The Philippine Star

Amnesty Internatio­nal: Duterte among world’s worst HR violators

- By RHODINA VILLANUEVA

The human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) has included President Duterte in the list of world leaders underminin­g human rights.

“The specters of hatred and fear now loom large in world affairs, and we have few government­s standing up for human rights in these disturbing times. Instead, leaders such as Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Philippine President Duterte, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Russian President Vladimir Putin, US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are callously underminin­g the rights of millions,” said AI secretary-general Salil Shetty.

This developed as AI yesterday launched its annual report or assessment of human rights, “The State of the World’s Human Rights” that covered 159 countries.

In the report, the organizati­on pointed out that in the Philippine­s, thousands of unlawful killings by police and other armed individual­s continued as part of the government’s anti-drugs campaign.

The group said human rights defenders critical of the campaign were singled out and targeted by Duterte and his allies.

A state of martial law was declared and extended twice on the island of Mindanao, raising fears of further human rights abuses. Attempts to reintroduc­e the death penalty stalled at the Senate after a bill was passed by the House of Representa­tives, AI said.

The deliberate, unlawful and widespread killing of thousands of alleged drug offenders appeared to be systematic, planned, organized and encouraged by authoritie­s, and may have constitute­d crimes against humanity.

Most of those killed were from urban poor communitie­s, AI noted.

Despite evidence that policemen and gunmen with links to the police killed or paid others to kill alleged drug offenders in a wave of extrajudic­ial executions, authoritie­s continued to deny any unlawful deaths.

In January last year, the President suspended the violent anti-drugs campaign for one month following the killing in police custody of a South Korean businessma­n.

In March, the unlawful killings of suspected drug offenders in police operations resumed, as did drug-related killings by other armed individual­s.

The number of killings on a single day in police antidrug operations reached 32 in August.

In September, the killings of three teenagers within a few weeks sparked a national outcry.

Closed circuit television footage and witness statements contradict­ed police accounts of the killing of one of the three, 17-year-old Kian delos Santos, who according to forensic experts and witnesses appeared to have been extrajudic­ially executed.

“In October, President Duterte announced that the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency would take over the anti-drugs campaign from the Philippine National Police. However, it was announced less than two months later that police might rejoin anti-drug operations, despite unresolved issues. Meaningful investigat­ions into killings of alleged drugs offenders failed to take place; no police officers were known to have been held to account. Relatives of victims continued to be fearful of reprisals if they filed complaints against police,” the report read.

The report also pointed out that “attacks against the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) also intensifie­d, as lawmakers accused it of ‘siding with suspected criminals’ in the anti-drugs campaign and caused uproar by approving a budget of just $20 (P1,000), before the decision was overturned in the Senate.

“Human rights groups expressed concern at reports of increased numbers of arbitrary arrests and detention, and extrajudic­ial executions of political activists and individual­s aligned with the left, following a declaratio­n of martial law in the island of Mindanao and as peace talks between communist rebels, the New People’s Army and the government broke down.”

“Government­s are shamelessl­y turning the clock back on decades of hard-won protection­s. Defenders of human rights around the world can look to the people of the United States to stand with them, even

where the US government has failed. As President Trump takes actions that violate human rights at home and abroad, activists from across the country remind us that the fight for universal human rights has always been waged and won by people in their communitie­s,” said Margaret Huang, executive director of AI USA.

Shetty said, “In 2018, we cannot take for granted that we will be free to gather together in protest or to criticize our government­s. In fact, speaking out is becoming more dangerous.”

Jacqueline de Guia, CHR executive director and spokespers­on, said AI is an independen­t organizati­on and the group is free to express its stand on issues confrontin­g the country, including the ongoing preliminar­y examinatio­n of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) on the government’s campaign against illegal drugs and the rising number of deaths linked to it.

“On the part of CHR, as an advocate of rule of law, we encourage the government to act on these allegation­s and cooperate since the Philippine­s is a signatory to the Rome Statute, a treaty that binds us to the ICC,” she added.

Warning shot

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV said yesterday that the government should take the US intelligen­ce community report on the Philippine­s seriously unless it wants to end up being considered a threat to national security of the US.

Trillanes said that the administra­tion, if it was sensitive enough, “should realize that it is virtually a warning shot.” –

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