The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine­s hails US rights remarks, denies murders

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PHILIPPINE officials yesterday welcomed comments by a US official noting what he described as its improving human rights record in the drugs war, but they denied Manila abetted the extrajudic­ial killing of suspects.

James A Walsh, a senior US State Department drug official, said Tuesday he was “cautiously optimistic” the rights record was improving, even though President Rodrigo Duterte is pressing on with a war on drugs in which law enforcers have killed nearly 4,000 suspects.

Foreign rights monitors have said the crackdown could be a crime against humanity.

“Many folks have been tracking the EJKs [extrajudic­ial killings] in the Philippine­s and the trends are going down so there is some encouragem­ent that we are seeing in some of our human rights training working,” Walsh told reporters.

“I would describe the United States as being cautiously optimistic in the trends when it comes to a good . . . appropriat­e way for a drug campaign,” added the deputy assistant secretary for internatio­nal narcotics and law enforcemen­t.

Walsh’s remarks “hint of a growing appreciati­on of the positive impact of the administra­tion’s anti-illegal drug campaign”, Duterte spokesman Harry Roque said.

He also said there had been no illegal killings of drug suspects, a position repeated by Press Secretary Martin Andanar.

“While we welcome US State Department senior official James Walsh ‘cautiously optimistic’ view of President Duterte’s successful anti-illegal drugs campaign, we maintain that there are no EJKs under the Duterte administra­tion,” Andanar said in a statement.

However, human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal warned that people should stay vigilant and keep pressing for an investigat­ion into rights abuses.

“Since President Duterte came to power, police have unlawfully killed thousands of people, the vast majority of them from poor and marginalis­ed communitie­s, in attacks so extensive and brutal they may well amount to crimes against humanity,” it said in a statement.

“To date, police have been allowed to operate in a culture of almost total impunity,” Amnesty added.

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