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Duterte mocks ‘ice-eating’ Iceland over UN council vote

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July 13,2019

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MANILA—President Duterte took a swipe at Iceland on Friday for spearheading a UN resolution to investigate his bloody war on drugs, saying it was a nation made entirely of ice, with no understanding of his country’s problems.

“What is the problem of Iceland?—Ice only. That is your problem. You have too much ice and there is no clear day and night there,” he said in a rambling speech to corrections department officials.

“So you can understand why there is no crime, no policeman either, and they just go about eating ice,” he said. “They don’t understand the social, economic, political problems of the Philippines.”

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The resolution on the Philippines, led by Iceland, was adopted by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday by a vote of 18 countries in favor and 14 against, with 15 abstentions.

The exact number of dead in President Duterte’s war on drugs is impossible to independently verify. Police say they have killed 6,600 who were armed and fought back during attempts to arrest them, but activists say there may have been as many as 27,000 drug-related killings overall.

‘Bogus news’

Human rights groups say there is a pattern of executions, planted evidence and falsified reports, and a state unwilling to investigate widespread allegations of systematic abuses by police during the three-year-old crackdown. The government rejects that as lies.

Duterte’s spokesperson, Salvador Panelo, said on Friday that Iceland had introduced a resolution “based on false information, bogus news,” and relied on narratives of the President’s opponents and biased media.

He told news channel ANC that Duterte would permit UN investigators to conduct a probe in his country “if he finds the purpose legitimate.”

The President defended his crackdown and said something had to be done because millions of Filipinos were “slaves to a drug called ‘shabu’ (crystal meth).”

“They are inutile,” he added. “If they have no money, they steal, kill. Now if you want to destroy a man or if you want to destroy a family, place one addict in that family. It would be hell for them for all time.”

‘So what’s wrong?’

Referring to frequent criticism that he publicly gave police orders to kill, he said there was nothing wrong with protecting his country.

The President spoke at the 28th anniversary of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) held at Camp Aguinaldo, where he thanked the BJMP for its role in upholding the rule of law.

Duterte again warned that “drugs are flooding the country.”

“So what’s wrong? I am asking the human rights people. Is it wrong to say, ‘if you’ll destroy my country, I will kill you’? Is that a crime for the President-mayor? Or a governor to say that in public?” he asked.

He also said other nations believed “hook, line and sinker” that detained Sen. Leila de Lima, one of the fiercest critics of his war on illegal drugs, was a political prisoner
 
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July 13,2019

View attachment 568951

MANILA—President Duterte took a swipe at Iceland on Friday for spearheading a UN resolution to investigate his bloody war on drugs, saying it was a nation made entirely of ice, with no understanding of his country’s problems.

“What is the problem of Iceland?—Ice only. That is your problem. You have too much ice and there is no clear day and night there,” he said in a rambling speech to corrections department officials.

“So you can understand why there is no crime, no policeman either, and they just go about eating ice,” he said. “They don’t understand the social, economic, political problems of the Philippines.”

View attachment 568950
The resolution on the Philippines, led by Iceland, was adopted by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday by a vote of 18 countries in favor and 14 against, with 15 abstentions.

The exact number of dead in President Duterte’s war on drugs is impossible to independently verify. Police say they have killed 6,600 who were armed and fought back during attempts to arrest them, but activists say there may have been as many as 27,000 drug-related killings overall.

‘Bogus news’

Human rights groups say there is a pattern of executions, planted evidence and falsified reports, and a state unwilling to investigate widespread allegations of systematic abuses by police during the three-year-old crackdown. The government rejects that as lies.

Duterte’s spokesperson, Salvador Panelo, said on Friday that Iceland had introduced a resolution “based on false information, bogus news,” and relied on narratives of the President’s opponents and biased media.

He told news channel ANC that Duterte would permit UN investigators to conduct a probe in his country “if he finds the purpose legitimate.”

The President defended his crackdown and said something had to be done because millions of Filipinos were “slaves to a drug called ‘shabu’ (crystal meth).”

