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New statistics unveiled as President Trump invites Philippines President to White House
Polls show Filipinos overwhelmingly are satisfied with the operations of the drug war
Manila, PhilippinesCNN
—
Police in the Philippines defended the country’s ongoing and deadly war on drugs Tuesday as they accused the international media of overstating death tolls.
In an elaborately planned, three-hour forum in an upscale Manila hotel, officials said 2,679 suspected drug users and dealers died during legitimate police operations between July 1 and January 30.
An additional 1,847 deaths between July 1 and March 31 are believed to have been drug-related, police said, but not the result of police activity.
Meanwhile, more than 5,000 homicides over those nine months remain “under investigation,” with any potential connection to the drug war still to be determined.
The figures are lower than previous official reports. Police in December said 2,086 people were killed in police operations and 3,841 killed in extrajudicial or vigilante-style killings from July 1 to December 12.
“I buried my son in the grave that was meant for me,” Ricardo Medina told CNN. His son, Ericardo, was stabbed numerous times and his face wrapped in packing tape, a grisly tactic common among the thousands of alleged vigilante killings that have happened since Duterte took office promising to rid the country of its drug problem by any means necessary.
Estimates of the number of deaths related to the drug war run as high as 8,000, based on figures released by the police and independent counts by human rights groups and media organizations.
Police on Tuesday, however, contested those totals, as well as allegations of widespread extrajudicial or vigilante killings.
Philippines Police Deputy Director General Ramon Apolinario cited “encounters” between drug-related groups as a reason for the deaths, adding that “even our own forces have been victimized.”
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International rights groups have condemned the spate of drug-related killings in the Southeast Asian country of 100 million people.
Even so, the public remains largely in favor of Duterte’s campaign. A poll in December found that while 78% of Filipinos feared they or someone they know will be a victim of extrajudicial killings, 85% of respondents were nevertheless satisfied with the ongoing operations in the drug war, according to CNN Philippines.
As of March, 75% of those surveyed said they were satisfied with Duterte’s performance.
During Tuesday’s forum, police played videos of former drug users, dealers, and the victims of drug-related crimes hailing the benefits of the drug war, with many saying they now feel safer in formerly crime-infested cities.
An accompanying social media campaign calls for the public to “know the real numbers” related to the drug war, with the hashtag #RealNumbersPH. The discussion was quickly dominated by pro-Duterte voices critical of the international media.
Police patrol a shanty community at night during curfew on June 8, 2016 in Manila.
Dondi Tawatao/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Some 1,000 people whom authorities accused of being drug users and dealers take an oath before local authorities after turning themselves in in Tanauan, the Philippines, on July 18, 2016.
TED ALJIBE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
A man authorities accused of being a drug user is fingerprinted during the mass surrender of some 1,000 alleged drug users and pushers in the Philippine town of Tanauan, located about 37 miles (60 kilometers) south of Manila on July 18, 2016.
TED ALJIBE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
A social worker gives counseling to those who have turned themselves in for drug-related crimes in the Philippines on July 18, 2016.
TED ALJIBE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
A woman cradles her husband, next to a placard which reads "I'm a pusher," who was shot dead in Manila on July 23, 2016.
NOEL CELIS/AFP/Getty Images
A Philippine police forensic investigator displays packets of drugs and a hand gun found inside a shanty where members of a suspected drug syndicate were killed after a shootout with police on July 3, 2016.
TED ALJIBE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
A suspected female member of a drug syndicate is presented by police in Manila on June 22, 2016.
Dondi Tawatao/Getty Images
A gun, bullets, marked money and sachets of crystal meth are laid on a table after a drug raid in Manila on June 20, 2016.
Dondi Tawatao/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Police officers stand in formation before the start of "Oplan Rody" on June 1, 2016, a law enforcement operation named after President Duterte, whose nickname is Rody.
NOEL CELIS/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Duterte's crime crackdown raises fears of vigilante killings
‘Secret jail’ discovered
As senior police officials defended the drug war in central Manila, a “secret jail cell” housing 12 detainees was discovered this week on the capital’s outskirts, according to CNN Philippines.
The chief of local police and a dozen other officers have been suspended pending an investigation, and human rights activists said the case is indicative of ongoing abuses despite the latest statistics.
“Killings by police persist on a daily basis,” Josef Benedict, Amnesty International’s deputy director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, told CNN.?
“The recent discovery of a secret detention cell, where drug suspects were being detained without charge, in conditions which may amount to cruel and inhuman treatment, suggests that further violations by police may be occurring, which have not yet been uncovered,” he said.
“Killings by unknown armed persons, some of whom have been reported to be police personnel, as well the killing of suspected drug offenders that have already surrendered to police are just some of the serious human rights violations that continue to be reported,” Benedict said.
Journalist Buena Bernal reported from Manila. CNN’s Zahra Ullah and James Griffiths reported from Hong Kong.