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Amnesty warns of crimes against humanity in Philippines | INQUIRER.net
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.
Philippines: Police ‘Drug War’ Killings Need Independent Probe | Human Rights Watch
The United Nations should lead an independent international investigation into alleged unlawful killings by the Philippine police linked to President Rodrigo Duterte’s abusive “War on Drugs,” Human Rights Watch said today. On January 30, 2017, Philippine National Police Director-General Ronald dela Rosa declared a pause in anti-drug operations for “internal cleansing” following revelations this month of the alleged brutal killing of a South Korean businessman by anti-drug police.
Since July 1, more than 7,000 Filipinos have been killed in Duterte’s anti-drug campaign
U.N. special rapporteur Agnes Callamard welcomes suspension of PH drug war, but seeks probe - CNN Philippines
United Nations Special Rapporteur Agnes Callamard welcomed the government's move to stop the war on drugs.
But she said the probe on extrajudicial killings shouldn't stop just because the drug war took a back seat.
"A pause in the war on drugs is welcomed. It must include investigation of all unlawful death," Callamard posted on her Twitter account on Tuesday.
She also sought for accountability from those behind drug-related killings.