“They are inutile,” he added. “If they have no money, they steal, kill. Now if you want to destroy a man or if you want to destroy a family, place one addict in that family. It would be hell for them for all time.”

‘So what’s wrong?’

Referring to frequent criticism that he publicly gave police orders to kill, he said there was nothing wrong with protecting his country.

The President spoke at the 28th anniversary of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) held at Camp Aguinaldo, where he thanked the BJMP for its role in upholding the rule of law.

Duterte again warned that “drugs are flooding the country.”

“So what’s wrong? I am asking the human rights people. Is it wrong to say, ‘if you’ll destroy my country, I will kill you’? Is that a crime for the President-mayor? Or a governor to say that in public?” he asked.

He also said other nations believed “hook, line and sinker” that detained Sen. Leila de Lima, one of the fiercest critics of his war on illegal drugs, was a political prisoner
President Duterte did right thing for his country. The west are bunch of hypocrites. When will they stop killing world wide?
 
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President Duterte did right thing for his country. The west are bunch of hypocrites. When will they stop killing world wide?
>5k people died & just yesterday a 3 years old just got shot from duterte's drug war. It's a failure period.
 
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>5k people died & just yesterday a 3 years old just got shot from duterte's drug war. It's a failure period.
Where did you come from? You may be misled by propaganda. Do you know how terrible Filipinos live with drugs?
 
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Where did you come from? You may be misled by propaganda. Do you know how terrible Filipinos live with drugs?


Extra judicial killings is not solving the core of problem there, meanwhile the warlord and powerful people who controlled the drug trade in Philippine is free of scotch and harms. Most victims there is smalltime peddler and junkies
 
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Extra judicial killings is not solving the core of problem there, meanwhile the warlord and powerful people who controlled the drug trade in Philippine is free of scotch and harms. Most victims there is smalltime peddler and junkies

I viewed your posts for a while. I knew you will say that. Can you provide a solution instead? If yes, please say it. If not, what's your point?
 
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I viewed your posts for a while. I knew you will say that. Can you provide a solution instead? If yes, please say it. If not, what's your point?

Take an example for what is currently going on in my country , rehab for small times user, heavy punishment for warlord and Drugs leader syndicate leader including capital punishment , put tight recon for border and gates (airport and ports to prevent smugling cases), made a wide campaign against drug abuse.

What Duterte doing right now is not solution but diversion from political and social issues in Philippine as there is rampant corruption, high inequality, ongoing insurgencies and abuse of law including the widespread use of firearms among philippinos population
 
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Take an example for what is currently going on in my country , rehab for small times user, heavy punishment for warlord and Drugs leader syndicate leader including capital punishment , put tight recon for border and gates (airport and ports to prevent smugling cases), made a wide campaign against drug abuse.

What Duterte doing right now is not solution but diversion from political and social issues in Philippine as there is rampant corruption, high inequality, ongoing insurgencies and abuse of law including the widespread use of firearms among philippinos population

Hmm, you knew Philippine has completely efferent political environment from Indonesia. The reason is simple, USA influence and mind colonization. Duterte lack the political support to do systemic reform in Philippine, what he has is just 5 years, and he get the most out of his 5 years.

If you take Philippine political ecosystem into account, there is no way out.
 
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Sotto hits nations backing Iceland human rights resolution

July 13,2019

MANILA, Philippines — Senate President Vicente “Tito” Sotto III advised the Philippine government on Friday to just disregard the “biased” Iceland resolution against the Philippines.

Sotto even branded as “dangerous drugs tolerant” those countries that backed the resolution that allows the United Nations to look into the human-rights situation in the Philippines.

Of the 47 states composing the UNHRC, 18 voted for the approval of the resolution, 14 rejected it while 15 abstained from voting.

READ: Greater scrutiny on PH killings gets UN rights council’s nod

“Those countries supporting the Iceland resolution are probably dangerous drugs tolerant,” Sotto said in a text message when sought for comment on the UNHRC’s adoption of the resolution.

Asked how the government should treat the adopted resolution, the Senate leader said, “Disregard.”

“They are obviously biased. If they are so concerned about human rights, then they should go to Syria,” Sotto added.




