EDITORIAL
This country’s tourism secretary urged the media Wednesday to "tone
down" coverage of President Rodrigo Duterte's deadly drug war, complaining
that reports on extrajudicial killings were scaring away foreigners.
On a trip to Thailand accompanying Duterte, Tourism Secretary Wanda Teo
insisted the Philippines was a safe destination but said journalists were
making the country a hard sell because of their focus on the killings.
"Help us because you know, it's really difficult for me to sell the
Philippines, especially when extrajudicial killings becomes the topic,"
Teo told Filipino reporters following the Duterte entourage.
Teo said tour operators abroad were "always" asking her about
the issue, citing Asia and Europe as regions where people were particularly
concerned.
"I would always say it's safe in the Philippines," Teo added.
"To the media, please tone down a little the extrajudicial killing
reports," she said.
Duterte was elected last year after promising during the campaign to
eradicate drugs in society by killing tens of thousands of people.
Since he took office nearly nine months ago, police have reported
killing 2,594 people in the drug war while rights groups say thousands more
have been killed in a state-sanctioned campaign of mass murder.
While most of those killed have been poor people living in slums, some
foreigners have also died.
Duterte briefly suspended all police from the crackdown in January after
it was revealed anti-drugs officers used the drug war as cover for kidnapping
and murdering a South Korean businessman.
But, after describing the police force as "corrupt to the
core", Duterte brought it back a month later and vowed to continue the
crackdown until all drug traffickers were off the streets or killed.
Duterte has over the past year become a well-known figure
internationally because of the drug war and his caustic rhetoric against
critics.
Duterte this week boasted that calling then-US president Barack Obama a
"son of a whore" had made him famous.
He then used more foul language to respond to criticism from European
lawmakers of the drug war, and called them "crazies".
The Philippines, despite picturesque tropical islands and spectacular
mountains, has long lagged behind its neighbors as a tourist destination.
This is partly due to decades-long Muslim and communist insurgencies, as
well as frequent kidnappings of foreigners by Islamic militants.
About 5.9 million tourists visited the Philippines last year, compared
with 32.6 million for Thailand.
The EJK issue won’t simply go away with media toning down its reports on
the matter to boost tourism. As political commentators say, what is needed is
an honest to goodness government program to address proliferation of drugs –
not killing people suspected of being part of the problem.
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