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Bastard killed people and now he shits in pants

Sikodolaukazzz

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Moral of the story is:
Like Mr. Singh said in a post in this forum: "The Evil that you do remains with you. The Good that you do comes back to you".

Arrest the bastard and cut his 2 useless balls first

The Philippines will not intervene if Interpol arrests Duterte over ‘war on drugs’


giphy.gif



The Philippines has said it will not intervene if Interpol issues a red notice to arrest the former president, Rodrigo Duterte, over his bloody “war on drugs”.

Pitched as an anti-narcotics crackdown, roughly 6,000 people officially died during Mr Duterte’s controversial “war on drugs”, which began when he was mayor of the southern city Davao, and expanded after his election as president in 2016.

But human rights groups estimate the true death toll could exceed 20,000 during his presidency alone, as thousands of people were killed in mysterious circumstances.

While the police have insisted they only killed in self defence, there have been widespread reports that they acted with impunity, allegedly falsifying crime scenes and systematically shooting unarmed suspects.

Amid global condemnation, the International Criminal Court (ICC) launched an official inquiry in 2021, following a three year “preliminary investigation”.

Mr Duterte had taken the Philippines out of the ICC in 2019, but the court said its prosecutors still have jurisdiction over alleged crimes that took place before the withdrawal.

Now, for the first time, the government has said it will cooperate with the ICC – the court of last resort for crimes that countries are unwilling or unable to prosecute themselves – after it resumed a stalled investigation into Mr Duterte last year.

“If the ICC refers the process to Interpol, which may then transmit a red notice to the Philippine authorities, the government will feel obliged to consider the red notice as a request to be honoured,” executive secretary Lucas Bersamin, the most senior cabinet member, said on Wednesday.

He added that the government would neither object nor block Mr Duterte if he did choose to surrender.

The comments came after the former president – whose daughter is currently the vice president in a ticket headed by the scion of another major political dynasty, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, who she has fallen out with – faced a congressional hearing into the bloody crackdown, where he gave conflicting statements about whether he would submit to an ICC investigation.

The bullish, brash-speaking politician said he would physically kick any ICC investigator who faced him.

The 79-year-old also said: “The ICC does not scare me a bit. They can come here any time.

“I’m asking the ICC to hurry up and come here and start the investigation tomorrow… this issue has been hanging for many years and I may already die. If I’m found guilty, I can go to prison and rot there for all time.”

In previous committee hearings earlier last month, it was alleged that Mr Duterte’s office had paid the police up to 1m pesos (£13,200) per killing during the crackdowns, depending upon the target. He denies the claims, but has admitted to maintaining a “death squad” of criminals to kill other criminals while serving as mayor of Davao.
 
ICC hypocrisy
Charge those terrorist leaders la
Dare to charge likes of Putin and xi?
 
History shows that there are many leeders who get the thrill out of killing babies, children, men and women, young and old.
At the end of the day they also become a handful of ashes but these bastards get dragged by the Messenger of Death.


Duterte admits to planting evidence, personally killing suspects in drug war​


In a Philippine House committee hearing on Nov. 13, former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte admitted to using controversial tactics, including planting evidence and personally killing suspects during his tenure as Davao City mayor. The revelations came after repeated questioning by lawmakers about his statements from a 2016 press conference where he hinted at such methods.

  • Planting evidence: Initially denying these accusations, Duterte eventually confirmed them when confronted with video footage of his past remarks. The 79-year-old former president acknowledged that planting evidence was part of his strategy to apprehend criminals, describing it as a necessary tactic to control crime in Davao. He explained that while illegal, these actions were justified by the need to combat criminal elements. He also reiterated his admission of having personally killed six or seven individuals, allegedly to set an example for police officers. "If I can do it, why can’t you?" he reportedly told law enforcement during his time in office.
  • Rewarding killers: The hearing, part of an ongoing investigation into Duterte’s war on drugs, also touched on allegations of a reward system for killing suspected drug offenders. Duterte confirmed the existence of monetary rewards but insisted that these were for solving "big crimes" rather than incentivizing extrajudicial killings. His admissions have reignited debates over his administration's methods, with human rights groups estimating that as many as 30,000 individuals were killed in the anti-drug campaign.
 