Philippines should cut diplomatic relations with Iceland


July 13,2019

MANILA, Philippines — Sen. Imee Marcos said the Philippines should sever ties with Iceland for spearheading a UN resolution compelling an international review of killings under the Duterte administration’s lethal drug war.

The daughter of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos said cutting diplomatic relations with Iceland would “send a strong statement that other countries should not impose their values on us.”

“We are an independent country enforcing its own drug laws to eradicate its own war against the pernicious drug trade,”

“How can these countries point a finger at the Philippines when many of them have legalized abortion and have ignored the right to life of unborn children?” she added.

Voting 18-14 with 15 abstentions, the UN human rights council narrowly approved Thursday a two-page resolution tabled by Iceland.

The text, however, is not seeking an inquiry into the human rights situation in the country but a report—in what activists have described as “a compromise” made to win a majority

Human rights organizations hailed the adoption of the resolution, which they said is crucial for holding the Philippine government accountable for drug war killings.

Police say 6,600 who resisted arrest have been killed since President Rodrigo Duterte launched his deadly narcotics crackdown — a far cry from rights groups’ estimate that pegs drug-related fatalities at 27,000.

Commenting on the UN vote, Duterte — a political ally of the Marcos family — mocked Iceland, saying in a speech Friday that the “ice-eating” Nordic nation does not understand the Philippines’ drug problem.

Separately, Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said the resolution does not represent the will of the council, “much less that of the developing countries who are always the target of such resolutions.”

"The Philippines rejects this resolution," Locsin said, adding a warning that there will be “consequences, far-reaching ones.”

"We will not accept a politically partisan and one-sided resolution, so detached from the truth on the ground,” he continued.

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Never mind those bull$shit as long as you have the support of the people.

Duterte records new personal high satisfaction rating


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MANILA, Philippines — Public satisfaction with President Rodrigo Duterte reached a fresh record high in the second quarter of 2019 despite declines in Metro Manila, the Visayas and Mindanao, according to the latest survey of the Social Weather Stations.

Results of the June 22 to 26 poll showed that 80% of adult Filipinos are satisfied with Duterte’s performance—up by one point from 79% recorded in the first quarter.

Twelve percent said they are satisfied with the performance of the chief executive, while 9% answered they are undecided.

This yielded a net satisfaction rating of +68, classified by SWS as “very good.”

“This is a new personal record-high that surpassed the previous record of ‘very good’ +66 in March 2019 and June 2017,” the polling firm noted.

SWS attributed the two-point increase in Duterte’s net satisfaction rating to the nine-point increase in Luzon from “very good” +56 in March to “very good” +65 in June.

The net satisfaction rating stayed “excellent” in Mindanao at +81 in June, although down by seven points from +88 in March.

It remained “very good” in the Visayas at +66 despite a three-point decline and in Metro Manila at +59 although down by two points.

The president’s net satisfaction rating rose to “excellent” among 25 to 34-year-olds at +72, among 55 years old and older at +70 and among high school graduates at +74. It remained “excellent” among 35 to 44-year-olds.

It stayed “very good” in class E at +68, class D or the masa at +68, in class ABC at +58, among women at +69, among men at +67, among 45 to 54-year-olds and among elementary school graduates at +62.

The survey was conducted two weeks after a Chinese vessel rammed a Filipino fishing boat near Recto Bank and less than a week after Duterte downplayed the incident as a “little maritime accident.”

The survey has sampling error margins of ±3% for national percentages, and ±6% each for Metro Manila, Balance Luzon, the Visayas, and Mindanao.
 
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Lacson nixes UN rights council resolution on PH drug war

MANILA - Sen. Panfilo Lacson on Friday rejected the move of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to adopt a resolution seeking a comprehensive report on the human rights situation in the Philippines, including alleged extrajudicial killings in government's drug war.

During its 41st regular session in Geneva, Switzerland, the rights body voted to adopt the resolution filed by Iceland. Eighteen countries, mostly from Europe, voted in favor of the resolution, while 14, including China, voted against it. Fifteen others abstained.

