Philippine police shot dead four suspected drug dealers while unknown men gunned down two others, officials said today, raising the death toll for narcotics suspects to 14 this week after president-elect Rodrigo Duterte vowed a war against crime.
Police killed eight other suspects in the country's north including two in Manila during the past week as civil rights monitors warned the government against taking illegal shortcuts to fight crime.
Authorities have insisted the drug suspects were killed lawfully, with the officers firing back after being shot at during separate raids.
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"The suspects were wounded and were brought to (hospital) but were all declared dead on arrival by the attending physician," Galgo said in a written report.
He did not report any police casualties in what he described as a short firefight.
Duterte, the long-time mayor of the southern city of Davao, won the May 9 presidential election in a landslide largely on a pledge to roll out his city's law-and-order policies nationally.
The controversial and acid-tongued politician captivated millions of Filipinos, and enraged his critics, with vows of ruthless tactics to end crime within six months.
The mayor warned security forces would kill tens of thousands of criminals and ignore human rights as he eradicated the scourge of drugs that many voters rated as their top concern.
Duterte's campaign threats were backed by his rule in Davao, where he has been accused of running or tolerating death squads that killed more than 1,000 suspects. He takes office on June 30.
Davao police reported Saturday that unknown gunmen shot and killed two suspected drug dealers this week.
One victim, attacked at an Internet shop on Wednesday, had been out on bail on a drug-related offence.
The second man was gunned down by two suspects outside a university campus on Friday.
Three petty thieves were also killed in a single attack by motorcycle-riding gunmen in another area of Davao also on Wednesday.
"We are doing our best to identify and arrest the suspects," city police spokeswoman Chief Inspector Milgrace Driz told reporters.