Why is war on Drug a crime? Drug trafficking is punishable by death in Singapore. Does that mean PAPPY is now the world criminal?
 
Why is war on Drug a crime? Drug trafficking is punishable by death in Singapore. Does that mean PAPPY is now the world criminal?
The old fuckerrrrrr planted evidence.
And shot people without any trial.
Maybe then he should also be shot without any trial then just like what he did to thousands of others.
What evil a person does it always comes back.
 
What about vaccines? They shot the world without testing the fucking poison. They are still at it in some places where there are no terms of office in the Govt
 
Moral of the story is:
Like Mr. Singh said in a post in this forum: "The Evil that you do remains with you. The Good that you do comes back to you".

Arrest the bastard and cut his 2 useless balls first

The Philippines will not intervene if Interpol arrests Duterte over ‘war on drugs’


giphy.gif



The Philippines has said it will not intervene if Interpol issues a red notice to arrest the former president, Rodrigo Duterte, over his bloody “war on drugs”.

Pitched as an anti-narcotics crackdown, roughly 6,000 people officially died during Mr Duterte’s controversial “war on drugs”, which began when he was mayor of the southern city Davao, and expanded after his election as president in 2016.

But human rights groups estimate the true death toll could exceed 20,000 during his presidency alone, as thousands of people were killed in mysterious circumstances.

While the police have insisted they only killed in self defence, there have been widespread reports that they acted with impunity, allegedly falsifying crime scenes and systematically shooting unarmed suspects.

Amid global condemnation, the International Criminal Court (ICC) launched an official inquiry in 2021, following a three year “preliminary investigation”.

Mr Duterte had taken the Philippines out of the ICC in 2019, but the court said its prosecutors still have jurisdiction over alleged crimes that took place before the withdrawal.

Now, for the first time, the government has said it will cooperate with the ICC – the court of last resort for crimes that countries are unwilling or unable to prosecute themselves – after it resumed a stalled investigation into Mr Duterte last year.

“If the ICC refers the process to Interpol, which may then transmit a red notice to the Philippine authorities, the government will feel obliged to consider the red notice as a request to be honoured,” executive secretary Lucas Bersamin, the most senior cabinet member, said on Wednesday.

He added that the government would neither object nor block Mr Duterte if he did choose to surrender.

The comments came after the former president – whose daughter is currently the vice president in a ticket headed by the scion of another major political dynasty, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, who she has fallen out with – faced a congressional hearing into the bloody crackdown, where he gave conflicting statements about whether he would submit to an ICC investigation.

The bullish, brash-speaking politician said he would physically kick any ICC investigator who faced him.

The 79-year-old also said: “The ICC does not scare me a bit. They can come here any time.

“I’m asking the ICC to hurry up and come here and start the investigation tomorrow… this issue has been hanging for many years and I may already die. If I’m found guilty, I can go to prison and rot there for all time.”

In previous committee hearings earlier last month, it was alleged that Mr Duterte’s office had paid the police up to 1m pesos (£13,200) per killing during the crackdowns, depending upon the target. He denies the claims, but has admitted to maintaining a “death squad” of criminals to kill other criminals while serving as mayor of Davao.
He worried his family is losing power and no happy ending for all
 
ICC hypocrisy
Charge those terrorist leaders la
Dare to charge likes of Putin and xi?
Charge Georgie bush, Obama Hilary Clinton for a indiscriminately bombing, killing of Arabs and regime change and wanton destruction of societies.
 
Bastard must have killed so many innocents in the process.
Imagine a police officer who has a personal enmity with someone goes over and kills him and says he is a drug suspect.
No questions asked.

