Bangkok Post

Filipino Catholics march against drug war killings

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>> MANILA: Thousands of Roman Catholics marched in the Philippine­s capital Manila yesterday in the biggest gathering denouncing extra-judicial killings and a government plan to reimpose the death penalty for criminals.

Dubbed a “Walk for Life” prayer rally and endorsed by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippine­s (CBCP), the gathering came just days after the church launched its strongest attack against President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs.

Organisers claimed as many as 50,000 people took part in the march toward Manila’s Rizal Park, while about 10,000 based on police estimates stayed to hear speeches.

More than 7,600 people have been killed since Mr Duterte launched his anti-drugs campaign seven months ago. More than 2,500 died in shoot-outs during raids and sting operations, according to the police.

Amid mounting criticism about a surge in killings, Mr Duterte said yesterday the campaign was “by and large successful”.

Speaking at the Philippine Military Academy’s alumni homecoming in Baguio City, he said the drug problem was more complex than he initially thought, prompting him to seek military support.

“I need the help of each one, especially the military, not for social control but protection [for] the citizens from the lawless, the reckless, and the selfish,” the firebrand leader said.

Both the government and police have denied that extra-judicial killings have taken place. But human rights groups believe many deaths that police had attributed to vigilantes were carried out by assassins likely colluding with police.

“We cannot teach that killing is wrong by killing those who kill. It also increases the number of killers,” CBCP president Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas said in a statement.

In its most strongly worded attack on the drug crackdown, a CBCP pastoral letter read out at services across the country early this month said killing people was not the answer to traffickin­g of illegal drugs.

Nearly 80% of the Philippine­s’ 100 million people are Catholic and until recently the church had been hesitant to criticise Mr Duterte’s war on drugs.

Senator Leila de Lima, a staunch critic of Mr Duterte’s war on drugs now facing three drug-related charges, also joined the rally. She said the charges were meant to silence her.

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