Duterte Hitler talk reaps international censure
President Rodrigo Duterte on Saturday faced a barrage of criticism from the United Nations, Israel, Western governments and international rights groups for drawing parallels with his brutal war on drugs and Adolf Hitlers extermination of Jews before and during World War II.
Even longtime ally the United States has hinted at impatience with Mr. Duterte over his latest inflammatory comments, with Pentagon chief Ashton Carter and the US Embassy in Manila both saying the Philippine leaders remark about being happy to slaughter 3 million drug addicts is deeply troubling.
READ: Dutertes Hitler remarks deeply troubling, says Pentagon chief
Early on Friday, Mr. Duterte, speaking to reporters at Davao International Airport after arriving from a two-day official visit to Vietnam, said his critics were threatening to bring him before an international court for the killing of thousands of people in his bloody war on drugs and complained that they were picturing him as a cousin of Hitler even if nothing had been proven against him.
Noting that Hitler had murdered millions of Jews, Mr. Duterte said he was also willing to kill the 3 million drug addicts in the Philippines if it were the only way to solve the countrys drug problem.
READ: Heil Digong?
There are 3 million drug addicts (in the Philippines). Id be happy to slaughter them, he said.
If Germany had Hitler, the Philippines would have , he said, pausing and pointing to himself.
You know my victims. I would like (them) to be all criminals to finish the problem of my country and save the next generation from perdition, he said.
Clarification sought
Israels foreign ministry yesterday said it was unfortunate that Mr. Duterte chose to invoke Hitler and the Holocaust in his bloody anticrime war.
READ: Israel condemns Duterte for invoking Hitler
Ministry spokesperson Emmanuel Nahshon said Israel was convinced Mr. Duterte would find a way to clarify his words.
World Jewish Congress president Ronald Lauder on Friday said Mr. Dutertes remarks were revolting and demanded that he retract them and apologize.
Drug abuse is a serious issue. But what President Duterte said is not only profoundly inhumane, but it demonstrates an appalling disrespect for human life that is truly heartbreaking for the democratically elected leader of a great country, Lauder said in a statement issued from Jerusalem, where he was attending the funeral of former Israeli leader Shimon Peres.
Yesterday, UN special adviser on the prevention of genocide, Adam Dieng, said Mr. Dutertes remarks were deeply disrespectful of the right to life of all human beings.
In a statement issued from New York, Dieng stressed that the Holocaust was one of the darkest periods of the history of humankind, and that any glorification of the cruel and criminal acts committed by those responsible was unacceptable and offensive.
Dieng urged Mr. Duterte to exercise restraint in the use of language that could exacerbate discrimination, hostility and violence, and encourage the commission of criminal acts which, if widespread or systematic, could amount to crimes against humanity.
Dieng also exhorted Mr. Duterte to support instead the investigation of the reported killings in his war on drugs and crime.
Deeply troubling
Speaking on the sidelines of a regional security summit of Southeast Asian ally nations, Carter, the US defense chief, said he had not discussed Mr. Dutertes comments with his Philippine counterpart, Delfin Lorenzana, who also attended the meeting.
Just speaking personally for myself, I find these comments deeply troubling, Carter said.
The Pentagon chief noted that the Philippines is a longtime US treaty ally.
Like all alliances, it depends on the continuation of a sense of shared interests, he added. So far in US-Philippine history we have had that. We look forward to continuing that. But thats something that we continue to discuss with the Philippine government.
In Manila, the US Embassy issued a statement yesterday calling Mr. Dutertes comments deeply troubling.
Americas partnership with the Philippines has long been based on a foundation of shared values, including our shared belief in human rights and dignity, US Embassy press attaché Molly Koscina said.
President Dutertes recent comments depart from that common tradition and are deeply troubling, she said.
Unacceptable
The German government on Friday said it called in Philippine Ambassador Melita S. Sta. Maria-Thomaczek and told her that Mr. Dutertes likening his deadly war on drugs to Hitlers effort to exterminate Jews were unacceptable.
Any comparison of the singular atrocities of the Holocaust with anything else is totally unacceptable, ministry spokesperson Martin Schaefer told reporters.
Germany, Europes top economy, has expressed serious concerns about Mr. Dutertes crackdown on illegal drugs, which has cost the lives of more than 3,000 people in three months and threatened a breakdown of the rule of law in the Philippines.
Those killingsand the governments celebration of them as evidence of a successful war on drugsare nothing less than mass killings disguised as crime control, Phelim Kine, deputy director for Asia of Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.
