Philippine court jails 3 police officers for drug war killing
Thursday, 29th November 2018
A Philippine court on Thursday sentenced three police officers to up to 40 years in jail for the murder of a 17-year-old high school student, the first to be convicted in President Rodrigo Duterte’s drugs war.
The Caloocan City regional trial court declared the three policemen guilty for the killing of Kian Lloyd Delos Santos in August 2017 in a dark, trash-filled alley in a northern suburb in the capital, Manila.
Delos Santos was found dead in an alley with a gun in his left hand. Security cameras showed the officers aggressively escorting a male matching Delos Santos' description in the direction of the spot where he was killed.
Duterte, a firebrand leader who unleashed the ferocious war against illegal drugs after coming to power in June 2016, has more than once said he would not allow police officers to go to jail for killing drug users and pushers.
But shortly after the verdict was handed down, Duterte's spokesperson Salvador Panelo said: "This is murder, there is an intention to kill. The president would never tolerate that."
Duterte's government has repeatedly said there was no declared policy to kill drug users and dealers.
"A shoot first, think later attitude can never be countenanced in a civilized society. Never has homicide or murder been a function of law enforcement. The public peace is never predicated on the cost of human life," said the ruling by Judge Roldolfo Azucena.
This was the first case of what human rights advocates say was an extrajudicial killing carried out by state agents in the 29-month war on drugs, which saw close to 5,000 people dead in police anti-drug operations.
Police reject allegations the killings were executions, saying the drug peddlers and users were killed in shootouts, and they were acting in self-defense.
The death of the teenager Delos Santos stirred unprecedented public attention to what activists say are executions and systematic abuses by police backed steadfastly by Duterte.
"We respect the decision of the court. We don't tolerate any erring police officers," said Benigno Durana, a national police spokesman, adding the police force "stand fully behind police officers engaged in the drug war, who are doing their jobs within the bounds of the law."
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