Bangkok Post

DEATH SQUAD DISRUPTERS: FILIPINA PATROLS MAKE STREETS SAFER

- By Martin Petty and Eloisa Lopez in Manila

Late each night, a dozen women chat and share a meal before hitting the narrow streets of a Manila suburb where a death squad once roamed.

They are the “women’s patrol”, a group of 18 mothers and grandmothe­rs whose nightly walks through the dimly lit alleys of Pateros have been helping to deter shadowy gunmen behind murders of residents linked to illegal drugs.

Not long after President Rodrigo Duterte declared a war on drugs in 2016 and promised thousands would die, Pateros was being terrorised by attackers in hoods and ski masks, known locally as the “bonnet gang”.

With the town of 63,000 paralysed by fear, the women decided to arm themselves with flashlight­s and patrol their community, keeping up a nightly presence to disrupt the bonnet gang.

“When we started the patrols, the enthusiasm came back to our community and the fear disappeare­d. Back then, people were afraid to go out,” said Jenny Helo, 39, who leads the women through the labyrinth of shops, shacks and informal dwellings.

“But when they saw how effective we are, because of how we really go around the community, people regained confidence.”

The killers have not been caught. In the deadliest periods of the crackdown, there were as many as four murders linked to drugs each day in the Philippine­s, many by gunmen riding pillion on motorcycle­s.

The total number of drug-related killings since Duterte unleashed his drugs war is unknown.

Police say they killed 5,400 suspects in self-defence during their anti-drugs operations, but deny allegation­s by activists that elements of the force are involved in the mystery killings that plagued Pateros and other parts of Manila.

In a written response to Reuters, Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo called those “inevitable results” when a government was serious about suppressin­g illegal drugs.

He attributed the deaths to botched drug deals, turf wars between drug syndicates, or informants being silenced.

Pateros is now safer and the gunmen have gone, say those who live there. The women never found out who the bonnet gang were, Helo said, but believe they thwarted them.

“We disrupted them in what they do,” she said. “They know we are here to fight what they’re doing.”

Pateros police chief Colonel Simnar

Gran praised the patrollers and said local police had worked closely with them and the mayor to tighten the town’s security.

A few officers accompany the women each night, enforcing curfews and smoking bans, and warning people against drugs.

“This can be replicated by other communitie­s,” Gran said. “They’re doing this voluntaril­y without compensati­on. They’re just civic-minded people.”

“When we started the patrols, the enthusiasm came back to our community and the fear disappeare­d”

JENNY HELO

 ??  ?? ABOVE
Maria Oqueria, 64, is one of the local women who decided to take to the streets in a challenge to shadowy local gunmen.
ABOVE Maria Oqueria, 64, is one of the local women who decided to take to the streets in a challenge to shadowy local gunmen.
 ??  ?? A policeman reprimands men for drinking in public, while accompanyi­ng volunteer patrollers in Pateros.
A policeman reprimands men for drinking in public, while accompanyi­ng volunteer patrollers in Pateros.
 ??  ?? RIGHT
Lea Reyes Cabrera, 51, a member of a volunteer group of female patrollers, makes her nightly rounds in Pateros, Metro Manila.
RIGHT Lea Reyes Cabrera, 51, a member of a volunteer group of female patrollers, makes her nightly rounds in Pateros, Metro Manila.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand