MANILA: Philippine police vowed on Monday to revamp and intensify a fight against crime and drugs, a week after President Rodrigo Duterte promised no letup in a bloody crackdown that has alarmed the international community.
“Surgical and chilling will be the trademark of the reinvigorated anti-illegal drugs and anti-criminality campaign,” police chief Oscar Albayalde told a news conference.
Thousands of suspected drug dealers and users have been killed in the past two years in what police say were shootouts.
Police have rejected accusations by activists that suspects were being systematically executed, based on weak intelligence and with the assumed backing of Duterte.
Prosecutors of the International Criminal Court (ICC) have launched a preliminary examination to assess whether crimes against humanity may have been committed. Duterte in March canceled the Philippines’ ICC membership in protest.
Albayalde said Duterte’s war on drugs would be “recalibrated,” and there would be renewed focus and intensity, with “built-in safeguards” to ensure operations were lawful and protected human rights.
A police oversight committee would be formed, he said.
The police chief warned of “frightful” consequences for anyone who continued to sell drugs.
He said police intelligence had identified 893 “high-value targets,” warning that they and “their patrons and protectors” would receive a “strong message of the certainty of punishment.”
Albayalde said nearly 1.3 million drug users and street peddlers had surrendered, and that they would be strictly monitored, including 215,000 who have undergone rehabilitation.
Philippine police have several times promised to overhaul the anti-drugs campaign, although human rights groups say there has been little noticeable change.
Philippine police vow ‘surgical and chilling’ war on drugs, crime
Philippine police vow ‘surgical and chilling’ war on drugs, crime
Germany orders worldwide recall of BMWs over fire risk
BERLIN: Germany’s BMW must recall more than 330,000 cars worldwide because of concerns over a fire risk, the KBA transport regulator said Friday, ordering a second recall for the brand in less than a month.
Some 337,000 cars, 29,000 of them in Germany, covering five different models are “potentially concerned” by the safety issue, which concerns incorrect routing of the dashboard wiring, said the KBA.
The recall concerns the i5, 5, M5, i7 and 7 models built between June 2022 and December 2025, said the regulator in the details of the recall posted on its website.
So far, no incident has been registered regarding this safety risk, it added.
Contacted by AFP, a BMW spokesperson confirmed the numbers for the Germany recall but could not confirm the international figures posted by the KBA.
Earlier this month, BMW said it would recall hundreds of thousands of cars worldwide over a potential risk of engine starters sparking a fire.
In late 2024, BMW recalled 1.5 million vehicles because of a faulty braking system, which forced it to revise its 2024 outlook downwards.