Old Ugly Fukkerrrrrr still dyes his hair.
Wonder if he also dyes his hair elsewhere




Ex-PH President Duterte admits suspects were encouraged to 'fight' so cops can kill them​


 

The bloody legacy of Rodrigo Duterte​


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-61891472

A skull rolled towards my feet.
It would have hit my trainers if it hadn't been blocked by the zipline of a body bag it had just been thrown inside.
Next to me, Gemma Baran, 44, watched in horror as more of her husband's bones were loaded into the bag.
Gemma had buried Patricio Baran here five years ago but she could no longer afford to lease the cemetery plot - in crowded Manila, the poor often lie in rented graves, nearly $200 (£164) a piece.
But she was recently offered a different grave for Patricio - this one for free - by a local church programme, "paghilom" or "healing".

It supports families of those who have been killed in the vicious war on drugs that has catapulted the Philippines into global headlines in recent years.
Patricio, a 47-year-old security guard, was shot dead on 9 July 2017.
He had disappeared the day before. A neighbour heard three shots but didn't see the assailants. The police say Patricio's body was found next to a gun and a sign that read: "pusher and rapist".
Reuters/Eloisa Lopez Catholic priest Flavie Villanueva (R) attends alongside funeral workers as the remains of a victim of an alleged extra-judicial killing are exhumed at a cemetery in Manila on 2 June
Reuters/Eloisa Lopez
Father Villanueva, seen here at another exhumation of a victim of the drug war, tries to help families of those killed
But Patricio's family rejects this, saying he had never sold or used drugs. Gemma says he had become embroiled in a land dispute in the weeks before his death.

She even suspects that he was killed in connection with it, but she is fearful of publicly contradicting the police.
Gemma says that since Patricio was killed, she's been struggling to pay rent and provide for her three children. She cleans homes for a living and also relies on food handouts from her church: "I'm really suffering. I don't know what to do for my children."
She says her children are also the reason she hasn't pushed for an investigation into her husband's death: "I'm really scared. I'm staying silent."
On that sunny June morning, Father Flavie Villanueva prayed over Patricio's remains as the body bag was zipped up and he was carried away to another resting place.
"We decided to start this programme to help the victims' grieving families rebuild and empower their lives anew," said Father Villanueva, a Catholic priest who has long campaigned against outgoing President Rodrigo Duterte's government.

"Duterte's order of 'kill, kill, kill' is a deliberate state-sponsored command that has produced thousands of widows and orphans. This is the president's most tragic legacy."

p04k6w16.jpg


Contains some upsetting scenes and flashing images.



4:48
Contains some upsetting scenes and flashing images.
Manila's brutal nightshift in the war on drugs

Duterte's war on drugs​

Mr Duterte's brutal crackdown on drugs has its supporters.
It has lessened the number of "evil elements", says Ofelia, a mother of four who lives in Pinyahan, northern Manila, a community that once experienced high drug-related crime.
In 2020, during the height of the pandemic, two masked gunmen crossed through police quarantine checkpoints to kill an alleged drug user, locally known as Bulldog, just 30 metres from Ofelia's house.

Ofelia, who had voted for Mr Duterte, was sad about Bulldog's death because she knew and liked him.
"It's painful. A second chance should have been given to him to change, not something so sudden."
But she also endorses the campaign, adding that drug use is no longer visible in her neighbourhood - although she says that her life was neither better nor worse since Mr Duterte took office.
Rodrigo "Digong" Duterte, who is 77, was elected in June 2016 on a hardline ticket to clamp down on drugs and crime.
His signature policy - the so-called "war on drugs" - has seen thousands of suspected drug addicts and dealers killed in controversial police operations. Thousands more have been shot dead by unidentified masked gunmen, often referred to by the Philippines' media as "vigilantes".

