
MANILA, Philippines — Legal counsel for drug war victims renewed their appeal on Friday for court protection for affected families and communities, pointing out that the PNP policy that launched the deadly campaign a decade ago is still in place.
Human rights lawyers Joel Butuyan and Gilbert Andres of CenterLaw Philippines, alongside the families of drug war victims, have urged the Supreme Court to rule on two consolidated writ of amparo petitions originally filed in 2017.
The case covers 26 communities in Manila, whose residents had been subjected to harassment at the height of the war on drugs waged by former President Rodrigo Duterte. The lawyers refuse to identify the specific areas for security reasons.
READ: PNP faces class suit in SC over drug killings
Double Barrel
The motion and manifestation wants the Supreme Court to act on the petitions and declare the unconstitutionality of PNP command memorandum circular 16-2016, more known as the “Project: Double Barrel,” which marks its 10th year in existence.
The policy, which led to thousands of killings, was signed on July 1, 2016, by then-national police chief and now Sen. Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa, who remains in hiding in the face of an arrest warrant in the International Criminal Court (ICC).
The lawyers pointed out that police officers may continue to use the brutal approach to combating criminality in poor communities.
“If similar incidents happen again… (the police) may still use the Double Barrel to justify their operations. So we are asking the Supreme Court to decide on this and declare it invalid and unconstitutional,” Butuyan told reporters outside the high tribunal.
Asked whether a Supreme Court ruling in the victim’s favor would strengthen the case of Duterte in the ICC, Andres said that they are two different courts and only the Philippine high court could decide on the legality of the issuances related to the drug war.
READ: ‘Collateral damage’: Children’s lives lost in Duterte drug war
Duterte, who is detained in the Scheveningen prison complex in The Hague, the Netherlands, is facing trial in the ICC starting Nov. 30 for his role in masterminding the drug war.
“The families of ‘war on drugs’ EJK (extrajudicial killings) victims are left commemorating a decade of grief, loss, and unaddressed systemic violence. Despite the passage of 10 years, the constitutional and legal challenges against the ‘war on drugs’ remain unresolved and pending before the Supreme Court,” the lawyers said.n/mr
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View original source — Philippine Daily Inquirer ↗


