Bangkok Post

Police say not all killings drug-related

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MANILA: The Philippine­s’ national police chief said yesterday that about 1,900 people had been killed during a crackdown on illegal drugs, which began seven weeks ago when President Rodrigo Duterte took power, but about 40 were not drug-related.

The number provided by Director-General Ronaldo Dela Rosa at a Senate hearing was higher than the 1,800 deaths he gave at the hearing on Monday. He gave no explanatio­n for the higher number but said the figures were updated.

It means that on average, 35 people have been killed each day since Mr Duterte came to power.

Mr Dela Rosa said about 750 of the dead were killed in police operations against drug peddlers. The other deaths were being investigat­ed, he said. “Not all deaths under investigat­ion are drug-related,” he said, adding that 40 killings were known to be due to enmity or robbery.

Nearly 700,000 drug users and drug peddlers have turned themselves in to escape the crackdown, Mr Dela Rosa said. He said there was a decrease in overall crime, although murders and homicides had increased.

Mr Duterte, nicknamed “the Punisher”, was voted to power promising to wipe out drugs and warning trafficker­s they risked death if they did not mend their ways.

The inquiry is being conducted by a staunch critic of the president, Sen Leila de Lima, who has summoned top police and anti-narcotics officials to explain the “unpreceden­ted” rise in the body count.

Mr Duterte responded by warning legislator­s not to interfere with his campaign, saying they could be killed if they blocked efforts aimed at improving the country.

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