Duterte's Drug War in the Phillipines

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Philippine police may have committed crimes against humanity by killing thousands of alleged drug offenders or paying others to murder as part of President Rodrigo Duterte's drug war, Amnesty International said Wednesday.

An Amnesty report, which followed an in-depth investigation into the drug war, also outlined what it said were other widespread police crimes aside from extrajudicial killings that mainly targeted the poor.

"Acting on orders from the very top, policemen and unknown killers have been targeting anybody remotely suspected of using of selling drugs," Rawya Rageh, a senior crisis adviser for Amnesty, told AFP.

"Our investigation shows that this wave of extrajudicial killings has been widespread, deliberate and systematic, and therefore may amount to crimes against humanity."

Among a litany of alleged crimes, Amnesty accused police of shooting dead defenceless people, fabricating evidence, paying assassins to murder drug addicts and stealing from those they killed or the victims' relatives.

It also said police were being paid by their superiors to kill, and documented victims as young as eight years old.

"The police are behaving like the criminal underworld that they are supposed to be enforcing the law against," the report said.

Duterte won presidential elections last year after promising during the campaign to eradicate drugs in society within six months by killing tens of thousands of people.

- 'Murderous war on poor' -

On one occasion Duterte vowed that 100,000 people would be killed and so many bodies would be dumped in Manila Bay that the fish there would grow fat from feeding on them.

Duterte launched his crackdown immediately upon taking office seven months ago.

Since then, police have reported killing 2,555 people while nearly 4,000 others have died in unexplained circumstances, according to official figures.

As president, Duterte has repeatedly urged police to kill drug users as well as traffickers.

Duterte said in December he had personally killed people when he was mayor of a southern city to set an example for police.

Three months earlier he said he would be "happy to slaughter" three million drug addicts, and likened his campaign to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler's efforts to exterminate Jews in Europe.

The Amnesty report said Duterte had incited the police to carry out a murderous war on the poor, and warned that the International Criminal Court would need to start investigating unless Philippine authorities did not stop it soon.

"The police killings are driven by pressures from the top, including an order to 'neutralise' alleged drug offenders, as well as financial incentives. They have created an informal economy of death," the report said.

Amnesty said it investigated the deaths of 59 people, and found the majority of them were extrajudicial killings.

- 'I will surrender, sir' -

In a number of cases witnesses to killings or victims' relatives told Amnesty that the person shot dead was unarmed and had not resisted arrest. Police also planted drugs and weapons that they later "seized" as evidence, Amnesty said.

"I will surrender, I will surrender, sir," Gener Rondina, 38, told police after they broke into his home in the central city of Cebu, a witness told Amnesty.

Rondina then knelt and raised his arms behind his head but police then shot him dead, Amnesty said, citing the witness.

When family members were allowed into the house six hours after Gener was shot, valuables including a laptop, watch and money were missing, according to Amnesty.

Police alleged Rondina had a gun and they acted in self defence, and the method of killing as well as the justification was typical of the drug war, Amnesty said.

Amnesty also warned that the lists of drug suspects that police were using to target people were deeply flawed.

This was partly because many people were placed on the lists simply after being reported by fellow community members, without any further investigation, according to Amnesty.

Duterte had until this week been unrepentant in response to criticism of his drug war and the police, insisting he was acting within the law but that extreme measures must be taken to stop the Philippines from becoming a narco state.

After a series of scandals emerged over the past month in which police were caught committing murder, kidnapping, extortion and robbery, Duterte this week ordered them to stop all activities related to the drug war.

He described the police force as "corrupt to the core" and vowed to cleanse it.

But he also vowed the drug war would continue until the last day of his term, in 2022.

He said police would return to the drug war after he reorganised the force and, in the meantime, the military would become more involved.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/amnesty-warns-crimes-against-humanity-philippines-161003405.html

See Also: Duterte: Trump says Philippines tackling drug problem 'the right way' - CNNPolitics.com
 
Duterte won presidential elections last year after promising during the campaign to eradicate drugs in society within six months by killing tens of thousands of people.

Ain't Democracy great?
 
Context. These people live in a different realm than us. I only know what i just read. I see he is taking a hard stance on something that is out of control, but when his enforcers are found corrupt he continues but in a different way.

I likin it to sadaam and iraq. Yes the world went after him for his genocidal show of force to keep his country in line. Is iraq better now or did terrorism grow with other factions gaining power thanks to failed democracy.

I feel some countries need a dictaror to run. And that dictator cant be a punk bitch.

That being said.. Dick tator is such a funny word. A spicy little nugget plucked from the nether regions.
 
As history has shown, it never works out well for the dictator... Or the dictated.
Maybe that is subjective. I mean how many years does a dictator have to go and what has to be achieved to claim success.. Etc etc

Same can be said about our democratic leaders lol.. Have some of them really done well
 
Same can be said about our democratic leaders lol.. Have some of them really done well

Well, they haven't created death squads to kill people in the street... So, kind of an apples to oranges comparison there.




"The incentive for the bloodshed: money.


As one officer with an anti-illegal drugs unit in Manila reportedly told the human rights group, police are paid “per head,” between $160 and $300 depending on whether the person killed is a suspected user or dealer.

“We’re paid in cash, secretly, by headquarters,” the officer reportedly said. “There’s no incentive for arresting. We’re not paid anything.”




Source:

Killers Are Paid Up To $300 Per Head In Philippines' Deadly War On Drugs: Report | The Huffington Post
 
Well, they haven't created death squads to kill people in the street...

Or have they? Lets not forget govt security contractors under scrutiny in iraq for killing civilians. Hired by the govt. Aka hired by our president.

Set people on a mission with guns and you'll find corruption.

Im just saying i cant say i know this president of the phillipines is the head of the snake or not. Just as our president is a puppet that takes the fall.

I do agree that there is some wrong doing, aka maybe arrest them, try them and then shoot them when guilty if thats what he wants.. Then he can say he proved their guilt, and took measures he seemed fit and the world will have to judge him on crime and punishment.
 
Lol ignorance. Thread is yours. Peace

Ignorance, huh?

Let's explore that, first you say this article is the first you're reading about this... You only know what you just read.

Then you try to compare what our leaders do in a war zone to what Duterte does to his own people in his own country. Are people dying in Afghanistan the same thing as people dying down the street from you in the US for smoking weed?

You're not sure if he's the "head of the snake" when he based his entire campaign on killing people? He was killing people himself when he was Mayor to set an example. He offers incentives to kill drug addicts and drug dealers but no incentive to arrest them and try them for any actual crime...

I'm the ignorant one, really? Please, continue.
 
Are people dying in Afghanistan the same thing as people dying down the street from you in the US for smoking weed?

It is a sad attribute of human nature that this is not obvious to most people. The answer is yes, and if the killer is willing to murder innocent people in another country, he may very well be willing to do it at home. The only moral difference between Duterte's war on his own people and the wars US Presidents choose overseas is one of scope. That is, the US Presidents tend to have higher body counts.
 
It is a sad attribute of human nature that this is not obvious to most people. The answer is yes, and if the killer is willing to murder innocent people in another country, he may very well be willing to do it at home. The only moral difference between Duterte's war on his own people and the wars US Presidents choose overseas is one of scope. That is, the US Presidents tend to have higher body counts.

Two completely different scenarios, incomparable is an understatement.
 
Two completely different scenarios, incomparable is an understatement.

When is murder not murder? I know, you will say war is different, then give me a million justifications for voluntarily waging war on people who weren't a threat to us. Then you can dehumanize the innocents on the enemy side to justify collateral damage based on the relative safety of dropping bombs. And hey, if we invite the survivors (refugees) home for dinner and a sleep over, it will prove our superior morality and compassion.

Sorry, I really don't get it. I never have.
 
When is murder not murder?

So you're saying that the comparison is the same because people died...?

I'm not saying it's not bullshit either way... But if our leaders are killing drug addicts within our own borders compared to killing people in Iraq, I am baffled by how you'd call it the same thing.
 

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