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Philippines' Duterte 'not afraid of human rights' in war on drugs

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By AFP

PUBLISHED: 18 July 2016

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said human rights are not a concern in his war on drugs, vowing to ignore due process and comparing himself to former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin.

Duterte's threat came as the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) joined the chorus of groups criticising Duterte's advocacy of killing.

In the latest of a series of tirades, the country's newly elected leader doubled down on a promised campaign of widespread killings and said he wouldn't listen to "bleeding hearts".

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"I will retire with the reputation of Idi Amin," he said in a speech Sunday, referring to the late African ruler whose 1971 - 1979 regime was characterised by large-scale rights abuses that killed tens if not hundreds of thousands of Ugandans.

"I am not afraid of human rights (concerns.) I will not allow my country to go to the dogs," Duterte said, vowing to pardon all abuses committed by security forces.

"Why will I give you a (due) process? I am the president. I don't give you (due) process," he said.

Duterte swept to power on May 9 after pledging to end crime in the Philippines using the same "shoot-to-kill" methods critics say he employed as mayor of the southern city of Davao.

Police on Monday unveiled plans for a large electronic billboard outside the force's Manila headquarters to broadcast a running tally of drugs suspects who have been arrested or "neutralised" -- killed -- during operations.

The billboard will "give everyday people... the accomplishments of their police," community relations chief Senior Superintendent Gilberto Cruz told AFP.

The billboard, which was ordered by Duterte and the police leadership, will likely be completed by September, he added.

In a public statement, the Bangkok office of the ICJ criticised Duterte, saying "there has been a marked increase in the number of deaths of alleged drug dealers from the day you assumed office."

"We are also concerned about your recent statements that appear to be encouraging extra-judicial killings," the non-government organisation of judges and lawyers said.

The group reminded him that the Philippines had passed laws and signed international agreements binding it to work against police abuse, extra-judicial killings and the death penalty which Duterte hopes to restore to the country.

Major TV network ABS-CBN said it had recorded 408 "drug fatalities" between May 10 and July 15, based on police and media reports.

Images of people killed in police anti-drug operations, or corpses found with signs saying things like "I am a drug pusher" have become daily fare in the local newspapers.

A former addict told AFP Monday that he had handed himself into police as part of an official mass drug amnesty event after two acquaintances turned up dead.

"I could be killed. That really scared me," he told AFP.

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Apparently his city is by far the country's safest. So death squads do work it would seem. The issue is whether the ends justify the means or if some actions are just wrong regardless.
 
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