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Philippine officials turn themselves in after president accuses them of drug ties

slimvictor

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Dozens of Philippine officials turn themselves in after president publicly accuses them of drug ties

Dozens of government officials in the Philippines have surrendered to police after the country’s newly inaugurated president publicly linked them to illegal drugs.

In a televised speech on Sunday, President Rodrigo Duterte, speaking in the southern city of Davao, named 150 officials that he said were involved in the country’s drug trade, including members of congress, police officials, five retired and current generals and at least seven judges, and gave them a 24-hour deadline to surrender to police. Several have turned themselves in, including 18 mayors and 31 police officials, according to police statistics.

"There is no due process in my mouth," Duterte said. "You can't stop me, and I'm not afraid even if you say that I can end up in jail."

For the accused, the stakes are high. Duterte, who took office on June 30, has pledged to rid the country of crime within six months by assassinating thousands of suspected criminals — or at least authorizing the police, military, and others to kill them on his behalf.


Since then, at least 564 people have been killed, according to the Philippine Inquirer’s “Kill List,” a comprehensive resource on the drug war’s death toll. Some were killed by vigilantes, others by military and police. Many were found next to signs reading “pusher” or “I am a drug addict,” their heads wrapped in tape.

Despite its brutality, the crackdown has been enormously popular in the Philippines, which has struggled with endemic drug use for decades. Yet human rights groups, foreign governments, other Filipino politicians and church leaders have cautioned that it could undermine the country’s democratic systems.

cont at
http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/l...te-drugs-politicians-20160808-snap-story.html
 
... yet the most statistically harmful drug (alcohol) remains legal in the Philippines. Duterete is selectively criminalizing and persecuting common and mostly harmless personal choices, then selectively enforcing this against his opponents and political dissidents. How did Duterte get an idea so novel?



 John Ehrlichman said:
The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.

— John Ehrlichman, President Nixon White House Domestic Affairs Advisor (United States), on the War on drugs in a Harper's Magazine interview in 1994
 
The kill list: how the Philippines’ leader is letting people get away with murder

President Rodrigo Duterte is exploiting the rivalry of China and the US to wage a ‘war on drugs’ that is cover for a tide of extrajudicial killings

More than a thousand Filipinos have reportedly been murdered or disappeared as a result of President’s Duterte’s war on drugs – in little more than a month since he took charge.

There is little to suggest that Rodrigo Duterte will change tack – he has plenty of domestic credit in the bank, and foreign governments thus far are ignoring the evidence of a mass tide of extrajudicial killings, despite his overt warnings. Beijing and Washington’s quest for dominance in the South China Sea trumps what Human Rights Watch describes as “government-sanctioned butchery”.

So-called kill lists look to be spiralling out of control, with bodies strewn in the most public of places – including Edsa, the main freeway that runs through the Metro Manila region. The irony is that the freeway was the location for the people power revolution that ousted the Marcos dictatorship in 1986. Bodies bundled up with tape – and labelled “snatcher”, “dealer”, “pusher” or “user” – suggest vigilantes are taking Duterte’s wild promise to eradicate all crime seriously. But the truth of whether the dead were guilty will never be proved, and is barely even questioned. Duterte’s incitement has quickly created a monster, unleashing murderous criminality.

The kill lists are largely the work of the police. Election rhetoric has quickly become policy with executions on the streets. Some reports estimate that 10 people are killed a day , but nothing can be verified: police forces are able to rely on self-defence, avoiding legal accountability even though there is a strong suggestion that innocent people are being caught up in the carnage.

President Duterte speaking last Sunday at the memorial for a soldier killed in an encounter with communist rebels. Photograph: Lean Daval Jr/Reuters
One such case is that of 22-year-old Rowena Tiamson, a choir member whose body was found with hands bound and eyes and mouth sealed. Her desperate parents are pleading to have her corpse tested in an attempt for justice. What could be a mistaken identity is more likely to be a case of the war on drugs becoming a convenient cover for murder. Tiamson was not on her local kill list, the authorities have been forced to admit.

Duterte’s obsession with drugs is putting the internal security of a developing country – already struggling with Islamist and communist insurgencies, and devastating typhoons – at undue risk. Drugs are an issue in the Philippines but only one of many, and Duterte has failed to display any understanding that drug crime is more a symptom of many social problems rather than the cause. Poverty and corruption were rightly on Duterte’s manifesto, yet the drug obsession is blinding him and leading to carnage for a fundamentally flawed ideal.

How these lists are created is anyone’s guess. Duterte claims he has evidence to justify putting mayors, police, judges, and politicians on them. Police corruption is at the heart of the matter – in one breath Duterte denounces the police as corrupt, yet is allowing them to murder without due process, and compile lists of people to kill. The image of a dead Manila rickshaw driver, Michael Siaron, in the arms of his partner will haunt many – but not Duterte, who claimed it was “melodramatic”. The constant stream of images has become almost pornographic, causing tit-for-tat squabbles between supporters and detractors. Siaron’s drug use (though his partner forcefully denies that he was dealing) while pedalling passengers around the packed streets of Manila should offend, or surprise, nobody. Duterte and his supporters must try to understand the human stories of drug users before inciting further murder.

The cost of deals with the superpowers is being paid in blood by bodies labelled guilty with flimsy cardboard signs
Civil society groups are calling on the UN and other authorities to condemn the president, but don’t expect anyone with any more clout than Richard Branson to speak out. The rather grotesque and obvious courting of Duterte by the US and China cannot be overstated and he is likely to continue to exploit his country’s enormous strategic value. Sadly, while a “reset” of the Philippines’ relationships with these allies is long overdue, it would be unlikely to result in fairer terms for Filipinos. Indeed, it could provide cover for murder.

Despite the clash with China over control of the South China Sea, and Manila’s recent legal victory, Sino-Filipino relations are less of a concern than ties with America. US military assistance, particularly in the battle to rid Duterte’s backyard of Mindanao of its complex Muslim insurgency, is seen as central to the US pivot-to-Asia policy. Long mothballed bases are being re-opened throughout the country.

However, some feel that US involvement is only making things worse. For the first time in too long the country is asking itself some important and difficult questions regarding its until now one-sided relationship with the US. But the cost of this debate, and any future arrangements with the superpowers, is being paid in blood by people on the streets, labelled guilty with flimsy cardboard signs.

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...rder-china-united-states-rivalry-war-on-drugs
 
How terrible, I only hope this doesn't take attention away from the drug policy problems in my country.

Another place being worse doesn't make the other countries any better.
 
Yet human rights groups, foreign governments, other Filipino politicians and church leaders have cautioned that it could undermine the country’s democratic systems

Really? You think that endorsing extra judicial executions could undermine democratic systems? By definition it undermines "rule of law" and a person's right to due process, so yeah, I'd say it's a pretty safe bet 8)
 
No matter how popular Duterte is with his supporters, his method of trying to address a pressing social issue in his country has set a dangerous precedent which can be exploited by the worst scumbags to permanently eliminate any form of opposition, be it political, business and/or personal.

Do the citizens of the Philippines not realize that they are all in danger of being falsely accused of drug trafficking and promptly executed? I have absolutely no doubt that it's already taken place.

P.S: I wouldn't be surprised at all if it turns out sooner or later that Duterte is a drug kingpin himself, and that he's ingeniously turned to controversial politicking - a la killing people without due process - in order to eliminate the competition.

Absolute power corrupts absolutely, and no one is permanently immune from its allure.
 
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