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Is anti-drug strongman of the philippines in bed with narco gangs?

poledriver

Bluelighter
Joined
Jul 21, 2005
Messages
11,543
IS ANTI-DRUG STRONGMAN OF THE PHILIPPINES IN BED WITH NARCO GANGS?

Is it really possible that Philippine President Rodirgo Duterte—who has unleashed a “War on Drugs,” which has now reached the point of mass murder, and used charges of narco-corruption to lock up his political opponents—is himself mixed up in the drug trade?

With the Philippine Senate now launching multiple investigations into the drug-related violence, charges of involvement in the narco trade have actually reached some of Duterte’s closest family members.

One Senate panel has called on vice mayor Paolo Duterte of Davao City and his brother-in-law Manases Carpio to appear before its hearing on the smuggling of a massive shipment of “shabu” (crystal meth) into the country. The vice mayor is a son of President Duterte, and the city where he serves is the same where the elder Duterte ruled for years as mayor and (rights groups charge) first began unleashing death-squad terror on local low-level drug dealers and users.

Presidential son-in-law Carpio said the pair will attend the upcoming hearing.

Carpio and vice mayor Duterte are accused by lawmakers of being behind the so-called “Davao Group” that is said to facilitate smuggling throughout the southern port city, including the 605 kilograms of shabu brought in from China in May. Acting on a tip from Chinese authorities, police eventually tracked down the shipment to a warehouse in the Manila area, opening the scandal, which is now making headlines in the Philippines.

There has been growing speculation that Duterte’s crackdown really masks a struggle for control of the Philippines’ narco trade. Now, for the first time, a formal invesitgation is touching on evidence to this effect.

Senate hearings have already opened into a wave of bloody drug raids in the Manila metropolitan area last month, in which police killed 96 people over the course of a week—the deadliest week of the Duterte presidency so far.

Especially drawing outrage is the police slaying of Kian Delos Santos, a 17-year-old high school student, in the working-class suburb of Caloocan City. Police claim the killing was in self-defense, but video footage and eyewitnesses have called this into question.

The killing has also drawn international attention.

“Kian’s death has rightly sparked a national outcry and public trust in the police is at an all-time low. The only way to address this is for the Philippines authorities to end all deadly drug operations, and return to an approach anchored on due process and rule of law,” said James Gomez, Amnesty International’s director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

UN Special Rapporteur for extrajudicial executions Agnes Callamard was even more forthright.

“Yes, President Duterte, this is murder,” she stated. “All unlawful deaths must be investigated.”

Cont -

http://hightimes.com/news/is-anti-drug-strongman-of-the-philippines-in-bed-with-narco-gangs/
 


It's funny reading the Duterte fans support comments, some of them get so worked up over anyone criticizing the guy.
 
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i wouldn't be surprised if this were true.
the man is a fucking butcher. corrupt to the core. absolute scum of the earth.

It's funny reading the Duterte fans support comments, some of them get so worked up over anyone criticizing the the guy.

sounds like trump fans.
supporting morally bankrupt crooks is an emotional business :\
these sorts of tyrants win their support through crazy scapegoating projects, and it's a shame how successful these kinds of demagogues can be at winning people over by appealing to - and stoking - their fear and prejudices.
 
Family of teenager killed in war on drugs seeks justice

Family of teenager killed in war on drugs seeks justice
Over the past year, thousands of people have been killed in the Philippines as part of President Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs. Three weeks ago, 17-year-old Kian delos Santos was shot dead after being picked up by plain-clothes police near his home. His death has sparked protests and started to change the tide of public opinion. Ginny Stein reports from Manila, and a warning, this story contains images that may be distressing to some viewers.

Video -

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-06/family-of-teenager-killed-in-war-on-drugs-seeks/8879928
 
Rodrigo Duterte: Family of Kian delos Santos seeks justice for son killed in deadly war on drugs

In reality, Kian delos Santos's death is no more remarkable or tragic than the deaths of the thousands of other people who have been gunned down in the Philippines in the past year — victims of President Rodrigo Duterte's so-called war on drugs.

What makes the 17-year-old's death unusual is the fact that the moments leading up to it were filmed on a CCTV camera.

Kian was dragged off by police in the evening of August 16, from near the front of his home.

The three police officers involved claimed Kian pulled a gun on them, but witnesses say it was the police who tried to coerce the teenager to take their gun and run.

In the congested and impoverished community of Caloocan, someone is always watching — but it is also a community wired up with CCTV cameras.

Now, for the first time, camera footage released by the community has contradicted the official story.

The footage shows Kian being taken away by two policemen — helping to identify his abductors, emboldening both witnesses and his family to speak out.

