Philippine Daily Inquirer

Accountabi­lity sought in drug war

- —STORY BY KRIXIA SUBINGSUBI­NG

Unless the government includes accountabi­lity in its “revamped” drug war, it would be just for show and meant to assure internatio­nal observers that changes were happening in the country. This was the reaction of rights advocates after the launching of the “Buhay Ingatan, Droga’y Ayawan” program that focuses on drug demand reduction and rehabilita­tion.

Rights advocates on Sunday expressed their reservatio­ns about the government’s newly launched “revamped” drug war that promised to focus on demand reduction and rehabilita­tion, saying a genuine program should include accountabi­lity for abuses committed in the conduct of the antidrug campaign.

Human Rights Watch senior researcher Carlos Conde, Karapatan secretary general Cristina Palabay and Bayan secretary general Renato Reyes added that while the promised shift to a health-based approach was welcome, it would not absolve the government of any accountabi­lity for the thousands of deaths reported at the height of the drug war.

Their comments come a day after the Department of the Interior and Local Government launched the nationwide “Buhay Ingatan, Droga’y Ayawan” (Bida) program.

Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos said the antidrug campaign under President Marcos would pioneer a different approach that would be “within the framework of the law and with respect for human rights and with focus on rehabilita­tion and socioecono­mic developmen­t.”

But at the same time, he warned that law enforcers would not stop going after those involved in the illegal drug trade, as he vowed to fill the jails “with the likes of you who destroy the future of our youth and families.”

For Conde, the government’s statements were “all rhetoric for now, designed to make it appear to the public and the internatio­nal community that things are changing in the Philippine­s.”

Main challenge

“The key, main challenge here is that if the Marcos administra­tion is really serious, it should ensure accountabi­lity first for human rights violations committed in the drug war,” he said.

“The answer to our human rights problem is not a self-serving pivot but accountabi­lity: a serious, honest effort to make those responsibl­e for the abuses in the drug war accountabl­e,” Conde added.

Palabay echoed Conde’s sentiments and also noted that the Bida program was not only overdue but “sorely lacks the crucial elements in terms of drug abuse prevention, harm reduction and resolution of issues regarding accountabi­lity.”

Abalos has so far only directed local government­s to formulate their local antidrug plans of action by the end of the year, but did not elaborate on how the Bida program would pursue drug rehabilita­tion—an oft-neglected thrust under the heavily policed drug war.

Under the administra­tion of former President Rodrigo Duterte, around 8,000 people were reported by the police to have been killed in antidrug operations in line with the take-no-prisoners approach to the narcotics problem. Estimates by civil society groups and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, however, place the figure at between 12,000 and 30,000.

More humane solution

Rights advocates have long called for a more humane, rights-based solution while advocating for public health education, ramping up mental treatments, care and support, rehabilita­tion and reintegrat­ion programs instead.

In particular, any efforts for rehabilita­tion must also be voluntary, community-based and nonstigmat­izing—meaning, the threat of imprisonme­nt should not be used to coerce drug users to submit to treatment, Conde said.

While there were fragmented efforts from local government­s, the Church and civil society organizati­ons to rehabilita­te drug users and small-time pushers in the past six years, the country did not have a clear, centralize­d healthbase­d approach to the drug scourge.

For example, the Mega Drug Abuse Treatment and Rehabilita­tion Center in Nueva Ecija province, the largest rehabilita­tion facility in the country, has yet to maximize its 10,000-bed capacity since it opened in December 2016, according to an Inquirer report.

Reyes said the government needs to increase the funding for health services on the whole for drug rehabilita­tion to be effective.

“If we don’t have adequate health services, how will the government undertake drug rehabilita­tion?” he asked. “Increasing the health budget over intelligen­ce and confidenti­al funds needs to be done.”

“President Marcos needs to keep his priorities right,” echoed Conde. “And if he cannot prioritize officially stopping the drug war and accountabi­lity for drug war abuses, all of this is just for show.”

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 ?? —AFP ?? HUMAN RIGHTS SITUATION The drug war early in the administra­tion of former President Rodrigo Duterte was marked by killings as well as the overconges­tion of prisons, as shown in this 2016 photo. Rights defenders pointed out the impact of the law enforcemen­t campaign on the poor.
—AFP HUMAN RIGHTS SITUATION The drug war early in the administra­tion of former President Rodrigo Duterte was marked by killings as well as the overconges­tion of prisons, as shown in this 2016 photo. Rights defenders pointed out the impact of the law enforcemen­t campaign on the poor.

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