Duterte's “shoot
them dead” order denounced by international human rights group
By
ICHRP
April 2, 2020
MANILA – The
International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP)
strongly condemns the shoot-to-kill order of President Rodrigo Roa
Duterte on April 1. “We are raising the alarm in the international
community on President Duterte’s directive to kill unruly violators
of the coronavirus quarantine. This pronouncement is a dangerous
order that allows authorities to target and kill anyone in a public
space. It is also a complete violation of the fundamental rights of
Filipinos especially in this time of global pandemic,” says ICHRP
chairperson Peter Murphy.
President Duterte
addressed the whole nation hours after the incidents of unrest and
people massing up for food and relief in the country’s capital. In
his televised speech, his tirade of violent threats included “I will
not hesitate. My orders are sa pulis pati military...na pagka ginulo
at nagkaroon ng okasyon na lumaban at ang buhay ninyo ay nalagay sa
alanganin – shoot them dead,” (I will not hesitate. My orders to the
police and military…if they caused any disorder, and they fight back
and your lives are on the line – shoot them dead).
The same day, 21 citizens
were arrested for going out of their homes and demanding the relief
promised by the national government. Residents of an urban community
in the biggest city in Metro Manila staged a rally asking for food
and aid amid the government’s lockdown to contain the coronavirus,
which in turn has left millions of Filipinos jobless and hungry.
“Our support goes to the
poor Filipinos whose only crime is to be hungry and demand what is
rightfully theirs. The right to food and basic social services
should be ensured especially in times like these,” ICHRP asserts. A
video circulating in the social media shows citizens demanding for
food being violently dispersed by authorities.
"Naintindihan ninyo? Patay.
Eh kaysa mag-gulo kayo diyan, eh 'di ilibing ko na kayo (Do you
understand? Dead. Instead of causing trouble, I'll send you to the
grave),” Duterte added in his recorded address. Recently, the
president was given special powers to distribute P200 billion
(US$3.9 billion) to more than 18 million poor households. But after
a week the aid remains unreleased.
“President Duterte’s
criminal negligence coupled with brutal measures to address the
pandemic is taking its toll on Filipinos. Millions of informal
workers have been displaced and right abuses have been rampant all
over the country,” says Murphy.
“The police and military
who have been deployed to enforce social distancing are not trained
for this task and have been the very perpetrators of human rights
violations,” ICHRP underlines. The authorities have been detaining
homeless people, putting curfew violators in cages and using torture
methods to punish them, and even arresting citizens over “provoking”
posts on social media.
Netizens showed their
anger online over the president’s pronouncement to “shoot them dead”
and called for his ouster. The #OustDuterte have been trending in
the Philippines for two days now.
The World Health
Organization states that “Measures that limit individual rights and
civil liberties must be necessary, reasonable, proportional,
equitable, non-discriminatory, and in full compliance with national
and international laws.”