Dozens of Philippine government and police officials turned themselves in on Monday, a day after President Rodrigo Duterte linked them to the drugs trade, stepping up a war on narcotics that has killed hundreds since he took office in June.
More
than 400 suspected drug dealers have been killed by police across the
Philippines since Duterte took over, officials say. Broadcaster ABS-CNN
put the number at over 800, though this includes executions by anonymous
vigilantes.
On Monday, 27 mayors and 31 police officers, including a colonel, went to the national police office in the capital, Manila, to clear their names, fearing the president's order to hunt them down if they failed to surrender within 24 hours.
Several
local officials reported to regional police offices to beat the
deadline set by Duterte, who won the elections in May on a single
platform of fighting crime and drugs.
On Sunday, he identified about 160 officials in a name-and-shame campaign.
"I want to change,"
a Cebu-based businessman tagged as a top-level drug trafficker told
reporters after he met national police chief Ronald dela Rosa.
Alarmed human rights groups have
urged the United Nations to condemn the rise in extrajudicial killings.
The Philippine Senate is to hold a legislative inquiry.
Dela
Rosa reprimanded the police officers on Duterte's list, threatening to
kill them if they continued to protect drug traders and resell seized
drugs. At one point, he challenged them to a fistfight.
"I am mad with what is happening," Dela Rosa said in a speech to local officials and police. "I
am ashamed. We should be the ones arresting these people, but we are
protecting them. I will kill you if you will not change."
All
police officers linked to the drug trade were disarmed, investigated
and could face criminal and administrative cases if there was strong
evidence, said national police spokesman Dionardo Carlos.
"They will be accorded due process," he added.
Besides
local officials and police officers, Duterte's list included two
retired police generals, soldiers, paramilitary members, judges and a
former lawmaker.
In a letter, Supreme Court Chief
Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno on Monday told the president the court
alone had the right to discipline judges. One judge named by Duterte
died eight years ago and two others have already been removed
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