The Star Malaysia

Human Rights group urges UN to probe ‘Duterte killer’ claim

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MANILA: The Philippine­s faced calls to investigat­e its firebrand president after a self-confessed hitman alleged Rodrigo Duterte ordered a thousand opponents and suspected criminals murdered when he was a city mayor.

The hitman told a Senate inquiry on Thursday that he and a group of policemen killed some 1,000 people in Davao city on Duterte’s orders from 1988-2013, with the politician himself shooting dead one of the victims.

“These are serious allegation­s and we take them seriously, we will look into them,” said US State Department deputy spokespers­on Mark Toner.

Critics say the alleged killings in Davao, where Duterte was mayor for more than 20 years, establishe­d a pattern that has spread nationwide under the new presidency.

The allegation­s surfaced as the Senate investigat­ed alleged extra-judicial killings in an ongoing antidrug crackdown that has led to more than 3,000 deaths in Duterte’s first 72 days in office.

US-based watchdog Human Rights Watch urged Manila to let United Nations investigat­ors probe the claims.

“President Duterte can’t be expected to investigat­e himself, so it is crucial that the United Nations is called in to lead such an effort,” the monitor’s Asia director Brad Adams said in a statement.

Duterte had on various occasions admitted or denied involvemen­t in the death squads during the campaign for May elections, which he won by a landslide on a pledge to kill tens of thousands of criminals.

Duterte has so far ignored the latest allegation­s while his senior aides dismissed them, with Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre branding them as “lies and fabricatio­ns”.

Wilnor Papa, a campaign officer for the Manila office of Amnesty Internatio­nal, said the problem of impunity was coming to a head partly due to the failure of previous government­s, which failed to prosecute Duterte.

“We are now seeing riding-in-tandem (motorcycle-riding assassins) like those that prowled the Davao streets in the late 1990s. The targets are not only drug syndicates. Even purse snatchers use them and they can target basically anyone,” he said.

House of Representa­tives member Edcel Lagman urged Duterte yesterday to name an independen­t fact-finding commission made up of retired judges to “determine the identities of the principals and perpetrato­rs as well as of the victims”.

The fate of the former death squad member, Edgar Matobato, was uncertain yesterday as the Senate president, Duterte ally Aquilino Pimentel, refused to take him into protective custody.

His testimony was not related to the drug war killings being investigat­ed, Pimentel said, adding: “There’s even no showing that his life or safety is threatened.” — AFP

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