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Duterte vows accountability in drug war

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Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte speaks via video link at the UN General Assembly.
Camera IconPhilippines President Rodrigo Duterte speaks via video link at the UN General Assembly. Credit: AP

Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte says anyone found to have "acted beyond bounds" in his campaign against illegal drugs would be held accountable under national laws.

At the same time he appeared to reject an International Criminal Court probe into the matter.

Duterte told the United Nations General Assembly he had instructed the justice ministry and police to review the conduct of the campaign, in which more than 6100 suspected drug dealers have been killed since 2016.

Activists say many thousands more, mostly users or small-time peddlers, were killed by mystery gunmen.

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"Those found to have acted beyond bounds during operations shall be made accountable before our laws," Duterte said in a video address to the annual gathering that drew criticism from rights groups.

Human Rights Watch accused Duterte of trying to mislead the international community into believing his government was investigating unlawful killings, noting that out of thousands of drug war killings only one case had resulted in a court conviction

In a statement, Carlos Conde, Senior Philippines Researcher at Human Rights Watch, said what the public had got instead was "more propaganda and stonewalling by the authorities."

Duterte made no mention of a formal investigation into possible crimes against humanity, which was approved by judges from the International Criminal Court last week, although he appeared to reject outside interference in human rights issues.

"We have recently finalised with the United Nations our Joint Program on Human Rights. This is a model for constructive engagement between a sovereign Member State and the United Nations," he said.

"Meaningful change, to be enduring, must come from within. The imposition of one's will over another - no matter how noble the intent - has never worked in the past. And it never will in the future."

Duterte's government said last week it will not cooperate with the ICC or allow any investigators into the Philippines. Duterte and his police chiefs have said the killings were in self-defence and his government has insisted the ICC has no right to meddle in the country's affairs.

Rights groups say Duterte personally incited deadly violence in the drug war and accuse police of murdering unarmed suspects on a massive scale. Rights group say the police summarily executed suspects, which the policy deny.

In February, the Philippine police said they were looking into a government review of the killings after the justice minister made an unprecedented admission to the United Nations of widespread police failures.

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