In a tweet, Lacson said the Philippines has a “functioning” criminal justice system that deals with erring law enforcers and that the government regularly provides funding for the Commission on Human Rights (CHR).


“Obviously, we can manage without the intervention of the UN Human Rights Council,” Lacson said.

Lacson, who headed the Senate committee on public order and dangerous drugs in the last session of Congress, had led legislative investigations into the drug war.

Aside from asking the High Commissioner to prepare a comprehensive report, the resolution also calls on the Philippine government to cooperate with the Office of the High Commissioner and the mechanisms of the Human Rights Council. This includes facilitating country visits and preventing and refraining from all acts of intimidation or retaliation.

The resolution also urges the Philippine government to “take all necessary measures to prevent extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances, to carry out impartial investigations and to hold perpetrators accountable in accordance with international norms and standards, including on due process and the rule of law.”

It also expresses deep concern over allegations of threats, intimidation and personal attacks directed against special procedure mandate holders, including the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples Vicki Tauli-Corpuz and the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary execution Agnes Callamard.

The Philippines rejected the resolution, with Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. warning of "consequences."

CHR: GOV’T SHOULD SHOW IT ADHERES TO ‘UNIVERSAL VALUES’

The CHR, meanwhile, said the Duterte administration should show that it “genuinely adheres to universal values and standards” by cooperating closely with the international community “in ensuring full respect and compliance with the globally accepted norms of human rights.”

In a statement, the rights body said the UNHRC resolution also provides the Philippines an opportunity to improve the country’s human rights situation.

It said as a “constructive partner,” it will be ready to assist the government in any “thorough, transparent, and independent investigations of all alleged violations of human rights in the country.”

“Rather than maintaining acrimony and the hurling of threats of possible consequences… the Philippine Government must open spaces for dialogue with other nations that have expressed their concerns about the human rights situation in the country to show resolve that we can most certainly improve,” it said.

“It must show both the international community and our own people that it is willing and able to hold perpetrators to account, to protect all human rights defenders, to stop the killings, and to end impunity.”

PALACE: DUTERTE WON’T BE COWED BY UNHRC RESOLUTION

Malacañang said the resolution contained "false information and unverified facts and figures,” as it stressed the move of the UNHRC would not weaken the Duterte presidency.

Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo said the resolution was "designed to embarrass" the Philippines on the global stage.

"The resolution demonstrates how the Western powers are scornful of our sovereign exercise of protecting our people from the scourge of prohibited drugs that threaten to destroy the fabric of our society," he said.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr., in a speech read on his behalf during the the UNHRC's 41st regular session, also questioned the validity of the resolution and warned of consequences.

"This resolution was not universally adopted. Therefore, its validity is highly questionable. It does not represent the will of the Council, much less that of the developing countries who are always the target of such resolutions," he said.

"Western countries pushed for this resolution in the confidence that the world has forgotten what they did and what should have been done to them had there been a Human Rights Council. It was pushed with the arrogance that developing countries must not stand up to them even if we can and as we hereby do. There will be consequences," Locsin added.

Rights groups have claimed that tens of thousands have died in the Philippine government's drug war. Police have, meanwhile said, the figure is just at over 6,000 from the start of the Duterte administration in July 2016 until the end of May.

Government has repeatedly denied involvement in summary killings, saying drug suspects slain in police operations had resisted arrest.
 
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Duterte refused to be cannon fodder for Yankee in South China Sea.

His predecessor Benigno Aquino III sold his country for Yankees. Without his mother - Corazon Aquino, 11th President of the Philippines, Benigno Aquino III is nothing.
 
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>5k people died & just yesterday a 3 years old just got shot from duterte's drug war. It's a failure period.
Indonesia have many problems. Why not solve your problems first before poking your nose in another sovereign country's affairs
 
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Extra judicial killings is not solving the core of problem there, meanwhile the warlord and powerful people who controlled the drug trade in Philippine is free of scotch and harms. Most victims there is smalltime peddler and junkies

ASEAN is one of the biggest drugs growing and distributing centres. Your group need to solve the problem. This harms the whole region.
 
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