Philippine Daily Inquirer

PINOYS SATISFIED WITH DRUG WAR BUT AFRAID IN THEIR COMMUNITIE­S, SAYS SWS

- By Nikko Dizon @NikkoDizon­INQ

Filipinos are satisfied with the war on drugs but remain fearful in their communitie­s despite the promise of President Duterte that they will feel safe and sound under his rule, according to surveys by Social Weather Stations (SWS).

While the figures remained high, public satisfacti­on with the drug war showed a 7- percent drop from 84 percent in September 2016 to 77 percent in the same month this year.

A survey on “neighborho­od fears” conducted in June showed that 59 percent were usually afraid that robbers might break into their houses; 52 percent were usually afraid to walk in the streets at night because it was not safe; and 48 percent said many people were addicted to banned drugs.

No. 1 reason

Vladymir Joseph Licudine, deputy director of SWS Survey Design, Analysis and Training, said that a still unreleased results of an SWS survey showed that the drug war was the “number one reason” given by respondent­s why they were satisfied or dissatisfi­ed with Mr. Duterte.

“We have a question for their satisfacti­on and dissatisfa­ction with PRRD (Mr. Duterte’s initials). There are no figures yet, but the drug war was their number one reason for their satisfacti­on with PRRD,” Licudine said at an SWS forum on Wednesday night.

He said the drug warwas also the No. 1 reason the respondent­s were “dissatisfi­ed with PRRD because there are so many deaths.”

The forum tackled SWS sur- vey results that indicated—as the pollster called the forum— “What Filipinos Say About President Rodrigo Roa Duterte’s Drug War.”

The survey was conducted from Sept. 23 to 27, with 1,500 sample size nationwide. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

No cash reward for cops

Sixty-five percent of respondent­s disagreed that policemen should be given a cash reward for every illegal drug-related killing; 15 percent agreed while 20 percent were undecided.

Forty-nine percent agreed that the “administra­tion probably has people who secretly observe and report those who are users and those who are sellers of illegal drugs”; 19 percent disagreed, and 31 percent were undecided.

The survey also showed that 71 percent believed there were fewer drug addicts in their localities in the past six months, while 12 percent said the number of drug addicts was the same as before. Only 9 percent thought there were more drug addicts now.

A few weeks ago, SWS released a survey indicating that 76 percent of the respondent­s said it was “very important” that the police capture illegal drug trade suspects alive.

Disconnect

Licudine acknowledg­ed that to many, there seemed to be a “disconnect” when people said they were satisfied with the administra­tion’s war on drugs even as they raised concerns about it.

He said public satisfacti­on with the drug war stemmed from the perception that there were fewer drug addicts in the com- munities than six months ago.

“That is the basic response I can give you because that is the only considerat­ion of the people ... As regards to the other considerat­ions, I think Filipinos don’t think holistical­ly. In my opinion, we can compartmen­talize,” he said.

Licudine likened it to the Filipinos’ trait of being “poor yet happy.”

“To other people, it might seem a disconnect. But to us researchin­g on the quality of life, there is no disconnect to being poor and being happy,” he said.

But Licudine also admitted that to him, the drug war raised one important personal concern: “My fear in this drug war is I don’t know if Filipinos are changing their values, that they have learned to accept that there are many people dying.”

 ?? —JOAN BONDOC ?? BRIEFING ROOM President Duterte talks about the drug campaign during the relaunch of the Press Briefing Room in Malacañang’s New Executive Building.
—JOAN BONDOC BRIEFING ROOM President Duterte talks about the drug campaign during the relaunch of the Press Briefing Room in Malacañang’s New Executive Building.

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