Philippines’ Duterte declines meeting with UN’s Ban

This handout photo taken on August 23, 2016, and received from the Presidential Photographers Division (PPD) on August 24 shows Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte administering the oath-taking of newly-promoted generals of the armed forces and newly-elected officials of the Philippine chamber of commerce at Malacanang Palace in Manila.
Duterte has said his threat to pull the country out of the United Nations following criticism of his deadly crime war was just a “joke”. Duterte on August 21 said he might decide to leave the world body after a UN human rights expert said last week his orders and promise of immunity and bounties to security forces who killed drug suspects violated international law. / AFP PHOTO /

UNITED NATIONS, United States (AFP) — Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who has railed against the United Nations for criticizing his government, has declined a request to meet UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, officials said Thursday.

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said that “contacts were had to try to set up a time” for a meeting on the sidelines of the ASEAN forum meeting in Laos next week, but that “no time could be agreed upon.”

A foreign affairs spokesman in Manila said that 11 heads of state had requested meetings with Duterte during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meeting, and that he had said yes to nine of them.

“Please understand that he cannot accept them all and no one should impute any negatives on those he could not accommodate,” said Charles Jose in Manila.

Duterte’s spokesman Ernesto Abella said the September 6-8 ASEAN meeting in Vientiane was “extraordinarily full” and that “a number of possible meetups have to be presently foregone.”

Duterte has launched several tirades against the world body after a UN special rapporteur criticized his crackdown on crime, even  threatening to pull out of the United Nations, a threat he later withdrew.

“Maybe we’ll just have to decide to separate from the United Nations. If you are that disrespectful… then I will just leave you,” Duterte said in a press conference last month.

He later said the threat was just a “joke.”

Nearly 2,000 people have been killed since Duterte was sworn into office on June 30 and immediately launched his war on crime, according to the national police chief.

Duterte has insisted most of the 756 people confirmed killed by police were drug suspects who resisted arrest, while the others died due to gang members waging warfare against each other.

However rights groups, some lawmakers and others have said security forces are engaging in unprecedented extrajudicial killings.

© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse

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