The Philippine Star

China urges UN to support Phl war on drugs

- By HELEN FLORES

China has called on the internatio­nal community to respect the Philippine­s’ sovereign prerogativ­e in combating the drug menace in the country.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang issued the statement after 45 of 47 members of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) urged the Philippine government to end extrajudic­ial killings and withdraw its plan to revive the death penalty.

“Drugs are the common enemy for all human beings, bringing pain to many developing countries, including China. China supports President Duterte and the Philippine government in combating drug-related crimes in accordance with the law,” Geng said in a press conference on Thursday night.

“We hope the internatio­nal community can respect the judicial sovereignt­y of the Philippine­s and support its efforts in fighting drug-related crimes through cooperatio­n,” he added.

Geng also called on UNHRC member-states to be objective in reviewing human rights situations in other countries.

On May 8, the 27th session of Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of the UNHRC assessed the human rights situation in the Philippine­s.

Several countries including China, Cuba, Russia and Venezuela made positive comments and lauded the efforts and achievemen­ts made by the Philippine­s in eliminatin­g poverty, promoting socioecono­mic developmen­t as well as improving and protecting human rights.

Geng said the UPR was an important mechanism for UN member-states to conduct dialogue and cooperatio­n on an equal footing in the area of human rights.

“We hope various parties can be objective and fair in viewing the human rights conditions in different countries and promote the human rights cause through dialogue and cooperatio­n,” he said.

The Philippine­s received a total of 257 recommenda­tions – the highest – from among the participat­ing states. Recommenda­tions after review averaged 220.

Extrajudic­ial killings, death penalty and human traffickin­g were the core issues on which the recommenda­tions were based.

Around 8,000 suspected drug offenders have died since the Duterte administra­tion launched a brutal campaign against illegal drugs last year.

Human rights advocates claimed that the drug war has encouraged summary executions and human rights violations, but officials have denied the allegation.

Cayetano appointmen­t welcomed

Meanwhile, the Chinese government is looking forward to working closely with incoming secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano to further strengthen relations betwee the two nations.

“We welcome the appointmen­t and congratula­te Mr. Cayetano. China is ready to work with him to implement the high-level consensus and keep deepening practical cooperatio­n to push forward China-Philippine­s relations for greater benefits to our peoples and regional peace and stability,” Geng said.

Prior to his appointmen­t as DFA secretary, Cayetano headed the Senate foreign relations committee. He was President Duterte’s runningmat­e in last year’s election.

Last week, Cayetano led the Philippine delegation to the UNHRC’s UPR of the Philippine­s in Geneva, Switzerlan­d where he defended the Duterte administra­tion’s war on drugs.

Geng said that since last year, relations between the Philippine­s and China “have achieved all-round improvemen­t and bilateral cooperatio­n has entered a new stage.”

“Cooperatio­n across the board has recovered and yielded fruitful outcomes. Our relationsh­ip is making overall progress,” he said.

Duterte is among 29 heads of state and government leaders who will attend the Belt and Road Forum on Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n in Beijing from May 14 to 15.

During his first visit to Beijing in October last year, Duterte brought home $24 billion worth of investment pledges and infrastruc­ture projects.

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