Philippines | US concerned about extrajudicial killings

Police cars block a street as they enforce an overnight curfew for minors in Manila

Police cars block a street as they enforce an overnight curfew for minors in Manila

The U.S. government has expressed concern over extrajudicial killings of suspected drug dealers and users in a bloody crackdown overseen by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and urged his government to ensure law enforcement efforts comply with human rights obligations.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Elizabeth Trudeau yesterday [Macau time] also criticized recent remarks by Duterte about the U.S. ambassador in Manila and said Philippine officials have been asked to clarify them.
The president recently referred to U.S. Ambassador Philip Goldberg with a profanity and accused him of meddling in the Philippine elections.
Duterte has had an uneasy relationship with America and has said he would chart a foreign policy that is not dependent on the U.S., his country’s longtime treaty ally. Relatedly, Duterte has tried to repair relations with China that have been strained over escalating disputes in the South China Sea.
The drug crackdown has left more than 400 suspected dealers and pushers dead and more than 4,400 arrested since Duterte took office on June 30. Nearly 600,000 people have surrendered to authorities, hoping to avoid getting killed. The arrests have further overwhelmed the country’s mostly rundown and already-­overcrowded jails.
“We are concerned by these detentions, as well as the extrajudicial killing of individuals suspected to be involved in drug activity in the Philippines,” Trudeau said. We strongly urge the Philippines to ensure its law enforcement efforts comply with its human rights obligations.”
“We believe in rule of law. We believe in due process. We believe in respect for universal human rights. We believe, fundamentally, that those aspects ensure and promote long-term security,” she said.
Roman Catholic church leaders and human rights groups in the Philippines have also expressed alarm over the widespread killings in reported gunbattles with police or still-unexplained deaths of drugs suspects, some of whom were abandoned with cardboard messages warning the public to stay away from illegal drugs or they would die next.
Several of the slain drugs suspects were killed by motorcycle-riding gunmen in recent attacks similar to those carried out by the so-called “death squads,” which were blamed for years of killings in southern Davao city while Duterte was its longtime mayor.
Trudeau also criticized Duterte for “inappropriate comments” on Goldberg.
“We’ve seen those inappropriate comments made about Ambassador Goldberg. He’s a multi-time ambassador, one of our most senior U.S. diplomats,” she said. “We have asked the Philippine charge to come into the State Department to clarify those remarks.”
In a speech before army troops on Friday in the central Philippines, Duterte narrated a lunch meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at the presidential palace in Manila last month. Duterte said Kerry, who offered more than USD30 million in aid for law enforcement training, was “OK” but he criticized Goldberg.
“I had a feud with his ambassador, his gay ambassador. Son of a bitch, I’m annoyed with the guy. He meddled in the elections, giving statements here and there. He wasn’t supposed to do that,” Duterte said without giving details.
During the presidential campaign, the Australian ambassador in Manila criticized a joke by Duterte, who said he “should have been first” in line to rape Australian missionary, who was gang raped and killed during a jail riot in 1989. Goldberg expressed support to the statement of his Australian counterpart.
Duterte reacted by asking the two ambassadors to “shut up.” Jim Gomez, Manila, AP

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