Daily Dispatch

Killing with ‘near impunity’ in Philippine drug war: UN

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Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war has unleashed widespread and systematic killing with “near impunity” for offenders, a UN report said on Thursday, calling for an independen­t probe into human rights abuses.

Police have been encouraged by the highest levels of government to use lethal force on drug suspects and thousands have been killed by officers and unknown gunmen since 2016, the UN human rights office said.

Many victims had been put on “drug watch lists” by local officials and then visited by police at their homes, which often ends in a deadly shooting that officers claim was self-defence. But details in police reports on the incidents cast doubt on their own version of events, the UN office said, citing an example of two handguns which each reappeared at five different crime scenes.

“Despite credible allegation­s of widespread and systematic extrajudic­ial killings in the context of the campaign against illegal drugs, there has been near impunity for such violations,” it said.

The UN office called for “independen­t, impartial, credible investigat­ions into all allegation­s of serious violations of human rights and internatio­nal humanitari­an law” after the Philippine­s’ failure to ensure accountabi­lity.

Its report will be presented this month to the UN Human Rights Council, which requested the review of the crackdown last year.

Duterte, who fiercely defends the drug war against internatio­nal criticism, lashed out against the move, even suspending for a time negotiatio­ns of loans and grants with countries that backed the report.

The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency says officers have killed about 5,600 suspects in official operations.

But watchdogs say the true toll is at least three times higher, including killing done by masked gunmen on motorcycle­s.

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court also launched a preliminar­y examinatio­n of the drug war in 2018, which would determine if it opens a full-blown investigat­ion.

Despite the thousands of deadly shootings, police have only been convicted for the 2017 killing of 17-year-old Kian delos Santos.

“This outcome owes much to the availabili­ty of CCTV footage and public outrage following the murder,” the UN report noted. —

 ?? REUTERS / ERIK DE CASTRO ?? STARK REMINDER: Activists wore hoods, depicting families of victims killed in President Rodrigo Duterte's drug war, in Manila, Philippine­s, in 2018.
REUTERS / ERIK DE CASTRO STARK REMINDER: Activists wore hoods, depicting families of victims killed in President Rodrigo Duterte's drug war, in Manila, Philippine­s, in 2018.

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