The Philippine Star

A continuing war

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The spokespers­on for the Philippine National Police dismissed the words as hyperbole. With President Duterte, however, warnings to kill drug trafficker­s are rarely empty threats.

Meeting with some Cabinet members last Wednesday night, Duterte again defended his brutal war on drugs, and said that before stepping down on June 30, he wanted to see three or five more drug lords fight it out with the police and killed.

Duterte was borne to power on an anti-crime platform, memorably promising to end the drug menace in six months. Six years later, with over 6,000 drug suspects killed in police anti-narcotics operations, the President himself has admitted that he has yet to fulfill his promise. Throughout his bloody campaign against drugs, shabu continued to be smuggled into the country by the ton.

Despite a possible investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, the President says he has no regrets and sees no reason to apologize for his methods in fighting the drug menace. At the start of his presidency, he had said that the involvemeT­nhteerev  ewnillo  bfel  oncoa  nl executives[,  Rpolice gene-r,a$-ls0 a] nd barangay officials complicate­d efforts to fight the drug menace  M. SAeYv  TeOraPlICl­o:  CcaRlEgAoT­IvOeNrnmen­t officials and dozens of barangay captains were among those killed in his war.

In his speech, he noted that the lieutenant­s of slain drug lords simply took over the lucrative operations. He expressed hope that the incoming administra­tion would continue his war on drugs. Being a former city prosecutor, he also offered to provide legal assistance to law enforcers who are sued for carrying out the campaign against illegal drugs.

It is unclear if the incoming Marcos administra­tion will have the same brutal approach to the drug menace. The persistenc­e of the problem shows that the drug killings have not provided sufficient shock and awe to deter drug dealers from engaging in one of the most lucrative although illegal enterprise­s.

President Duterte’s war has also been deficient in addressing the other major aspect of the illegal drug scourge: the demand. This is a far more complex element that calls for a multiprong­ed approach involving families, the community,

MAY 15 schools, civil society and the religious sector. Perhaps the incoming administra­tion will have a deeper grasp of the problem, and a better tack in addressing both supply and demand.

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