Getty Images This photo taken on February 18, 2017 shows the mourning mother of an alleged drug dealer after he was shot by unidentified assailants in Manila.
Getty Images
Mr Duterte's war on drugs has claimed an uncounted number of victims
Many also point to evidence of growing police impunity as a fallout from the drug war - in 2020, an off-duty police officer was caught on camera shooting his neighbour after an argument, sparking huge public anger. He was sentenced to life in prison.
Shortly after I arrived in Manila in 2017, 32 alleged drug dealers were killed in a single evening in a police operation labelled "drug war, double barrel reloaded".
Many of the victims' families have insisted their loved ones were innocent - and human rights groups and the international community have decried the violence.
But Mr Duterte has been unfazed. He once boasted he'd be "happy to slaughter" three million drug addicts in the Philippines, falsely comparing his anti-drug campaign to the Holocaust - and bringing swift condemnation from Germany and Jewish groups.

Mr Duterte's government has consistently dehumanised drug addicts and dealers - and its supporters on social media have often referred to them as "rapists and killers" who deserve to be killed.
His foreign secretary Teodoro Locsin Junior sparked global outrage with a series of tweets invoking the Holocaust, including one that said the Philippines' "drug menace is so big it needs a final solution like the Nazis adopted".
I recently asked Mr Locsin if he saw similarities between the Holocaust and the killing of alleged drug addicts and dealers in the Philippines.
"No" was his reply, but he admitted to problems in policing: "We're trying to fix that. But we will not in the interim allow the drug trade to get such a grip on our political life that we can't reverse it, so that we end up like Central America."
The true toll of the war on drugs will never be known. At first, the official count, which combined confirmed deaths during police operations and the killings by masked men (the government called them deaths under investigation, or DUI) ran into tens of thousands. But then the government dropped the DUI metric and the number fell.

Getty Images Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte
Getty Images
The latest official figure - for the number of alleged drug dealers and users killed between July 2016 and April 2022 - is 6,248. But human rights groups believe the number could be as high as 30,000.
The police have always said that they only killed in self-defence. But CCTV footage, photographs of victims suggesting that they were incapacitated, and the accounts of whistle blowers point to something more sinister. A Manila police captain was secretly recorded in a 2019 documentary - On the President's Orders - saying that it was officers who were carrying out the masked killings.

Mr Duterte had once told law enforcers at an anti-drug event: "You might be shot. Shoot him first, because he will really draw his gun on you, and you will die. For me, I don't care about human rights... I will assume full legal responsibility. I will face those human rights [lawyers], not you."

The popular strongman

All of this has done little to dent his popularity - his ratings have stayed high throughout despite international condemnation and an ongoing investigation into alleged crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.
Some have attributed this to his aggressive populism in a poor country where public faith in the judicial system has always been low, while others say Mr Duterte, despite his long political career, projected himself as something of an outsider - as opposed to the Aquino and Marcos families that have governed the Philippines for decades.

Over the years, he modelled himself as a "punisher" who "broke the rules". His blunt and often crass choice of words resonated with ordinary Filipinos, with some even referring to him as "tatay Digong" or "Father Duterte". His misogynistic comments about women and sexist remarks over rape have been passed off by his supporters as "just jokes".
But neither his provocative personality nor his open encouragement of violence is new.

Mr Duterte rose to power in the 1980s when the Philippines was still steeped in Cold War politics.
Davao, a key southern city where he became mayor in 1988, was the centre of the resistance that sprang up against armed Communist rebels who were targeting police, officials and others they saw as their enemy.
Much of this resistance - called Alsa Masa (Masses Arise) - was driven by arming civilians, and according to some reports even forcing them, to fight the Communists. Some experts believe the United States, too, had a role to play given that, fresh from a costly defeat in the Vietnam War, it had been helping arm anti-Communist fighter groups across the world.
When asked if the US had ever been involved in supporting Alsa Masa, Mr Locsin said: "If they were, I would basically have to shoot myself if I told you so. It was a tough world. It was a world that got things done. That is unimaginable now. We're not the same people now."
Reuters Mayor Rodrigo Duterte poses with his Uzi submachinegun in the mountainous village of Carmen in the Baguio District of Davao city in the southern Philippines
Reuters
Mr Duterte (L) poses with a machine gun in Davao city

