, including body cameras, to reduce violence in antinarcot­ics operations as the Internatio­nal Criminal Court investigat­es allegation­s of thousands of extrajudic­ial killings in President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war.

Five days after the ICC launched a preliminar­y examinatio­n of the alleged murders, authoritie­s said the number of suspects shot dead by law enforcemen­t personnel had risen to more than 4,000.

Critics allege the fiery Duterte, who has vowed to kill tens of thousands of criminals to rid Philippine society of drugs, is goading police to murder suspects through inflammato­ry statements.

“We are confident that this time, police-intensive operations against illegal drugs will be carried out with greater efficiency and with less violent confrontat­ions between law enforcers and offenders,” national police spokesman John Bulalacao said.

While the campaign is not expected to be entirely “bloodless”, the government has adopted certain measures — including more training and body cameras — to minimise bloodshed, Bulalacao told a news conference.

Duterte suspended police participat­ion in the crackdown twice last year due to controvers­ial killings that led to a public backlash against his anti-narcotics campaign.

Bulalacao said police adopted the extra safeguards in December last year after Duterte authorised the force to rejoin his drug war.

The ICC’s initial inquiry is designed to help prosecutor­s determine if there is enough evidence of crimes that fall into its jurisdicti­on. It could lead to a full probe and eventually charges. The massmurder complaint filed at the ICC by a Filipino lawyer last year alleges around 8,000 extrajudic­ial killings, while human rights groups estimate the actual toll is now more than 12,000, some of them assassinat­ed by suspected vigilantes. Activists allege police break down doors in slums and kill defenceles­s people, then plant guns and drugs on the bodies. —

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