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Rights group says Philippine killings are extrajudicial
MANILA, Philippines –Most of the thousands of killings of poor suspected drug offenders during Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s crackdown appear to be extrajudicial executions and may constitute crimes against humanity, Amnesty International said Wednesday.
The London-based human rights group urged Duterte’s government to adopt an approach that respects human rights in its fight against drugs and crime, and called on the police and judiciary to prosecute officers involved in unlawful killings.
After investigating the deaths of 59 people, the group said it concluded “the vast majority of these killings appear to have been extrajudicial executions.”
It said it interviewed 110 witnesses, relatives of slain suspects, drug users, police officers and even hired killers from November to December.
The group said it is “deeply concerned that the deliberate and widespread killings of alleged drug offenders, which appear to be systematic, planned and organized by the authorities, may constitute crimes against humanity.”
Duterte’s spokesman, Ernie Abella, acknowledged “extrajudicial deaths” have occurred but said they were not state-sanctioned and did not elaborate further. He cited a Senate committee finding that the government has no policy condoning unlawful killings and that the anti-drug campaign was being carried out “within legal processes.”
Duterte has defended his crackdown and says he and his top police officials have authorized law enforcers to open fire only when threatened by suspects.
Police say the deaths of at least 35 policemen and three soldiers prove that suspects have fought back during raids.
More than 7,000 suspected drug sellers or users have been killed since Duterte took office in June, and many were killed in clashes with police. The deaths have alarmed Western governments, including the United States and the European Union.
Amnesty International noted that the deaths have averaged 34 a day.
It said it found in several cases it investigated that “witnesses described alleged drug offenders yelling they would surrender, at times while on their knees or in another compliant position. They were still gunned down.”
It said police officers often appear to have planted evidence and falsified incident reports.
It cited a police officer in Manila as saying that police and hired killers profit from the killings, with some law enforcers getting paid by funeral parlours for each body brought in.
The group said it interviewed two killers who were paid 10,000 pesos ($200) by a police officer for each execution they carried out, adding they gunned down three to four victims a week.
On Monday, National Police chief Director-General Ronald Dela Rosa indefinitely stopped all police anti-drug raids and disbanded police anti-narcotics units after the anti-drug crackdown was used as a cover by a group of rogue officers to kidnap and kill a South Korean man for ransom in a still-unraveling scandal.
The widely publicized scandal prompted Dela Rosa to form a counterintelligence force to cleanse the 170,000-strong police force of criminals and corrupt officers. He has tried to resign twice but Duterte, who has pledged to defend police enforcing his crackdown, has ordered him to stay on.
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court prohibited a group of police officers from entering a slum community to stop them from threatening villagers who have accused the officers of ruthlessly killing four residents in an anti-drug raid.
With the police out of the drug fight, Duterte has asked the military to help out in the campaign, which an opposition senator said amounted to the president exercising his constitutional emergency power to suppress “lawless violence.” Sen. Leila de Lima questioned if Duterte has adequate grounds to harness troops to quell crimes.
The defence department responded Wednesday by asking Duterte’s executive secretary to issue an official order “as a legal basis for our troops to follow.”