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Rodrigo Duterte
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Amnesty warns of crimes against humanity in the Philippines

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A handout photo made available by the Presidential Photographers Division (PPD) shows Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte (5-R) posing for photographs with his newly promoted military generals during their oath-taking ceremony inside the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila. Photo: EPA
Agence France-Presse

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 or selling drugs,” Rawya Rageh, a senior crisis adviser for Amnesty, told AFP.

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“Our investigation shows that this wave of extrajudicial killings has been widespread, deliberate and systematic, and therefore may amount to crimes against humanity.”

Among a litany of alleged crimes, Amnesty accused police of shooting dead defenceless people, fabricating evidence, paying assassins to murder drug addicts and stealing from those they killed or the victims’ relatives.

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