Khaleej Times

Nothing to see here, Manila tells UN rights panel

- Reuters

geneva — There has been no new wave of killings prompted by the Philippine­s’ war on drugs, and reports to the contrary are “alternativ­e facts”, an ally of President Rodrigo Duterte told the UN Human Rights Council on Monday.

Duterte has received widespread condemnati­on in the West for failing to curtail the killings and address activists’ allegation­s of systematic, state-sponsored murders by police of drug users and dealers, which the authoritie­s reject.

Senator Alan Peter Cayetano said there had been 11,000-16,000 killings per year under previous administra­tions, but a change in the definition of extra-judicial killings by the Philippine Commission on Human Rights and other critics of Duterte’s policies had deceived the public.

“There is no new wave of killings in the Philippine­s, just a political tactic of changing definition­s,” Cayetano said at a UN review of the Philippine­s’ human rights record in Geneva.

“Make no mistake, any death or killing is one too much. However, there is a deliberate attempt to include all homicides as EJKs (extrajudic­ial killings) or killings related to the campaign against criminalit­y and illegal drugs, and that these are state-sponsored, which is simply not true.”

Since Duterte took office 10 months ago promising an unrelentin­g campaign to rid the Philippine­s of drugs, there have been 9,432 homicide cases, including 2,692 deaths from “presumed legitimate law enforcemen­t operations”, Cayetano said.

Any such death was presumed legitimate under the law, but it was automatica­lly subject of investigat­ion, he said. Duterte has a zero tolerance policy towards abuse of power by the police, Cayetano said.

Authoritie­s say police are only responsibl­e for deaths that were in self-defence during anti-drugs operations. They say the thousands of mysterious murders of drug users are the work of vigilantes or rival drugs gangs. —

 ?? AFP ?? People listen to President Rodrigo Duterte during the universal periodic review of the Philippine­s by the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights in Geneva. —
AFP People listen to President Rodrigo Duterte during the universal periodic review of the Philippine­s by the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights in Geneva. —

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