Philippine Daily Inquirer

LOCSIN TELLS UN GATHERING: PH NEEDS NO HELP IN WAR ON DRUGS

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The Duterte administra­tion will carry on with its brutal war on drugs without the assistance of any nation, Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locson Jr. bluntly told a United Nations gathering in Vienna, Austria, on Thursday.

The strongly worded speech of the country’s top diplomat seemed to contradict the previous statements of Malacañang, which sought internatio­nal cooperatio­n in combating transnatio­nal crimes such as the drug menace.

The President himself earlier claimed that foreign countries had provided him with wiretapped informatio­n about the operations of drug syndi- cates in the country and helped him come up with his so-called narcolist and drug matrix.

‘A little understand­ing’

“As always, the Philippine­s fights its battles alone; it needs no help,” Locsin said at the 62nd Session of the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs.

“(The Philippine­s) fears no opposition from any quarter, but it wouldn’t mind a little understand­ing,” he stressed.

“The Philippine war on drugs has braved withering criticism—indeed an internatio­nal public relations war is being waged against the war on drugs,” he added.

Thousands of drug suspects have been murdered since Mr. Duterte declared his drug war in July 2016, most of whom were gunned down by masked assassins that human rights groups regarded as extrajudic­ial killings.

Colombian cartel

In defending the President’s violent antidrug campaign, Locsin claimed that the Colombian drug cartel had penetrated the Philippine­s despite Mr. Duterte’s iron-fisted strategy against the narcotics trade.

He also said some “local government units” had been in cahoots with internatio­nal drug rings that had been dumping cocaine in sealed plastic bags off the country’s coastlines.

Amid mounting concerns of human rights advocates, Locsin reiterated that the drug war was consistent with the UN convention­s and the 2009 Political Declaratio­n and Plan of Action against the illicit drug trade.

The foreign secretary maintained that Mr. Duterte’s strategy was a “whole-of-nation approach” based on the government’s National Anti-Drug Plan of Action, which was given a “sharper edge, a longer blade and a wider swing.”

Said Locsin: “At its core are drug supply reduction—stemming the massive flow of illicit drugs; and drug demand reduction through community-based rehabilita­tion and the widest preventive programs—a strategy of enforcemen­t, rehabilita­tion, reintegrat­ion.”

Rogue policemen

While admitting that innocent individual­s had fallen victims to abusive policemen, he said these were “not collateral damage,” but were merely “morally repulsive cases of reckless disregard for basic rights and fundamenta­l decencies by rogue” members of the Philippine National Police.

He said the violations committed by erring policemen should not stop the Philippine government from pursuing the drug war.

“Rather, they are calls to do it better: to address impunity and address accountabi­lity; to consider a clinical approach in addition to the current surgery,” Locsin said.

“With the war on drugs, the Philippine­s renews its commitment to the state responsibi­lity to protect, first and foremost, the law-abiding against the lawless (elements),” he added.

Meanwhile, Locsin lambasted nongovernm­ent organizati­ons (NGOs) from the European Union (EU) for allegedly funding communist groups in the Philippine­s.

 ??  ?? Teodoro Locsin Jr.
Teodoro Locsin Jr.

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