On to his second year of this six year term
office, a lot of things have been thrown at the current Philippine president.
President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has been
recording record numbers from different survey agencies, critics of the
president has thrown different issues in an attempt to take down the presidency
from Duterte and yet all is put in vain...
In the article published by Mr. Joel Ruiz
Butuyan, titled “Why do people support the drug war?” he cites instances and
explains the Duterte phenomena currently sweeping the nation, thus to the
complete bewilderment of the opposition.
Duterte's trust ratings remains high despite numerous unexplained surrounding The Philippine National Police war on drugs operation (photo credit to owner) |
Below is the full quoted
article :
It puzzles and shocks critics of President
Duterte. Notwithstanding the thousands of corpses that piled up as a result of
his bloody war on drugs, the President still earned high trust ratings in
four-quarter surveys during the first year of his presidency.
From June 2016 to June 2017, Social Weather
Stations (SWS) surveys showed Mr. Duterte consistently earning high trust
ratings: 84 percent in June 2016, 83 percent in September 2016, 81 percent in
December 2016, 80 percent in March 2017, and 78 percent in June 2017.
These high trust ratings coincided with the
period when thousands of people died in police and masked-vigilante operations.
The killings have been marked by reports of mistaken identities, collateral
damage, and arrests of eyewitnesses under trumped-up charges and as means to
silence them.
Since the last survey in June 2017, however,
three teenaged boys have been killed under outrageous circumstances. The deaths
of 17-year-old Kian Loyd delos Santos, 19-year-old Carl Angelo Arnaiz, and
14-year-old Reynaldo de Guzman have drawn strong condemnation even from some
supporters of the President.
The despicable manner by which the three
young men died must have dented the President’s trust rating, but as to what
extent we will only know when the next survey results come out. Yet, judging by
how his diehard supporters continue to zealously defend him, one gets the sense
that he continues to enjoy substantial backing. *
Why does the President continue to enjoy the
trust and support of many people despite the increasing incidents of unlawful
killings and terrible abuses by policemen?
The most plausible answer to this question
comes from my colleague at the Center for International Law (Centerlaw),
Cristina Antonio. Centerlaw represents a number of families of victims of
extrajudicial killing in the current war on drugs.
It filed the first legal challenge against
“Operation Tokhang,” and managed to obtain a writ of amparo that gives
protection to the families of four men who were killed by policemen in Payatas,
Quezon City, and the lone survivor, Efren Morillo.
Antonio has extensively interacted with
victims’ families. She has observed that in urban poor communities which
experience unlawful killings, the people put the blame entirely on abusive
policemen. The assignment of liability does not reach the President. For them,
unlawful killings happen because crooked policemen violate the President’s
orders.
Many residents of poor communities are
supportive of Mr. Duterte’s war on drugs because a lot of those killed are real
drug couriers and drug dependents who are notorious for having long paralyzed
their neighborhoods with fear. I have heard of urban poor people applauding the
killing of drug pushers who had freely been plying their trade since the Marcos
era. *
It is not far from the truth to approximate
that out of every ten people killed by the police and masked vigilantes, nine
are real drug personalities who have long destroyed peace and order in local
communities. The feeling of relief brought about by the killings of these drug
personalities outweighs the fear engendered by the few killings of innocent
civilians.
For the President’s critics, it is not enough
to persistently argue that the killings are unlawful and inhuman. Calling his
supporters nasty names like “bobo” and “idiots” does not win converts but
hardens hostility. And it does not help that many of the critics live in gated
communities.
For opponents of the violent war on drugs, a
wholesale condemnation of the drug campaign does not sway support away from the
President. It is interpreted as a denial of the benefits of peace that the
campaign has brought to drug-infested communities.
The campaign to stop the unlawful killings
must acknowledge the need for a drug campaign, but insist on the necessity of
detailed solutions and particularized proposals that will prevent rogue
policemen from becoming rampaging murderers.
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