Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jul 2019 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Jake Maxwell Watts U.N. SEEKS PROBE ON DUTERTE'S DRUG WAR The United Nations Human Rights Council voted to launch an investigation into the alleged killings of tens of thousands of Filipinos by police in a yearslong drug war-a rare international rebuke of Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who started the campaign against narcotics. The vote passed 18 to 14 on Thursday at a meeting of the council in Geneva. The Philippines and China, both among the council's 47 members, voted against it. The remaining 15 members abstained. The resolution calls on the Philippines to carry out impartial investigations into alleged extrajudicial killings and to cooperate with U.N. representatives assigned to prepare a report on the human-rights situation in the Philippines. The report would need to be presented to the council for action in June 2020. The Philippines rejected the outcome and warned of consequences for states who backed it. Philippine officials had previously dismissed the resolution as an attempt to interfere with the country's sovereignty and denied that any deaths in the drug war were state-sponsored. Before the vote, the country's foreign secretary, Teodoro Locsin Jr., said on Twitter that if the resolution passes, "that means bonuses for everyone who worked for it-for the drug cartels." Rights groups said the resolution would call attention to the thousands of killings that have continued unabated. "The resolution is basically telling the whole world and the Philippines that the U.N. has the mandate to investigate," said Wilnor Papa, a human-rights officer at Amnesty International in the Philippines, which had pushed for the resolution. "This is something that the families of victims are going to be holding on to." Manila says nearly 5,400 "drug personalities" have died since Mr. Duterte took office in mid-2016 on a tough law-and-order platform he said was necessary to rid the Philippines of widespread addiction to methamphetamine. Activists say the actual death toll is far higher when killings by alleged vigilantes or undercover police officers are included. The police deny executing drug suspects and say death toll statistics from human-rights groups are fabricated. The government says both Mr. Duterte and its war on drugs have support among the vast majority of Filipinos. Police officers have been convicted in just one killing related to the drug war, the death of a 17-year-old who was killed while kneeling in a Manila back alley. The U.N. is the second international body to probe the drug war. Last year the International Criminal Court, which operates independently, launched an examination into alleged crimes against humanity. Mr. Duterte responded by withdrawing the Philippines' membership from the court, which he said was being used as a political tool to unfairly target him. Opponents of Mr. Duterte say he has systematically sidelined the country's legal system and failed to prosecute cases of blatant police abuse. Instead, they say, the government has jailed critics on politically motivated charges, threatened journalists who reported on the drug war and deported or verbally slandered critics. Spokesmen for Mr. Duterte say the president respects the rule of law and errant officers will be prosecuted. They deny the government has unfairly targeted critics and reporters. The resolution adopted on Thursday expressed concern that Human Rights Council representatives had also faced threats, intimidation and personal attacks. Mr. Duterte has clashed repeatedly with Agnes Callamard, the U.N.'s special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings. "If you investigate me," he said during a speech in 2017, "I'll slap you." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt