Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH NOTES UN WORRIES, MUM ON COMMITMENT

- STORY BY PHILIP C. TUBEZA, BELLA CARIASO AND REUTERS

The Philippine­s has told the UN it would review its war on drugs amid concerns on killings, but has stopped short of commiting to make reforms or punish erring policemen

The Philippine­s said on Friday that it would review recommenda­tions over killings in its war on drugs, but did not commit to make reforms or prosecute the police for excessive use of force after receiving criticism from UN rights council members.

President Duterte has been widely condemned in the West for failing to curtail the killings and address activists’ allegation­s of systematic, state-sponsored murders by police of drug users and dealers, a charge which the authoritie­s reject.

The United Nations Human Rights Council examined the Philippine­s’ record this week, where the government delegation insisted there had been no new wave of killings prompted by the campaign, and denounced what it branded as “alternativ­e facts.”

Since Mr. Duterte took office 10 months ago, there have been 9,432 homicide cases, including 2,692 deaths from “presumed legitimate law enforcemen­t operations,” it said.

The council adopted a report on Thursday comprising 257 recommenda­tions from 95 states, roughly half voicing concern over the killings, and told the Philippine­s to report back “with a clear position” at its September session.

Among them was a recommenda­tion from the United States to “ensure that all counternar­cotics operations are conducted in conformity with constituti­onal protection­s and internatio­nal human rights obligation­s.”

Sen. Richard Gordon, a staunch ally of the president, said the government should listen to the recommenda­tions ( See page 11)

“To the best of our ability we tried to explain the underlying reasons for this campaign. That is to protect the human rights of the majority of our people who stand to potentiall­y suffer the dark consequenc­es of unmitigate­d abuse of illegal drugs and to set an environmen­t conducive to further social economic developmen­t,” Menardo Guevarra, senior deputy executive secretary in Mr. Duterte’s office, said on Thursday.

The Presidenti­al Human Rights Committee would “review and determine what actions to take on your numerous recommenda­tions,” Guevarra told the forum.

“The internatio­nal community sent out a very strong message to the Philippine­s government today ... Many of the recommenda­tions did address the extrajudic­ial killings, arbitrary detentions vis-a-vis the government’s campaign to stamp out illegal drugs,” council spokespers­on Rolando Gomez said.

Nearly 50 states had voiced concerns, “so that obviously speaks volumes, and now of course it is up to the government to make good on the promises [to which they] committed here,” Gomez told Reuters Television.

China, which during the debate congratula­ted Mr. Duterte’s administra­tion on its “remarkable achievemen­ts” in protecting human rights, suggested in its recommenda­tion that it should “address the root cause of illegal drugs through developmen­t.”

Philippine National Police Director General Ronald Dela Rosa on Friday said only the President could order a freeze to the campaign, following a call from Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) to suspend it amid UN concerns.

VACC said the police must suspend the drug war due to the increasing number of cases of “tanim-droga” of policemen “planting drugs as evidence” against their would-be victims.

But reacting to the suggestion, Dela Rosa said: “You tell it to the President because we are just following orders.”

“If the President says ‘stop,’ then we will stop. I have no power to say ‘go’ or ‘no go.’ It’s the President’s order,” he stressed.

The PNP in early March relaunched its antidrug effort, about a month after the President ordered police to stop the campaign after rogue policemen were implicated in the kidnap-slay of South Korean businessma­n Jee Ick-joo inside Camp Crame last year.

In Hong Kong, where Mr. Duterte is on an official trip, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said that the 10-nation Associa- tion of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) bloc continued to support the drug war.

“Actually all of them, if you talk to the Asean counterpar­ts, the leaders, heads of state, they’re in full support of the drive, the campaign against drugs,” Lopez told reporters.

He stressed that the government “does not sanction human rights violations,” a message that Senator and incoming foreign secretary Alan Peter Cayetano had explicitly conveyed to the United Nations.

Lopez said only President Duterte “had the guts” to implement and impose tough measures against drugs, which he stressed had affected 4 million Filipinos.

“The leaders are in full support. Because I think they think that way also, in their countries, they are solving it that way,” he said.

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