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The United States expressed concern Monday over the extrajudicial killings of drug suspects in the Philippines, a key US ally whose newly elected president has launched a bloody war on crime.

President Rodrigo Duterte was swept to power in May after pledging to end crime in the Philippines using the same "shoot-to-kill" methods critics say he employed as mayor of the southern city of Davao.

Since Duterte assumed office at the end of June, police have reported killing more than 400 drug suspects while the country's largest broadcaster ABS-CBN put the death toll at 852 to include reported summary executions.

Elizabeth Trudeau, a State Department spokeswoman, said Monday that the United States was "concerned."

"We believe in rule of law. We believe in due process. We believe in respect for universal human rights," she told reporters.

"We believe -- fundamentally -- that those aspects ensure and promote long-term security," she said. "We are concerned by these detentions, as well as the extra judicial killing of individuals suspected to be involved in drug activity in the Philippines."

On Sunday Duterte publicly named more than 160 judges, mayors, legislators, police and military individuals allegedly involved in narcotics and warned them to surrender.

Before meeting the Philippine president in Manila last month, US Secretary of State John Kerry said "civil and human rights need to be protected even as we work to keep our societies safe," but did not explicitly condemn Duterte's violent crackdown.

A former US colony, the Philippines and the United States have long shared a military treaty.

Read More: Laglag bala modus sa NAIA nasampulan ni Duterte

Source: INQ
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