
Former
police officer Arthur Lascanas (C) wipes his tears as he relates the
death of his brothers, during a press conference next to lawyers from
the Free Legal Assistance group Arno Sanidad (L) and Manuel Diokno III
(R) at the Senate in Manila on February 20, 2017. Lascanas during the
press conference confessed to a litany of brutal crimes allegedly
ordered by President Rodrigo Duterte when he was the mayor of the
southern city of Davao. The crimes range from the murder of a Duterte
opponent to the bombing of a mosque. He testified in the senate last
October, but at that time denied the allegations. / AFP PHOTO / TED
ALJIBE
Arthur Lascanas, sitting alongside three prominent human rights lawyers, broke down in tears as he listed a series of murders in Davao city that he alleged Duterte ordered either to eliminate critics or fight crime.
Lascanas said he even killed his two brothers, who were involved in drug trafficking, due to “blind loyalty” to Duterte as well as cash rewards.
“Whether we buried them (bodies) or dumped them at sea, we were always paid by Mayor Rody Duterte,” Lascanas said.
Duterte has over the years variously denied and confirmed the existence of a Davao death squad, and claimed to have personally killed people to set an example for police.
However presidential spokesman Martin Anadanar on Monday rejected all of Lascanas’s claims.
“The press conference of self-confessed hitman Arthur Lascanas is part of a protracted political drama aimed to destroy the president and to topple his administration,” Andanar said in a statement.
In one of the most chilling accounts, Lascanas said he and other policemen abducted a suspected kidnapper but also took his seven-month pregnant wife, his four or five-year-old son, his son-in-law and two house helpers.
“Mayor Rody Duterte gave us the signal: “go ahead, clean them up,” he said.
“In this case, evil prevailed. They killed the entire family in front of me, using a calibre .22 with silencer.”
He said Duterte also paid him and other policemen three million pesos ($60,000) for killing in 2003 prominent radio broadcaster Jun Pala, a critic of the then-mayor.
A self-confessed hitman last year told a Senate inquiry that Lascanas was a leader of the Davao death squad that killed more than 1,000 people.
Lascanas, when he was still a policeman, initially denied to the Senate inquiry that he was involved.
But, after retiring from the police force in December, Lascanas said his conscience dictated he should now tell the truth and confess to being part of the death squads.
Duterte, 71, won presidential elections last year after promising during the campaign to eradicate drugs in society by killing tens of thousands of people.
He immediately launched the drug war after taking office on June 30, and more than 6,500 people have died in the crackdown in what Amnesty International has said may amount to crimes against humanity.

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