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Friday, August 19, 2016

UN who failed to bring peace to Middle East want Duterte to stop drug war ~SHARE~

The United Nations, which failed to bring peace and order in violent places like Syria, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, Sierra Leone, and Liberia (to name a few) is telling us Filipinos how to handle our drug war which is working.

They want to impose their methods which will guarantee that the scourge of drugs will turn us into a narco state.

I am sure they were prodded by western liberal media and our very own traitors who want our beloved country to be overrun by narco politicians.

If you think about it, it was western liberal media who helped justify the intervention of western governments to act against Iraq, Libya, and Syria.  Look at what happened, the west impose their liberal western values on a culture they did not understand and now there is war and chaos in these lands that used to be peaceful.

Show below is the INQUIRER.net article titled Palace slams UN for ‘seeming incomprehension’ of drug problem basis which is the basis of my opinion.

Western intervention turn the once beautiful Syria into a battlezone.

Palace slams UN for ‘seeming incomprehension’ of drug problem
By: Kristine Angeli Sabillo
INQUIRER.net  05:21 PM August 19th, 2016

Malacañang on Friday accused the United Nations (UN) and other international observers of “incomprehension” as they criticize President Rodrigo Duterte’s war against illegal drugs.

“What is more alarming than the pandemic use and trade of illegal drugs in the Philippines is the seeming incomprehension by local and international observers,” Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto Abella said.

Abella’s statement was released a day after UN rapporteurs criticized Duterte for allowing summary killings to proliferate under his watch.

Agnes Callamard, UN special rapporteur on summary executions, said illegal drug trafficking should be decided by courts “not by gunmen on the streets.”

“We call on the Philippine authorities to adopt with immediate effect the necessary measures to protect all persons from targeted killings and extrajudicial executions,” Callamard said in a statement.

Dainius Puras, UN special rapporteur on the right to health, also said the drug issue should be treated as a public health issue and actions against the illegal trade should be carried out in full compliance with the Philippines’ human rights obligations.

The west destabilized the middle east and created ISIS.
Puras and Callamard said Duterte’s public condemnation of the vigilante killings “is not enough.”

On the other hand, Abella pointed out that there is a rise in “narco-politicians” who buy votes using money earned from the illegal drug trade.

“In his pursuit to staunch the flood of drugs from nearby countries and entrenched manufacturers in key cities and locations, the President framed the menace in terms of war, which resulted in a number of deaths, but even more surprisingly, in the surrender of hundreds of thousands of users,” the spokesperson said.

He said Duterte has already tasked the police to investigate cases involving vigilantes and innocent people killed in police operations.

“The nature of a number of deaths though [implies] internecine, or organizational killings within the drug trade,” he claimed.

Abella reiterated Duterte’s earlier pronouncement that he will not tolerate extrajudicial killings. “Nor is it policy,” he added.

Citing a decrease in crime rate, Abella said, “The President therefore decries the attribution of killings to the Philippine government.”

“This is simply unfair, especially to the hardworking men and women in uniform who risk their lives and limbs to win the war against drugs,” he said.

“The government approach is to see drugs as a public health and social issue, but also as a national security issue.” RAM/rga


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