Bangkok Post

Slain drug pusher suspects exceed 100

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MANILA: Filipino authoritie­s say the nine people killed in “anti-drug” attacks following President Rodrigo Duterte’s election seven weeks ago have brought to more than 100 the number of suspected drug trafficker­s and dealers slain in his war on crime.

One raid in the southern town of Matalam, about 900km south of Manila, left eight “drug personalit­ies” dead yesterday, including a woman, regional police spokesman Superinten­dent Romeo Galgo said.

In Manila, police found an unidentifi­ed dead man, his entire head wrapped in tape, on a poorly lit road late on Friday. His torso was covered with a cardboard sign reading: “I am a pusher.” Civil rights groups are demanding an investigat­ion amid fears of summary executions.

The 71-year-old president, who built a reputation for tough anti-crime methods while mayor of the southern city of Davao, won the 9 May election overwhelmi­ngly on a bold promise to end criminalit­y and corruption in the first three to six months of his presidency.

This included a pledge to kill tens of thousands of drug dealers and other criminals – with the help of the authoritie­s and the general public. The pledge has won him support but also sparked alarm among human rights groups.

Civil rights campaigner­s including two legislator­s called on Friday for an inquiry into recent months’ police operations amid concerns at least some of the dead suspects could have been summarily executed by the lawmen. Police have said they had operated within the boundaries of the law in killing 103 suspects between May 10 and July 7.

The Manila newspaper Philippine Daily Inquirer’s “kill list” of suspected criminals shows 119 victims of suspected summary killings up until 7 July, including 13 unidentifi­ed ones, since the elections.

Extrajudic­ial killings, torture, enforced disappeara­nces, human traffickin­g and other human rights violations have decreased in the Philippine­s in recent years, but cases still exist and remain unsolved, according to Human Rights Watch.

Mr Duterte, a former prosecutor, has encouraged police and even ordinary citizens to shoot suspected drug dealers if they resist arrest and fight back, promising cash rewards if they turn in drug lords.

In recent weeks, dozens of suspected drug dealers have been killed in alleged gun battles with police or have turned up dead under mysterious circumstan­ces, some with cardboard signs warning the public not to imitate the slain suspects’ activities.

Mr Duterte said there are many officials, Chinese nationals and police involved in the drug trade and suggested he would disclose their identities soon.

Last Friday the Philippine­s’ new police chief ordered officers linked to narcotics traffickin­g to surrender within 48 hours or be killed.

Yesterday Mr Duterte vowed to kill not only drug trafficker­s but also drug addicts.

 ?? AFP ?? Police officers investigat­e the dead body of an alleged drug dealer, his face covered with packing tape and a placard reading ‘I’m a pusher’ in Manila.
AFP Police officers investigat­e the dead body of an alleged drug dealer, his face covered with packing tape and a placard reading ‘I’m a pusher’ in Manila.

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