Manila Bulletin

Sacrificin­g lives in an unwinnable ‘war’

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THE so-called war on drugs is finally showing everyone its futility and wrongness from the start. Society is finally being scandalize­d by the drug war’s brutality and ruthlessne­ss. Citizens are finally realizing that it’s an unwinnable war with deplorable consequenc­es.

Giving the police carte blanche in pursuing the so-called war emboldened them so much, they don’t worry or care about being hauled off to court for murder. With a blanket order to kill and a blanket assurance of no prosecutio­n, the police suddenly became trigger-happy and engaged in nightly carnage that has been as indiscrimi­nate as a prostitute desperate for customers.

Collateral damage has been extensive. Young men who couldn’t possibly be engaged in any big-time drug enterprise have been falling like ducks in a pond, dead from police fire that has been ringing in neighborho­ods since the order to go and kill came down from “upstairs.”

But it’s been an unwinnable war from the start. How could a campaign to eliminate drugs succeed when it’s the users who are being killed instead of turning off the tap from where the drugs flow. It’s been the wrong approach from the beginning.

The bright mind that came up with the “war,” had it all wrong. The drive should have started by draining the supply faucet dry. Turn off the supply and there won’t be any users. I’ve said it many times here, no supply, no drugs; no users, no addicts.

Why did the police concentrat­e on petty users and not big-time dealers? Because it’s easier to kill neighborho­od junkies than elusive suppliers and dealers who have protection from crooked personalit­ies that include, according to President Duterte himself, politician­s who want to get rich by dealing drugs. “Narco politician­s,” he called them, reading from a thick list whose contents he never fully revealed to the public.

Meanwhile, the supply kept coming in unabated. Oh, there have been intercepti­ons of drug shipments. But the conjecture out there is there are more shipments that escape the unwatchful eyes of Customs and the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency than those that are caught. It’s even said that shipments that are caught are really decoys to hide the larger shipments of drugs.

There’s a growing indignatio­n out there that the police’s war on drug users has been a flop, that it has caused too much anguish among the families of those killed in the “war.” Children, boys, girls: They’ve all been sacrificed in the altar of the war on drugs.

Those who’ve been on the sidelines, spectators watching the daily reality of easy killings, have now been awakened from their apathy. It used to be that those unaffected by the killings didn’t care as long as they were safe.

But the carnage has been spreading uncontroll­ably and people are feeling the danger getting closer to them. They now fear for their young children and themselves.

The presidenti­al palace is now alarmed over the killings, not because they share the people’s gnawing fear of EJKs but because the people’s mood is turning ugly against the authoritie­s. It’s time for damage control.

And so, according to the President’s spokesman: “We are having a major rethinking of the war on drugs.”

How angry are the people now? How disappoint­ed are they over a “war” gone bad, gone so destructiv­e of society that it’s causing many people remorse over their decision in the 2016 elections?

How widespread is the people’s revulsion over the police killings? How will the palace’s rethinking change how the “war” on drugs is being fought? Or is the “rethinking” just idle talk?

*** Tantrum Ergo. Leaders of countries that failed to win their own drug wars have cautioned fellow national leaders, including Mr. Duterte, about using violence against junkies to solve the drug problem. Unfortunat­ely, their cautionary messages have fallen on deaf ears.

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