The Philippines independent human rights watchdog said Thursday it
will investigate President Rodrigo Duterte’s admission he killed three
criminals years ago, after the United Nation’s rights chief called for a
murder probe.
Duterte, who is waging an anti-drugs war that has left thousands
dead, said last week that he helped police kill three suspected
kidnappers early in the first of his several terms as mayor of the
southern city of Davao.
UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said Tuesday that Duterte’s
killings, by his own admission, “clearly constitute murder” and
Philippine judicial authorities must launch an investigation.
Commission on Human
Rights chief Jose Gascon said he has formed a team of investigators to
look into the matter, even as Duterte’s spokesman Ernesto Abella
dismissed the UN call as mere “opinion”.
“Law enforcement agencies… must investigate as a matter of course any
information that suggests that a crime may have been committed with the
view to ensuring that perpetrators are ultimately held accountable
should the evidence warrant it,” Gascon said in a statement.
The commission is an independent government body that prosecutes law
enforcers or other officials who commit torture, extrajudicial killings
or violate Filipinos’ constitutional rights.
The commission had investigated then Davao mayor Duterte over
allegations he ran death squads that killed more than a thousand petty
criminals there.
Duterte has variously denied or confirmed the allegations. The
commission did not file any criminal charges after completing its
inquiry.
Gascon said his agency has “reconstituted a team to further
investigate (Davao death squads) to look into the new revelations and
public admissions that may shed light on our previous findings.”
“The team will look into any matter that may further shed light on
the killings in Davao that was the subject matter of our previous
investigation.”
Duterte easily won presidential elections in May largely on a promise
to eradicate illegal drugs in society by by launching an unprecedented
campaign in which tens of thousands of people would be killed.
More than 5,300 people have died since he took office in late June,
including 2,124 at the hands of police. The commission has said it is
investigating several cases where police were responsible.
Duterte insists police have not violated any law in killing drug suspects.
On Wednesday Abella said Duterte’s admission about the killing of
three people referred to “legitimate police action” but did not address
the fact the then mayor was not a police officer.
Duterte has said he routinely carried a gun during his early years as
mayor of Davao to protect himself from crime. He has not said if the
weapon used in the ambush was licensed.
AFP
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