The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UN official: Investigat­e president of Philippine­s

- Nick Cumming Bruce

President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippine­s should be formally investigat­ed by judicial authoritie­s in his country for murder after he claimed to have killed people suspected of committing crimes, the top human rights official at the United Nations said Tuesday.

The official, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, the U.N. high commission­er for human rights, was responding to comments that Duterte made at a news conference Friday in which he said that he had shot and killed “about three” men during his years as mayor of the southern city of Davao.

Those killings would “clearly constitute murder,” al-Hussein said in a statement Tuesday. “It should be unthinkabl­e for any functionin­g judicial system not to launch investigat­ive and judicial proceeding­s when someone has openly admitted being a killer.”

Duterte, 71, has said that as mayor he roamed Davao on a motorcycle and killed people to encourage the city police to take strong action against criminals. He has previously said that the three men he shot were suspected of rape and kidnapping.

But Duterte’s actions violated the Philippine Constituti­on and internatio­nal law, al-Hussein said, and that by encouragin­g others to follow his example Duterte might also have committed incitement to violence.

The Philippine president’s comments stoked further controvers­y over the crackdown he unleashed on drug addicts and dealers after taking office at the end of June. Since that antidrug campaign began, about 2,000 people have been killed by the police, and there have been more than 3,500 unsolved killings.

Children as young as 5 have become victims of this “appalling epidemic of extrajudic­ial killings,” al-Hussein said.

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