PNP: Official death toll from drug war at 5,526
The number of deaths in the government’s war on drugs officially breached the 5,500-mark over the last three years – fewer by 1,174 than the figure released earlier by the Philippine National Police (PNP).
Data from the RealNumbersPH forum showed that the number of drug suspects killed in anti-narcotics operations reached 5,526 from July 1, 2016 to June 30 this year.
The number is notably lower than the report released last month by the PNP that at least 6,600 were slain in police anti-drug operations.
Government officials brushed off the discrepancies in the drug death toll, saying the lower figure is the official and validated data.
PNP deputy spokesperson Lt. Col. Kimberly Molitas said there was confusion
with the data, citing validation that the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency has to do to determine if the deaths were indeed related to illegal drugs.
The administration released the official tally of the drug killings as the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) adopted a resolution which seeks to probe the human rights situation in the country.
Asked if the administration will comply with the resolution, Undersecretary Severo Catura, executive director of the Presidential Human Rights Committee Secretariat, said the government stands by the position to “totally reject” it.
Catura described the resolution as “very divisive” that was perpetrated by “countries who tend to be bullies” toward developing countries.
Phl thanks US aid in drug war
The Philippines’ top diplomat thanked yesterday the United States for its assistance in the Duterte administration’s war on drugs, calling the US Department of Justice and Drug Enforcement Administration (USDEA) the most “effective” and “emphatic” of all anti-drug enforcers in the world.
“Thank you America. Of all anti-drug enforcers in the world the most effective and emphatic is the USDEA whose agents stopped dead cold the illegal drug trade’s infiltration of our armed forces during the time of former president Cory Aquino. It had made inroads during the corrupt Marcos regime,” Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said on his Twitter account.
Reacting to Locsin’s tweet, Muntinlupa Rep. Ruffy Biazon said the success in the US antidrug campaign is mainly due to evidence gathering through consensual recording, which the Philippines does not have.
On Tuesday, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs David Stilwell said the US remains committed to working with the Philippines to combat illegal drugs.
“We remain committed to working together on evidencebased approaches to reducing drug demand by improving prevention, treatment and rehabilitation services,” Stilwell said during the Eighth USPhilippines Bilateral Strategic Dialogue in Manila.
“I want to continue sharing information and best practices to jointly combat this common challenge in a manner that will respect human rights and the rule of law,” he added.
On July 12, the UNHRC adopted the Iceland-backed resolution calling for a review of the human rights situation in the Philippines.
Eighteen of 47 memberstates supported the resolution which, among others, asked the rights body to prepare a comprehensive report on the drug killings in the Philippines.
Fourteen countries opposed it and 15 abstained.
Palace condemns boy’s slay
Meanwhile, Malacañang yesterday condemned the rape and killing of a oneyear-old boy in Makati and vowed to bring the perpetrator to justice.
The victim’s body was found in an abandoned building along Yakal street in Barangay San Antonio on Wednesday, according to police.
Police arrested Gerald Reparip, a 28-year-old construction worker, who admitted to raping the boy and choking him to death.