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Added on the 06/10/2016 19:51:50 - Copyright : Reuters EN
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte tells President Barack Obama to "go to hell" and reconsider his government's foreign policy. Deborah Lutterbeck reports.
Manila, Jun 30 (EFE/EPA).- Various groups held a protest Wednesday in Manila against the alleged killings during Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's campaign against illegal drugs. The International Criminal Court (ICC) has reason to believe that crimes against humanity have been committed during Duterte's war on drugs from Jul. 1, 2016 to Mar. 16, 2019, where more than 6,000 drug suspects have been killed. (Camera: MARK CRISTINO).SHOT LIST: PEOPLE RALLY AGAINST THE ALLEGED KILLINGS OF DUTERTE'S WAR ON DRUGS IN MANILA, PHILIPPINES.
Manila, May 27 (EFE).- At just 10 years of age, Karla witnessed the murder of her father, gunned down by four masked assailants during her aunt's wake. Her father died instantly, her 13-year-old brother was wounded in the leg, and before her eyes her family was shattered.The incident occurred in December 2016 in Mandaluyong, Manila, in one of the bloodiest months of the drug war. The murder of Renato Aldeguer, Karla's father, went unpunished for lack of evidence, but research suggests that the assailants mistook him for someone else in a drug reckoning.Renato is one of the 27,000 victims of almost four years of the incessant war on drugs waged by President Rodrigo Duterte from the first day of his mandate, but the trauma inherited by Renato’s children is not recorded in any statistics."Our Happy Family is Gone," a Human Rights Watch (HRW) investigation released Wednesday, reports the psychological, economic and social impact of the campaign on minors.(Camera: SARA GOMEZ).FOOTAGE SHOWS AN ONLINE INTERVIEW WITH HRW DIRECTOR PHIL ROBERTSON.SOUNDBITES: HRW DIRECTOR PHIL ROBERTSON (IN ENGLISH).
The UN human rights chief says that Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who has launched profanity-laced diatribes against United Nations rapporteurs, needs "psychiatric evaluation". SOUNDBITE
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte vowed Monday to press on with his drug war that has claimed thousands of lives, as he urged lawmakers to endorse "eye-for-an-eye" death penalties. Duterte devoted large chunks of his annual State of the Nation Address to pushing his law-and-order policies that have made him hugely popular with many Filipinos but have been condemned by human rights groups and other critics. IMAGES of his arrival
U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).