In an interview on CNN on Friday night, Kine noted that Mr. Duterte had warned that more people would be killed, and urged urgent action by the international community.
Amnesty International (AI) also slammed Mr. Dutertes remarks.
With this latest outburst, President Duterte has sunk to new depths. Governmentsboth in the region and around the worldshould speak out immediately and condemn these outrageous statements, Josef Benedict, AI deputy director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, said in a statement issued on Friday.
They serve no discernible purpose other than to put more lives at risk, he said.
Since coming to power, there has been a surge of state-sanctioned violence and unlawful killings across the Philippines. Instead of stopping and condemning these human-rights violations, and ensuring those responsible are held to account, he has vowed to escalate them, Benedict said.
Mass killings under President Duterte must end, he added.
The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) expressed alarm over Mr. Dutertes comments.
Public admission
[Mr. Dutertes words are] something we are concerned about because [they create] the backdrop, the bigger message arc. Well monitor closely the possible implication and meaning of those words, CHR chair Jose Luis Gascon said by phone yesterday.
Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said Mr. Dutertes remarks were a public admission of being behind Hitler-like killings in the war on drugs.
President Dutertes rhetoric has worsened from recklessness to culpability, from accusations to confession of guilt, Lagman said.
He said Mr. Dutertes comments were an attempt to justify the killing of drug addicts without due process.
His having compared himself to Hitler, who caused the slaughter of 6 million Jews during World War II, is a virtual confession that the extrajudicial killings of thousands of suspected drug dealers and addicts since the start of his term almost 100 days ago, have been instigated, encouraged and condoned by him, Lagman said.
The left-leaning Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) also objected to Mr. Dutertes reference to Hitler.
We do not subscribe to the Presidents referencing of Hitler in relation to the war on drugs and the killings of so-called drug addicts. Killings by state forces of unarmed civilians, even if they are suspected criminals, goes against the principle of due process, Bayan said in a statement yesterday.
Height of insensitivity
Fr. Jerome Secillano, executive secretary of Permanent Committee on Public Affairs of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, said Mr. Dutertes drawing parallels with is war on drugs and the Holocaust was the height of insensitivity. With reports from Jeannette I. Andrade, DJ Yap and Tina G. Santos; Ivan Angelo L. de Lara, Inquirer.net; AP and AFP/TVJ
President Rodrigo Duterte on Saturday faced a barrage of criticism from the United Nations, Israel, Western governments and international rights groups for drawing parallels with his brutal war on drugs and Adolf Hitlers extermination of Jews before and during World War II.
Even longtime ally the United States has hinted at impatience with Mr. Duterte over his latest inflammatory comments, with Pentagon chief Ashton Carter and the US Embassy in Manila both saying the Philippine leaders remark about being happy to slaughter 3 million drug addicts is deeply troubling.
READ: Dutertes Hitler remarks deeply troubling, says Pentagon chief
Early on Friday, Mr. Duterte, speaking to reporters at Davao International Airport after arriving from a two-day official visit to Vietnam, said his critics were threatening to bring him before an international court for the killing of thousands of people in his bloody war on drugs and complained that they were picturing him as a cousin of Hitler even if nothing had been proven against him.
Noting that Hitler had murdered millions of Jews, Mr. Duterte said he was also willing to kill the 3 million drug addicts in the Philippines if it were the only way to solve the countrys drug problem.
READ: Heil Digong?
There are 3 million drug addicts (in the Philippines). Id be happy to slaughter them, he said.
If Germany had Hitler, the Philippines would have , he said, pausing and pointing to himself.
You know my victims. I would like (them) to be all criminals to finish the problem of my country and save the next generation from perdition, he said.
Clarification sought
Israels foreign ministry yesterday said it was unfortunate that Mr. Duterte chose to invoke Hitler and the Holocaust in his bloody anticrime war.
READ: Israel condemns Duterte for invoking Hitler
Ministry spokesperson Emmanuel Nahshon said Israel was convinced Mr. Duterte would find a way to clarify his words.
World Jewish Congress president Ronald Lauder on Friday said Mr. Dutertes remarks were revolting and demanded that he retract them and apologize.
Drug abuse is a serious issue. But what President Duterte said is not only profoundly inhumane, but it demonstrates an appalling disrespect for human life that is truly heartbreaking for the democratically elected leader of a great country, Lauder said in a statement issued from Jerusalem, where he was attending the funeral of former Israeli leader Shimon Peres.
Yesterday, UN special adviser on the prevention of genocide, Adam Dieng, said Mr. Dutertes remarks were deeply disrespectful of the right to life of all human beings.
In a statement issued from New York, Dieng stressed that the Holocaust was one of the darkest periods of the history of humankind, and that any glorification of the cruel and criminal acts committed by those responsible was unacceptable and offensive.
Dieng urged Mr. Duterte to exercise restraint in the use of language that could exacerbate discrimination, hostility and violence, and encourage the commission of criminal acts which, if widespread or systematic, could amount to crimes against humanity.
Dieng also exhorted Mr. Duterte to support instead the investigation of the reported killings in his war on drugs and crime.
Deeply troubling
Speaking on the sidelines of a regional security summit of Southeast Asian ally nations, Carter, the US defense chief, said he had not discussed Mr. Dutertes comments with his Philippine counterpart, Delfin Lorenzana, who also attended the meeting.
Just speaking personally for myself, I find these comments deeply troubling, Carter said.
The Pentagon chief noted that the Philippines is a longtime US treaty ally.
Like all alliances, it depends on the continuation of a sense of shared interests, he added. So far in US-Philippine history we have had that. We look forward to continuing that. But thats something that we continue to discuss with the Philippine government.
In Manila, the US Embassy issued a statement yesterday calling Mr. Dutertes comments deeply troubling.
Americas partnership with the Philippines has long been based on a foundation of shared values, including our shared belief in human rights and dignity, US Embassy press attaché Molly Koscina said.
President Dutertes recent comments depart from that common tradition and are deeply troubling, she said.
Unacceptable
The German government on Friday said it called in Philippine Ambassador Melita S. Sta. Maria-Thomaczek and told her that Mr. Dutertes likening his deadly war on drugs to Hitlers effort to exterminate Jews were unacceptable.
Any comparison of the singular atrocities of the Holocaust with anything else is totally unacceptable, ministry spokesperson Martin Schaefer told reporters.
Germany, Europes top economy, has expressed serious concerns about Mr. Dutertes crackdown on illegal drugs, which has cost the lives of more than 3,000 people in three months and threatened a breakdown of the rule of law in the Philippines.
Those killingsand the governments celebration of them as evidence of a successful war on drugsare nothing less than mass killings disguised as crime control, Phelim Kine, deputy director for Asia of Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.
In an interview on CNN on Friday night, Kine noted that Mr. Duterte had warned that more people would be killed, and urged urgent action by the international community.
Amnesty International (AI) also slammed Mr. Dutertes remarks.
With this latest outburst, President Duterte has sunk to new depths. Governmentsboth in the region and around the worldshould speak out immediately and condemn these outrageous statements, Josef Benedict, AI deputy director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, said in a statement issued on Friday.
They serve no discernible purpose other than to put more lives at risk, he said.
Since coming to power, there has been a surge of state-sanctioned violence and unlawful killings across the Philippines. Instead of stopping and condemning these human-rights violations, and ensuring those responsible are held to account, he has vowed to escalate them, Benedict said.
Mass killings under President Duterte must end, he added.
The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) expressed alarm over Mr. Dutertes comments.
Public admission
[Mr. Dutertes words are] something we are concerned about because [they create] the backdrop, the bigger message arc. Well monitor closely the possible implication and meaning of those words, CHR chair Jose Luis Gascon said by phone yesterday.
Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said Mr. Dutertes remarks were a public admission of being behind Hitler-like killings in the war on drugs.
President Dutertes rhetoric has worsened from recklessness to culpability, from accusations to confession of guilt, Lagman said.
He said Mr. Dutertes comments were an attempt to justify the killing of drug addicts without due process.
His having compared himself to Hitler, who caused the slaughter of 6 million Jews during World War II, is a virtual confession that the extrajudicial killings of thousands of suspected drug dealers and addicts since the start of his term almost 100 days ago, have been instigated, encouraged and condoned by him, Lagman said.
The left-leaning Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) also objected to Mr. Dutertes reference to Hitler.
We do not subscribe to the Presidents referencing of Hitler in relation to the war on drugs and the killings of so-called drug addicts. Killings by state forces of unarmed civilians, even if they are suspected criminals, goes against the principle of due process, Bayan said in a statement yesterday.
Height of insensitivity
Fr. Jerome Secillano, executive secretary of Permanent Committee on Public Affairs of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, said Mr. Dutertes drawing parallels with is war on drugs and the Holocaust was the height of insensitivity. With reports from Jeannette I. Andrade, DJ Yap and Tina G. Santos; Ivan Angelo L. de Lara, Inquirer.net; AP and AFP/TVJ