The Philippine Star

Can Duterte push back rising dissent?

- FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

CAN President Rodrigo Duterte and his loyalists turn back the political tsunami whipped up by the storm of protest against the on-the-spot execution of thousands of Filipinos suspected of being drug pushers/ users?

Last week, 39 members of the United Nations Human Rights Council issued a statement assailing perceived human rights violations in Duterte’s narcotic drive. The bloc critical of his campaign has been joined lately by the United States, Canada, Australia, Ukraine and Georgia.

The bloc includes Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Georgia, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenst­ein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, Moldova, Montenegro, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerlan­d, The Netherland­s and Ukraine.

In the Philippine­s, meantime, surveys reveal that a growing number of concerned Filipinos are coming out of their comfort zones disturbed by the rash of extrajudic­ial killings (EJKs), with the police and/or vigilantes acting as prosecutor, judge and executione­r rolled into one.

The EJKs are an alarming oddity in a country that has banished the death penalty. Even if the accused were given his day in court, the judge convicting him of a heinous crime may not order his execution. But the police in effect are able/allowed to do with impunity what even the courts cannot.

The UNHRC statement exposed the emptiness of a boast that Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano has succeeded, in his recent presentati­on before the world body, in tamping down foreign criticisms of the drug drive’s violating human rights.

Rejecting the UNHRC statement, Malacañang admonished other nations not to meddle in the domestic affairs of the Philippine­s. That insular attitude, however, may have been trumped by the more widely held view that human rights are a universal concern of the civilized world.

Paying the high price of isolation

DISINGENUO­US Duterte propagandi­sts continue to misreprese­nt his critics as being pro-illegal drugs just because they question the campaign’s barbaric methods and its treating addiction more as a crime than a health problem.

But Filipino victims of state-inspired violation of human rights can at least find hope in the fact that even if their own government does not care enough to protect them, there are peoples and organizati­ons outside that are looking for ways to help.

In 1948, the Philippine­s was among United Nations charter members that voted for the adoption of the UN Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights. Under its Constituti­on, the Philippine­s has adopted “the generally accepted principles of internatio­nal law as part of the law of the land.”

However, with Duterte’s having bad-mouthed many Philippine friends of long standing and considerin­g his lack of diplomatic skills, he may have a hard time blunting the mounting criticisms of the brutal conduct of his drug war.

His tactic of intimidati­ng potential foes and his slathering the public with false statements (lies, actually) will not work on the internatio­nal stage. The novelty of his cursing leaders and officials of other countries has worn off, so he attracts less sympatheti­c attention.

His vision of establishi­ng a Beijing-Moscow-Manila axis “against the world” and his threat to chart an “independen­t” diplomatic path away from Washington has not materializ­ed. He has not grown enough muscle with which to bully foreign critics the way he browbeats local dissenters.

Apparently rattled by the spreading opposition to his strong-arm moves -- his handlers better apprise him of his waning standing in media and in surveys -- Duterte and his followers have started to show signs of desperatio­n, while the opposition has grown bolder.

Duterte made his fight against narcotics (“I hate draaags!”) and corruption (“I’ll keeel you!”) the centerpiec­e of his bare administra­tion program. Any failure in these critical areas or any hint of sliding back along those lines could prove politicall­y fatal.

More Filipinos now question drug war

THERE IS a palpable shifting of the tide, showing Filipinos taking a second hard look at the drug drive that has claimed the lives of more than 10,000 suspected pushers/ users who were denied their right to due process.

Some of the victims were gunned down by vigilantet­ype assassins, usually riding motorcycle­s. The police disown these brazen executions, but do not seem to bother to solve them. Yet the neighbors know why these cases are forever simply “under investigat­ion.”

Surveys show that around half (49 percent) of Filipinos have been disturbed enough to now tell pollsters that they doubt that the victims were shot after they fought back (“nanlaban”), the scripted line of policemen who had gunned down suspects.

In its latest nationwide survey, the Social Weather Stations has found that six out of every10 Filipinos (63 percent) believe that some drug suspects had already surrendere­d to the police but were still killed.

In Metro Manila, 75 percent of the 1,200 adults polled last June 23-26 agreed with the statement, “There are suspects in the illegal drug trade who already surrendere­d, yet were still killed.” In Mindanao, it was 63 percent; rest of Luzon, 63 percent; and the Visayas, 53 percent.

Almost two in 10 Filipinos (17 percent) said they knew of someone who was not really a drug pusher but was summoned for the “Oplan Tokhang” of the police. In Metro Manila, 22 percent said they knew of such cases.

In the previous week, the SWS released the results of another survey showing that half (49 percent) of Filipinos believe that many victims in anti-drug operations were not pushers. A bigger number (54 percent) said they believe that many of those killed did not fight back, as claimed by the police.

The number of doubters seems to be growing despite the propaganda, the game of trolls and the endless lies.

* * * ADVISORY: All Postscript­s from 1997 to the present can be accessed at manilamail.com. Follow me on

Twitter as @FDPascual. Email feedback to fdp333@ yahoo.com H

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