The Hamilton Spectator

“I will really kill you”

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Viewpoint: The Washington Post Rodrigo Duterte, the new president of the Philippine­s, is overseeing exactly what he pledged in his campaign: a terrifying surge of extrajudic­ial killings of suspected drug dealers, users and criminals. From the day after he was elected, May 10, to Aug. 4, by a local account, there had been 571 killings, most of them simple executions by police and vigilante groups. Duterte promised to “shoot to kill” and eliminate drug dealing in the country in six months. In fact, he is killing the rule of law, and that could undermine Philippine democracy.

After taking the oath, Duterte visited a Manila slum and told a crowd, referring to drug dealers, “These sons of whores are destroying our children. I warn you, don’t go into that, even if you’re a policeman, because I will really kill you. If you know of any addicts, go ahead and kill them yourself, as getting their parents to do it would be too painful.”

The Philippine­s has a serious drug problem, chiefly with crystal meth, a.k.a. shabu. Duterte’s firebrand response to drugs has been popular. But the street executions are taking lives without trials or proof of criminalit­y. Drug addicts and abusers who need medical attention and counsellin­g are getting a bullet instead.

No one should be surprised by Duterte’s brutal tactics. He has been championin­g extrajudic­ial violence for nearly two decades. From 1998 until this year he served as mayor of Davao City on the main southern island of Mindanao, where death squads took the lives of more than 1,000 people. An investigat­ion by Human Rights Watch documented the grisly methods of the killers; they meted out summary executions with impunity. On May 24, 2015, in a television broadcast, Duterte identified with the shadowy killers. “Am I the death squad? True. That is true,” he said. He pledged that if elected president, he would execute 100,000 criminals and dump their bodies in Manila Bay.

The past few weeks provide grim foreshadow­ing that he may be serious about that. Duterte won the election as a profane, take-no-prisoners leader who did not bristle at the word “dictator.” While the persona may have proved effective in the campaign, a real dictator, especially one with blood on his hands, is hardly what the Philippine­s needs.

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