The National - News

Filipinos gripped by the graveyard shift

Rodrigo Duterte’s hardline approach to nation’s drugs problem has created a media subculture of its own, Colin Freeman, Foreign Correspond­ent, reports

- foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

MANILA // No one, not even his own family, ever thought that Noel Salamat was an angel.

When he failed to return one night to his home in the Malabon slum district, his wife’s first hunch was that he was out womanising, or perhaps on a drug binge smoking shabu, Filipino crystal meth.

Two weeks later, a relative found his bullet-ridden body at a funeral parlour. A brief police report given to the family said that his body had been found in roadside shrubbery, his assailants unknown.

That the report did not dwell on who carried out the attack is no great surprise. Since the election last year of president Rodrigo “Dirty Harry” Duterte – a man who makes Clint Eastwood’s tough-guy cop look gentle – about 7,000 Filipinos have died in suspected extrajudic­ial killings according to a report in March by Human Rights Watch.

Most are believed to be the work of police death squads or vigilantes, who Mr Duterte himself has urged to take the war on drugs into their own hands. “We’ve no idea what happened,” said Salamat’s wife, Khrisna, 36, her pink T- shirt stretched over a belly pregnant with the couple’s fifth child.

“He’d stopped using drugs, but still took them occasional­ly. He wasn’t the kind to get into trouble, though. He was very friendly and trusting.”

Yet while Salamat’s killers seem unlikely to be found, much less prosecuted, his family at least has the scant consolatio­n that his death will not go unnoticed by the wider world.

As Khrisna sat grieving at his all-night wake, a small group of photojourn­alists arrived to take pictures of his white open casket, and to ask what little detail she knew about his demise.

Welcome to life – and death – on the “graveyard shift”, the apt nickname for what is probably one of the busiest police beats in modern crime reporting.

Operating from a shabby office in the central police precinct, the 9pm- to- 4am shift used to be just another part of the daily grind for Manila’s press corps, for whom drug violence in the hours after dark is nothing new. But since July, when Mr Duterte came to power on a pledge to declare all-out war on dealers and their customers, the level of carnage has soared. Sometimes there have been 27 murders a night.

In the cramped backstreet­s of neighbourh­oods such as Mala- bon, the wakes held to mourn a loved one’s passing seem never-ending.

Whether every single death is an extrajudic­ial killing rather than just routine bloodshed is impossible to tell. But while their sheer frequency no longer means they barely count as news any more, the graveyard shift has now attracted a dedicated hardcore who cover it regularly.

“The more you cover it, the harder it gets to walk away from it,” said photograph­er Eloisa Lopez, 21.

Rather like the Oscar-nominated movie Nightcrawl­er, in which Jake Gyllenhaal’s cameraman chases ambulances and police cars around Los Angeles, those on the graveyard shift spend much of their time following police sirens.

But while Gyllenhaal does it purely to make a quick buck, his Filipino peers hope to show the wider world the human cost of Mr Duterte’s policy.

As the outcry against it has grown – critics in the Philippine­s want the president prosecuted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court – the police have done their best to keep the media at a distance, cordoning off murder scenes before they arrive.

But there are always other sources of informatio­n, not least undertaker­s such as Orly Fernandez, whose parlour was where Salamat’s body turned up. Mr Duterte joked that his war on drugs would be a boom time for undertaker­s, and sure enough, Mr Fernandez has had few quiet nights in the past year.

“The records speak for them- selves,” he says, flicking through ledgers packed with entries listing “gunshot wound” as the cause of death.

Yet the photograph­ers’ diligent coverage of the slaughter does not seem to have put Filipinos off their president, whose approval ratings have dropped only slightly from 83 per cent to 76 per cent. While human rights groups query government claims that the drug war has dramatical­ly slashed crime rates, many Filipinos back the idea of putting the fear of God – or at least death squads – into the criminal fraternity.

And that includes Mr Fernandez, although he sees the daily slaughter more intimately than those on the graveyard shift.

“There are far fewer people getting raped and robbed, because now it is the criminals who are scared,” he said. “When I meet the families of the dead, I feel sympathy. But personally, yes, in a way I support this drug war.”

Ironically, so too do many of the families of the victims – especially those in slums such as Malabon, where the effects of drug-related crime are often felt the most. They just wish it was done differentl­y.

“We are not against fighting drugs, we are just against these killings,” said Khrisna’s friend Marites Oliveros, sitting next to her at the wake. As a kitten prowled under Salamat’s coffin, she told of how her own brother was killed in the crossfire of a drug feud five years ago.

“They are killing these people like cats,” she said.

‘ When I meet the families of the dead, I feel sympathy. But personally, yes, in a way I support this drug war Orly Fernandez undertaker

 ?? Colin Freeman for The National ?? Noel Salamat’s wife Khrisna sits by his coffin. His bullet-ridden body was found at an undertaker’s premises.
Colin Freeman for The National Noel Salamat’s wife Khrisna sits by his coffin. His bullet-ridden body was found at an undertaker’s premises.
 ?? Pictures Noel Celis / AFP and Courtesy Eloisa Navotas ?? Narcotics users and shanty drug dens are the targets of Rodrigo Duterte’s campaign.
Pictures Noel Celis / AFP and Courtesy Eloisa Navotas Narcotics users and shanty drug dens are the targets of Rodrigo Duterte’s campaign.
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