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Filipino bishops urge bell-ringing, prayers to protest bloody drugs war

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MANILA: Stepping up a campaign against President Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody war on drugs, Catholic bishops in the Philippine­s have called for church bells to be rung for the next 40 nights, and congregati­ons to light candles and pray for the killing to end.

A pastoral letter by Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s (CBCP) sent to priests urged Catholics to pray for victims from Saturday until All Saints’ Day on Nov. 1, when Filipinos traditiona­lly pay respects to the dead.

More than 3,800 people have been killed in antidrugs operations in the past 15 months and at least 2,100 murders are suspected of being drug-related, according to police data, though human rights groups believe the numbers are understate­d.

“The relentless and bloody campaign against drugs that shows no sign of abating impels us, your bishops, to declare: In the name of God, stop the killings!” Archbishop Socrates Villegas, the head of the CBCP, said in the letter.

Such messages are typically read aloud in church or distribute­d to their congregati­ons.

Many Catholic churches in the capital have already started lighting candles and ringing bells for five minutes each day at 8 p.m.

Thousands of Filipinos rallied against Duterte on Thursday to protest against what they fear is an emerging dictatorsh­ip, and several churches held mass against the killings and urged people to renounce violence.

The bishops are among the most influentia­l dissenting voices to come out against the Duterte’s uncompromi­sing strategy.

Having been largely silent on the issue when it first erupted last year, priests have increasing­ly taken a stand against the anti-drugs campaign.

As bodies started to appear nightly in Manila’s slums, the church stepped up its opposition, denouncing the killings and in some cases, providing sanctuary to witnesses of killings and drug users who feared they could be targeted.

Villegas said the country’s bishops were firmly against drugs, but killing was not the solution and prayer was “the most powerful weapon in our arsenal.”

Rights groups dispute official police accounts that say drug suspects were killed because they violently resisted arrest. Critics accuse police of executing users and smalltime dealers and planting evidence, which police reject.

Pablo Virgilio David, bishop in Manila’s Caloocan City, where large numbers of drug-related killings have taken place, urged the authoritie­s to end the killings and let healing begin.

“We disagree that we should treat them like monsters to be eliminated like stray cats and dogs,” he said of drug users and criminals. “We disagree that a criminal has no more hope of changing his life.”

 ??  ?? An anti-Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte protester raises a clenched fist during a rally at a park in Manila on Thursday. (AFP)
An anti-Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte protester raises a clenched fist during a rally at a park in Manila on Thursday. (AFP)

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