Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

‘Free to kill’: Duterte tells newly appointed police chief

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PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered a controvers­ial senior police commander, who was previously involved in high-profile drug operations that left two town mayors dead, to “start killing” in his newly assigned jurisdicti­on in the central island of Negros.

In a speech to business leaders in Manila on Thursday night, Duterte said Lt Col Jovie Espenido should carry out the government’s so-called “war on drugs” in the city of Bacolod, a Spanish-era city with a population of more than 560 000.

“Bacolod is badly hit [by drugs] now. I placed Espenido there. I said, ‘Go there and you are free to kill everybody. Son of a b****, start killing there. The two of us will then go to jail’,” Duterte said in a mix of Filipino and English.

Despite warnings that he could be prosecuted for his public pronouncem­ents about killing drug suspects and for the deadly war on drugs, Duterte has repeatedly taunted the internatio­nal community and human rights groups.

The president had also declared that he does “not care about human rights”, and issued a “shoot-tokill” order if drug suspects resist arrest.

Yesterday, Karen Gomez Dumpit Philippine Commission on Human of the Rights condemned Duterte’s latest statement, saying that the president is “enabling” the continued “brazen violation of human rights in the country”.

“That’s not the kind of language we want to hear from the president,” Dumpit said, adding that she expects Bacolod residents to express outrage at the appointmen­t of Espenido, who was named as deputy police director for operations in Bacolod on Wednesday.

In a statement yesterday, Police spokesman Brig Gen Bernard Banac said Espenido’s appointmen­t is seen “as putting emphasis on his [Duterte] campaign promise to eradicate illegal drugs”. He was also quoted as saying that Duterte’s latest statement is just “hyperbole”.

In 2017, Espenido was the police chief of Ozamiz City on the island of Mindanao when officers killed the mayor, Reynaldo Parojinog, his wife and 13 other people in a pre-dawn raid, which relatives said was premeditat­ed murder. Police said it was a legitimate anti-drug operation and that Parojinog and his security personnel resisted arrest.

Espenido was also the police chief of Albuera on the central island of Leyte in 2016, when the town mayor, Rolando Espinosa Sr, was killed inside his jail cell.

The slain mayor had voluntaril­y turned himself in to police after Duterte warned that he would go after him if he refused to surrender.

Parojinog and Espinosa were among those 158 local officials that Duterte publicly linked to drugs two months after becoming president.

Duterte had also listed several judges and police officers as being involved in drug trade across the country.

As of August 2019, there have been at least 12 mayors and eight vice mayors killed since July 2016.

For his part, Espenido assured residents of Bacolod that his new assignment would be different from his previous work.

“I guess, that’s the expectatio­n of the people, because they have seen what I have done. But to give you an idea, I don’t think it would be like that,” Espenido was quoted by Philippine media as saying.

In September, Bacolod Mayor Evelio Leonardia expressed his support for the war on drugs and said that the high satisfacti­on ratings of Duterte “simply tells us that this is what the people want”.

From June to August of this year, police in Bacolod had reportedly seized a total of 17.2 million pesos ($335 000) worth of methamphet­amine in the city, according to the Philippine News Agency.

Since Duterte assumed presidency in mid-2016, some 6 660 people have been reported killed during drug-related police operations, according to a June 2019 report published by the Philippine National Police.

Human rights advocates, however, say the number could be as high as 27 000 as of June 2019. — Al Jazeera

 ??  ?? Human rights advocates say the number of deaths related to the drug war in the Philippine­s could be as high as 27 000 as of June 2019. — EPA
Human rights advocates say the number of deaths related to the drug war in the Philippine­s could be as high as 27 000 as of June 2019. — EPA

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