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Monday, October 17, 2016
Duterte says children killed in Philippines drug war are 'collateral damage'
‘With the policeman and the M16, it’s one burst, brrrr, and [he] hits 1,000 people there,’ explains Philippines president
Paramedics
attend the scene of an extrajudicial killing in Manila in September.
Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte has vowed no let-up in his war on
crime. Photograph: Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images
Rodrigo Duterte,
the president of the Philippines, has referred to innocent people and
children as “collateral damage” in his war on drugs because police use
automatic weapons when confronting criminals.
Asked in an interview with al-Jazeera
about minors caught up in the violence, Duterte said those cases would
be investigated but added that police can kill hundreds of civilians
without criminal liability.
He gave a hypothetical example of an officer using an M16 rifle
when dealing with a “gangster” who wields a pistol. “When they meet,
they exchange fire. With the policeman and the M16, it’s one burst,
brrr, and [he] hits 1,000 people there and they die.
“It could not
be negligence because you have to save your life. It could not be
recklessness because you have to defend yourself,” he said.
Duterte then compared the killing of innocents in the Philippines to US attacks in wars in Vietnam and Afghanistan, where civilians are killed during airstrikes on militants.
“When
you bomb a village you intend to kill the militants but you kill the
children there ... Why do you say it is collateral damage to the west
and to us it is murder?”
Philippine law enforcement and vigilante
groups have killed more than 3,800 people since Duterte took office on
30 June, part of a war on drugs he says will save the country.
About 1,500 of those died in police operations but most killings were carried out by armed groups which Duterte has, at times, publicly encouraged.
His critics say the president has allowed an atmosphere of lawlessness
to develop in which criminal groups can settle vendettas with impunity.
Regardless,
the president has lashed out at at any criticism from domestic rights
organisations and foreign governments for his brutal crackdown.
“We
have 3 million drug addicts and it’s growing. So if we do not interdict
this problem, the next generation will be having a serious problem,” he
said.
“You destroy my country, I’ll kill you. And it’s a
legitimate thing. If you destroy our young children, I will kill you.
That is a very correct statement. There is nothing wrong in trying to
preserve the interest of the next generation.
“In my country there
is no law that says I cannot threaten criminals,” he added. “I do not
care what the human rights guys say. I have a duty to preserve the
generation. If it involves human rights, I don’t give a shit. I have to
strike fear.”
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