The Star Malaysia

Survey: Doubt grows over Duterte drug war killings

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Manila: Nearly half of Filipinos believe police are killing innocent people in waging President Rodrigo Duterte’s anti-drugs war, according to survey results released.

Police have reported killing 3,850 suspected drug dealers who allegedly resisted arrest during a 15-month crackdown waged in the name of Duterte’s election campaign vow to rid society of narcotics.

Thousands of other people have been murdered in unexplaine­d circumstan­ces which rights groups partly attribute to vigilante death squads.

Previous surveys showed popular support for the crackdown.

The latest poll by the respected Social Weather Station (SWS) was the first indication that significan­t numbers of Filipinos doubt the official version of the deaths.

“Forty-nine percent of the country agrees with the statement, ‘Many of those killed by the police in the anti-drug campaign are not really drug pushers’,” SWS said in a statement yesterday.

Twenty-three percent disagreed, while 27% were undecided, according to the Manila organisati­on, which surveyed 1,200 adults faceto-face across the country from June 23-26.

Twenty percent “strongly agree” and 34% “somewhat agree” that “many of those killed by the police in the anti-drug campaign didn’t really fight against the police”, it added.

Eight percent strongly disagreed and 12% somewhat disagreed, with 25% undecided.

Duterte spokesman Ernesto Abella dismissed the poll findings.

“It seems the second quarter Social Weather Stations survey contains leading and pointed questions that may have unduly influenced the answers of respondent­s,” Abella said in a statement.

National police spokesman Chief Superinten­dent Dionardo Carlos said the poll findings were about “perception”, adding 85 police officers had also been killed and more than 200 wounded while enforcing the crackdown.

It was the first time such a figure had been given.

“It only shows that there was resistance and danger because we lost lives,” Carlos added.

Political analyst Javad Heydarian said that while Filipinos backed the drug war, in principle, “they have consistent­ly raised concern with extrajudic­ial killings as well as the reliabilit­y and profession­alism of the national police”.

He added: “It certainly puts pressure on Duterte to instil more discipline within the law enforcemen­t ranks.”

Dindo Manhit, president of the Manila-based policy think-tank Stratbase ADR Institute, said past SWS surveys consistent­ly showed strong support for Duterte and his war on drugs.

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