Duterte to send rogue cops to violence-plagued south Philippines

Agencies
February 7, 2017 19:23 MYT
DUTERTE: If you're angry at me, wait until I finish my presidency. Let's have a shootout. You really think, you're really foolish so I will make it happen. -Filepix
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said on Tuesday that corrupt police will be sent to a violence-racked stronghold of militants or they should quit, in a fierce dressing down of men from a force he had relied on to fight his war on drugs, Reuters reports.
Duterte had been unwavering in his defence of the police in the face of international outrage over the death toll, but his faith in the force was shaken by the killing of a South Korean businessmen late last year by rogue officers.
Duterte late last month denounced the police as "corrupt to the core" and suspended their anti-drug operations, though vowing to forge ahead with the drug campaign.
On Tuesday, he spoke to ranks of 400 policemen lined up in the grounds of the presidential palace, all of them under investigation for various infractions, and condemned them as "foolish, idiots and sons of bitches".
"I will send you to Basilan, live there for two years. If you get out alive, you can return here. If you die there, I will tell the police not to spend anything to bring you back here, but to bury you there," Duterte told the policemen.
He even challenged them to a shootout.
"If you're angry at me, wait until I finish my presidency. Let's have a shootout. You really think, you're really foolish so I will make it happen," he said.
Those who did not want to go to Basilan could quit, Duterte said, but he warned any who did to stay out of trouble.
"Those who get dismissed are those who are part of syndicates because they already know how it works. You are the most dangerous criminals when you leave the police force. You know the workings (of criminals). Son of a bitch I will kill all of you in front of the Philippines (Filipinos)," he said.
Basilan is a southern island stronghold of the notorious Islamic State-linked Abu Sayyaf militant group, who have developed a reputation for beheading their captives.
More than 7,700 people have been killed since Duterte unleashed his bloody crackdown on drugs seven months ago, about 2,500 in police operations.
The rest of the killings are under investigation but rights groups suspect many of the victims were killed by vigilantes or hitmen supported by the police.
The Philippine Drugs Enforcement Agency has been put in charge of anti-drug operations and Duterte has also raised the possibility of getting the military to help.
The South Korean businessman, Jee Ick-joo, was killed at police headquarters after being arrested for drug offences that his wife and lawyers said was an official cover for kidnap for ransom.
Several police officers are being investigated in connection with his death.
#anti-drug operations #Philippine President #Rodrigo Duterte #stronghold of militants
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