Philippines' Duterte says police can kill
'idiots' who resist arrest
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[August 28, 2017]
MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine
President Rodrigo Duterte told police on Monday they could kill "idiots"
who violently resist arrest, two days after hundreds of people turned
the funeral of a slain teenager into a protest against his deadly war on
drugs.
Duterte met the parents of the schoolboy, 17-year-old Kian Loyd delos
Santos, at the presidential palace in Manila on Monday, to assure them
their son's case would be handled fairly.
Delos Santos' mother, Lorenza, said she was confident the president
would help quickly resolve the case, while the father, Saldy, said he no
longer feared for their lives and felt reassured by the meeting.
"He promised he would not allow those who have committed wrong to go
unpunished," the mother said in an interview posted online by Duterte's
communications office on a Facebook page after the meeting.
Duterte unleashed the anti-drugs war after taking office in June last
year following an election campaign in which he vowed to use deadly
force to wipe out crime and drugs.
Thousands of people have been killed and the violence has been
criticized by much of the international community.
Domestic opposition has been largely muted but the killing of delos
Santos by anti-drugs officers on Aug. 16 has sparked rare public
outrage.
More than 1,000 people, including nuns, priests and hundreds of
children, joined his funeral procession on Saturday, turning the march
into one of the biggest protests yet against Duterte's anti-drugs
campaign.
Earlier, Duterte broke off midway through a prepared speech at the
Hero's Cemetery on the outskirts of Manila and addressed impromptu
comments to Jovie Espenido, the police chief of a town in the south
where the mayor was killed in an anti-drugs raid.
"Your duty requires you to overcome the resistance of the person you are
arresting ... (if) he resists, and it is a violent one ... you are free
to kill the idiots, that is my order to you," Duterte told the police
officer.
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Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte greets Lorenza de los Santos
and husband Saldy, parents of 17-year-old high school student Kian
Delos Santos, who was killed recently in police raid in line with
the war on drug, during their visit at Malacanang presidential
complex in metro Manila, Philippines August 28, 2017. Malacanang
Presidential Palace/Handout via Reuters
Duterte added that "murder and homicide and unlawful killings" were not
allowed and that police had to uphold the rule of law while carrying out
their duties.
Delos Santos was dragged by plain-clothes policemen to a dark,
trash-filled alley in Manila before he was shot in the head and left
next to a pigsty, according to witnesses whose accounts appeared to be
backed up by CCTV footage.
Police say they acted in self defense after delos Santos opened fire on
them, and Duterte's spokesman and the justice minister have described
the killing of the teenager as an "isolated" case.
U.N. special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings, Agnes Callamard,
described the killing of delos Santos as "murder" in a tweet on Aug. 25,
earning the ire of Duterte who in a separate speech on Monday called her
"son of a bitch" and "stupid".
"She should not threaten me," Duterte said as he challenged Callamard to
visit and see the situation in the Philippines.
A planned visit by Callamard in December was canceled because she
refused to accept Duterte’s conditions that she must hold a debate with
him. She turned up in unofficial capacity in May to address an academic
conference on human rights.
(Reporting by Karen Lema; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan, Robert Birsel)
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