US State Department report: EJKs still top concern in Phl
MANILA — The alleged cases of summary execution in President Rodrigo Duterte's bloody drug war remains a major human rights concern in the Philippines, amid rising impunity following a dramatic surge in police killings, the US State Department said in its global rights report for 2017.
"Extrajudicial killings have been the chief human rights concern in the country for many years and, after a sharp rise with the onset of the antidrug campaign in 2016, they continued in 2017," read the report released Friday (Saturday in Manila).
Human rights monitors say most of the fatalities in the government's antinarcotic drive are extrajudicial killings committed by cops taking a frontline role in the lethal campaign and unknown assailants. But the force had vehemently denied executing suspected drug traffickers in cold blood, saying deaths in police shootings were done in selfdefense.
Amid the mounting death toll, critics say Duterte is waging a "war on poor," making him liable for crimes against humanity for giving cops the "license to kill."
Citing the 900 drug-related deaths reported by media from January to September last year, the State Department said concerns about police impunity "increased significantly."
The US government also expressed doubt over the accuracy and legitimacy of Duterte's list of alleged drug personalities. "Police claimed to have begun investigations of all reports of extrajudicial killings," the report read in part.
"Some civil society organizations accused police of planting evidence, tampering with crime scenes, unlawfully disposing of the bodies of drug suspects, and other actions to cover up extrajudicial killings," it added.
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Aside from the drug war, the report likewise flagged other "most significant" human rights issues in the country, including life threatening prison conditions, warrantless arrests, the state's "disregard" for due process, violence against the free press and rights activists, and forced labor, among others.
Asked how the State Department report is consistent with the human rights policies of Trump–who has been criticized for his apparent affinity for leaders accused of being authoritarian like Duterte–senior State Department official Michael Kozak maintained that the report is "factual."
"Now, does that mean that the President should never speak to these people? We're trying to keep the report as the factual baseline for what we're going to do in policy terms or sanctions as the secretary was mentioning. So we can learn a lot from this, and we can use it to formulate a policy," Kozak, who helped oversee the report, said in a press conference. —