President Rodrigo Duterte's hardline approach to stamping out drugs is creating a treatment crisis in the Philippines, hitting treatment centres and prisons hard as they struggle to cope with the numbers.

Mr Duterte has called the "unlawful" killing of Kian delos Santos an isolated case.

But that is far from the truth.

This government-sponsored war on drugs has claimed the lives of many thousands of Filipinos — mostly disadvantaged people, from poorer areas.

The official toll, according to the Philippines' Drug Enforcement Agency, is 3,451, but there may have been as many as 8,000 further other drug-related killings in the past year, carried out by suspected vigilantes and rogue police officers.

But the teenagers' death has pricked the conscience of a nation that has grown complacent to the killing of suspected drug users.

Cont -

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-...in-crossfire-of-dutertes-war-on-drugs/8877296
 
Dirterte,i Hope You die the worst possible way you
Son of a turd.
Sounds like what the thais did few years ago.
Gladly put a bullet in his insane membrane
What an absolute sub-human,HOPE he catches a daisycutter in the groin
 
This is the exact plot to the movie Traffic. I think he is almost certainly mixed up in the drug trade.
 
Rodrigo Duterte labelled 'sociopath' as opponents join forces on martial law anniversary

"People are being killed on the mere suspicion that they are drug addicts or drug carriers."

Opponents of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's ruthless war on drugs — which has claimed the lives of thousands of men, women and children — are finally joining forces.

And from inside the walls of a VIP detention facility in Manila, one critic has gone so far as to call him a "beast" and a "sociopath".

Thousands of people have been gunned down in the state-sanctioned, year-long crackdown, primarily poor Filipinos.

The 45th anniversary of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos's declaration of martial law has become a rallying point, with a national day of protest declared.

But speaking out about human rights violations comes at a price.

Political opponents of the President have been silenced, or, as in the case of the former chair of the Commission on Human Rights, detained — on charges she claims are trumped up.

Last year, the President warned Senator Leila de Lima she would "rot in jail".

Not long after he issued that warning, she was arrested and charged with drug trafficking. She's accused of aiding the illegal drug trade inside a national jail when she was justice secretary.

Many believe she was framed.

Senator de Lima is now in a special detention facility at Camp Crame, the national police headquarters in Manila, which under Marcos was a major detention facility.

Cont -

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-...nd-together-against-drug-war-killings/8965160
 
Let's not forget that Trump praised this murderer
 
What exactly does this have to do with trump?

Wanna know one thing Trump, his supporters, and his haters ALL have in common? They all think the whole world revolves around him.
 
What exactly does this have to do with trump?

Wanna know one thing Trump, his supporters, and his haters ALL have in common? They all think the whole world revolves around him.
Well that's kind of what happens when you are the leader of the world's sole super power.
 
Trump heaped lavish praise on Duterte's "war on drugs" bloodbath.

While the rest of the world's leaders condemned an atrocity in which thousands of alleged drug users were murdered extrajudiciously on the streets by cops and death squads, trump made a point of praising it and saying he's "doing great job".

Donald Trump has told Rodrigo Duterte that he is “doing a great job” despite knowing about the Philippine president’s controversial war on drugs.

The US president’s invitation to Duterte to visit him at the White House unleashed a storm of criticism in Washington because of the drugs campaign, which has killed thousands of people over the past 10 months.


That's the link.

Also, this was part of an obvious shift in US foreign policy that trump has enacted; many of the Western democracies that are traditionally strong US allies have been pushed away, alienated and trump has clashed with them (australia, canada, germany, etc) - all the while embracing oligarchies like russia and authoritarian butchers like duterte in the Philippines.

To some observers, that appeared to be anything but a casual coincidence.
 
Well that's kind of what happens when you are the leader of the world's sole super power.

That doesn't mean we need to find some excuse to bitch about trump in EVERY discussion though.

I hate trump too but I that's all the more reason I don't like it when someone finds some justification to bring him in to a discussion when there wasn't any reason too.
 
i'm sick of hearing about him too, but it's the way conversations flow sometimes.

Trump is tainted by his association with Duterte IMO, and especially by his praise of the guy, and his mass murder of people accused of being drug users.

And duterte has fanatical supporters, as poledriver noted.

They're both crooks, they're both massive hypocrites...i don't really see the harm in pointing out the similiarities between the two.

Considering trump's (disturbing) influence in world affairs, i don't really think it is unreasonable to point out his links and similarities to full-blown authoritarian dictators like duterte.

There is also the irony and hypocrisy of trump's hard line on countries like iran.

Trump's supporters were keen to talk up his apparent isolationism and disengagement from world affairs - until that turned out to be yet another of his lies.
 
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