Philippine Daily Inquirer

Duterte shoot-to-kill order illegal–Robredo

- By Vince F. Nonato, Philip C. Tubeza and Nikko Dizon @Team_Inquirer

President Duterte’s shoot-tokill order, even if aimed at suspected armed rebels, is not in accordance with the Constituti­on, Vice President Leni Robredo said on Thursday.

“If we say we can kill just because we are accusing someone of a crime, what will happen to all of us, right?” Robredo said when asked by reporters in Caloocan City about Mr. Duterte’s order.

The President on Wednesday said soldiers should shoot armed members of the New People’s Army (NPA) right away and disregard human rights.

“Shoot them! They will kill you anyway. If there is an armed NPA there or terrorist holding any firearms, shoot … I’ll answer for you,” he said in a speech at Sual town in Pangasinan province.

The NPA is the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP), which has been waging a rebellion for nearly 50 years.

Mr. Duterte, a lawyer, said he would answer for the soldiers accused of human rights violations.

He also said he would take up the cudgels for soldiers and police officers if they killed someone mistaken for an NPA member.

Mistaken identity

The President noted that a “mistaken identity” was “an exempting circumstan­ce.”

His shoot-to-kill order came a day after government forces killed 15 suspected NPA members, including five women, in separate encounters in Nasugbu, Batangas. The fatalities were in a jeepney and a van.

Mr. Duterte terminated peace negotiatio­ns with the National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s (NDFP), the political arm of the CPP, last week through Proclamati­on No. 360. He cited the rebels’ “insincerit­y” in the talks, saying that they continued to attack and kill soldiers and civilians.

A day after signing the proclamati­on, the President told soldiers to be prepared for “virulent confrontat­ions” with the rebels.

Eroding rule of law

Robredo, who is also a lawyer, said the President’s shoot-to-kill order did not seem to be stated in the Constituti­on and the laws.

“What our laws say is, if someone erred, there is a process to know if the charges are true and there are appropriat­e penal- ties for the charges,” the Vice President told reporters in an interview, a transcript of which was e-mailed by her office.

She said the rule of law would be eroded if people were allowed to take the law into their own hands. “[T]hat would lead us to a lot of mess.”

Robredo was attending the Bonifacio Day celebratio­n in Caloocan City, where Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana represente­d the President who skipped the event to tend to the Mindanao conflict.

Malacañang defended the President’s order for soldiers to shoot and kill armed members of the NPA.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said on Thursday that communists who took up arms against the government were legitimate military targets since they were committing a crime.

Crime of rebellion

“The crime of rebellion is a crime of taking arms against the government,” Roque told reporters. “When you are bearing arms against the government, you are engaged in crime.”

A legal consultant to the NDFP said Mr. Duterte’s shootto-kill order was a violation of the Comprehens­ive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law (Carhrihl), which was signed by both the government and the NDFP in 1998.

“There are rules of war aka internatio­nal humanitari­an law. One who is not in a position to fight or doing an overt hostile act should not be killed summarily,” said lawyer Edre Olalia, an NDFP consultant.

Carhrihl is a 2-decade-old agreement between the Philippine government and the NDFP, signed in The Hague, that ensures that despite the armed conflict, human rights are upheld by both sides and abuses would not go unpunished.

The military spokespers­on, Maj. Gen. Restituto Padilla Jr., assured the public that the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s would continue its “strict implementa­tion” of its rules of engagement, pointing out that the communist rebels have committed more human rights violations.

Focused operations

Padilla said the military was implementi­ng focused operations “against the NPAs and their economic sabotage activities.”

CPP founding chair Jose Maria Sison said human rights groups should investigat­e the gun battle in Batangas to determine if there was an actual firefight.

Also on Tuesday, two members of a human rights group were killed and another was wounded while on a fact-finding mission in Negros Oriental. (See story in Regions, Page A20.)

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? UNCONSTITU­TIONAL Vice President Leni Robredo, who attended the commemorat­ion rites at the Bonifacio Monument with Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana on Thursday, says President Duterte’s order to shoot and kill armed rebels is not in accordance with...
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA UNCONSTITU­TIONAL Vice President Leni Robredo, who attended the commemorat­ion rites at the Bonifacio Monument with Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana on Thursday, says President Duterte’s order to shoot and kill armed rebels is not in accordance with...

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