Alsa Masa, many believe, is the origin of the vigilante groups and so-called "death squads" that emerged in Davao under Mr Duterte - the victims were often leftists, opponents and alleged criminals, including drug users and dealers.
An investigation into more than 1,000 of these killings and disappearances in Davao by the UN implicated Mr Duterte. At a 2016 senate hearing into the killings, police whistle blowers described how a "Davao death squad" planted guns and drugs on victims to frame them.
Mr Duterte, however, has always insisted he never gave direct orders to kill. But in 2018 he said, "My only sin is the extrajudicial killings."

Shrinking democratic space​

Mr Duterte vowed big ticket infrastructure spending and easing of restrictions on foreign direct investment, but the pandemic and an ensuing recession obscures his economic record.
He did a "good job" of handling the economy, according to April Tan, chief equity strategist of COL Financial in Manila. "He allowed his technocrats to do their work. The tax system was successfully reformed. A lot of measures were passed that improve the incentive to do business here."

Government ministers also praised his handling of a peace deal that offered improved political autonomy for millions of Muslim Filipinos on the southern island of Mindanao in return for the decommissioning of weapons.
He also banned public smoking and pledged free university education and improved healthcare, but it's too early to measure the success of these initiatives.
One of his biggest promises - to cut corruption - included launching a helpline where people can report graft. But in 2021, his own government faced corruption allegations over multi-billion dollar contracts awarded to a healthcare supplier. Mr Duterte reacted by barring his cabinet from attending senate hearings investigating the matter, and no legal action followed, leading critics to claim that impunity for the rich and the powerful continues in the Philippines.
Another casualty of Mr Duterte's presidency has been free speech. Opposition leaders have been jailed and critics have been targeted, including Father Villanueva, the Catholic priest who prayed for Gemma's husband Patricio. He is charged with sedition.
Media, too, have been stifled - Maria Ressa, Nobel Peace Prize winner and co-founder of the Rappler news website, has been convicted of cyber libel. She has denied the charges and appealed against the verdict. Many believe the allegations against her are politically motivated over Rappler's hard-hitting coverage of Mr Duterte's policies. She also faces a daily barrage of online trolling, designed, she says, to "bludgeon you into silence". On the eve of Mr Duterte leaving office, the Rappler website was ordered to shut down by officials.


Getty Images Sara Duterte, together with her father Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and her mother Elizabeth Zimmerman, takes her oath as the next Vice President on June 19, 2022 in Davao, Philippines.
Getty Images
Sara Duterte (centre) is the new vice-president of the Philippines

Mr Duterte might not belong to a political dynasty but he has certainly started one - he leaves office as his daughter Sara Duterte-Carpio takes over as vice-president. She won on a landslide and could well be preparing for a presidential run in 2028.
Mr Duterte's supporters insist his record is commendable: "Mr Duterte has left so many legacies, it will take you several days to enumerate them," his former spokesperson Salvador Panelo said.
He dismissed the investigation by the International Criminal Court into the vigilante killings, saying "it's the drug syndicates who have been killing each other".
But Mr Duterte's critics say his legacy is marred by the violence. "When you're in government you can do good [as president], just by sitting there, because things happen," said Karen Gomez-Dumpit, the outgoing head of the country's commission on human rights.

"You have the whole apparatus of government at your beck and call. He could have done very well, had he not had that kind of policy.
"It's a legacy of killing," she said. "Safety at the expense of human rights? Is that real safety?"
 
The old fuckerrrrrr planted evidence.
And shot people without any trial.
Maybe then he should also be shot without any trial then just like what he did to thousands of others.
What evil a person does it always comes back.

Tiagong singapore also old fker who jail his political opponents without trial. Why no arrest?
 
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