Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palace: Drug war to improve in 2018

- By Leila B. Salaverria @LeilasINQ

The Duterte administra­tion will apply the lessons from its previous experience­s in the controvers­ial drug war to make the campaign better in 2018, according to presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque.

Roque also described as “hugely successful” the campaign against illegal narcotics despite President Duterte twice taking the police out of antidrug operations because of questionab­le killings of suspected ad- dicts and pushers.

The Philippine National Police has since been brought back to the campaign, but lost the lead role to the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA).

The thousands of drug-related killings in the country have given rise to allegation­s of extrajudic­ial executions and to criticism of the President and his administra­tion by human rights groups and other local and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

But Roque said the administra­tion had learned from its experience­s in handling the drug war and expected fewer complaints about how it was done.

Learn from experience

“Because we have gone through a lot of experience­s about it, I’m sure we will learn from our past experience,” he told reporters recently.

Roque said he considered the war on drugs a success because the crime rate had gone down, and to him, this was a “major accomplish­ment.”

Asked about the PNP being removed from the drug war twice, he said the President was just looking for the best way to rid the country of the illegal narcotics scourge.

Mr. Duterte first stopped the police from conducting antidrug operations in January after it was found that narcotics policemen had killed Korean businessma­n Jee Ick-joo right inside the PNP headquarte­rs at Camp Crame.

The police were directed to resume the drug war a month later.

In October, the PNP was taken out of the antidrug campaign for the second time, with the task handed over to PDEA.

Public outrage

This followed widespread public outrage over police-led killings, including that of 17-yearold Kian delos Santos, who was slain in an antidrug operation.

Earlier this month, Mr. Duterte brought back the PNP to the drug war anew, but said the campaign would still be headed by PDEA.

The PNP conducted 79,193 antidrug operations from July 1, 2016, to November 27, 2017, according to a yearend report from Malacañang.

During this period, 3,967 were killed in antidrug operations. Some 16,355 deaths were under investigat­ion.

A total of 118,287 drug personalit­ies were arrested and a total of 1,308,078 drug users surrendere­d.

The PNP has reported an 8.44-percent decrease in total crime volume from January to October this year.

There was also a 20.56-percent decrease in index crime, or crimes against persons and crimes against property. Robbery incidents also decreased by 23.61 percent.

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