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This Article is From Dec 07, 2015

Human Rights Sidelined In Philippine Presidential Race: Amnesty

Human Rights Sidelined In Philippine Presidential Race: Amnesty
Amnesty International (AI) Philippines said that it asked the five leading presidential hopefuls to give them a copy of their human rights agenda but none complied, despite repeated requests.
Manila: Philippine presidential candidates have ignored human rights in their campaigns despite the violence which plagues the country, Amnesty International said today.

The rights group spoke out as a survey was released showing the frontrunner for the 2016 poll was a mayor dubbed "Dirty Harry" who has openly boasted of personally killing criminals.

Amnesty International (AI) Philippines said that it asked the five leading presidential hopefuls to give them a copy of their human rights agenda but none complied, despite repeated requests.

"Unfortunately, this challenge has not been accepted as Amnesty International Philippines has yet to receive word from the offices of presidential candidates regarding their human rights platform," the rights group said.

AI Philippines said President Benigno Aquino's preferred successor, Mar Roxas, and rivals Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, Vice-President Jejomar Binay, Senator Grace Poe and Senator Miriam Santiago have not provided any policy details platform on human rights.

The Southeast Asian nation sees numerous killings of journalists, political figures and petty criminals.

A survey released today by the respected Social Weather Stations group revealed that Duterte, the longtime mayor of Davao, leads his rivals in the race to succeed Aquino.

In a report earlier this year, Human Rights Watch said Duterte's so-called "Davao Death Squad" had killed more than 1,000 people during his tenure as mayor of the city on the southern island of Mindanao

AI Philippines campaign coordinator Wilnor Papa said his group has long called for an investigation of Duterte but "the government seems to look the other way".

He said the popularity of Duterte and his anti-crime message should not detract from the need to promote human rights.

"We do understand where the Filipino people are coming from... but we don't believe that to get peace and order, you need extra-judicial executions, you don't need short cuts (to due process)," he said.

AI Philippines also rated Aquino, who ends his six-year term next year, poorly, saying he had made little progress in ending extra-judicial killings, reining in the police and military and stopping torture by the security services.

Papa said that in the run-up to the May elections, AI Philippines would also "make sure our voices are heard, to show that human rights is not something that can be ignored".

Critics say the Philippines has long suffered from a "culture of impunity" where powerful figures feel they can get away with murder.
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