PNP relaunches war on drugs, vows ‘less bloody’ campaign – Rappler

PNP chief Ronald dela Rosa says the police will avoid past mistakes

Published 12:26 PM, March 06, 2017

Updated 12:26 PM, March 06, 2017

AT THE HELM. PNP chief Ronald dela Rosa introduces Senior Superintendent Graciano Mjiares as head of the newly formed PNP Drug Enforcement Group on Monday, March 6, 2017. Photo by Darren Langit/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines The Philippine National Police (PNP) on Monday, March 6, 2017, relaunched its war on drugs, vowing to make it less bloody, if not bloodless.

In a speech announcing the revived campaign, PNP chief Director General Ronald dela Rosa said that the new anti-drug task force will be composed of policemen committed to defeating illegal drugs but who know that at stake is the future of the PNP.

The PNP Drug Enforcement Group (PNP-DEG) replaces the PNP Anti-Illegal Drugs Group (AIDG), which was dissolved by President Rodrigo Duterte on January 30 in the aftermath of the brutal murder inside Camp Crame of a South Korean businessman.

The revival of the drug war comes a month after its suspension by the President. (READ: #AnimatED: Ang pagbabalik)

More than 7,000 suspected drug dealers and users have been killed since the government launched its war on drugs in July 2016. The campaign has come under fire here and abroad, and has been the subject of various investigations by international human rights organizations. (READ: PNP behind extrajudicial killings - Human Rights Watch)

The President himself said the PNP had to rid itself of scalawags to make sure it will be effective in its campaign against illegal drugs.

We cant afford to fail in this campaign, Dela Rosa said. Ayusin na natin for our children,grandchildren [so they can] live without the problem of illegal drug.

The new group is headed by Senior Superintendent Graciano Mijares, who was introduced to the public on Monday by Dela Rosa.

Dela Rosa later told reporters that he will make sure that the group will not repeat past mistakes. Rappler.com

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PNP relaunches war on drugs, vows 'less bloody' campaign - Rappler

‘Ghost Recon Wildlands’ Goes to Battle in the War on Drugs – Huffington Post

Over the past couple decades video games have emerged as powerful propaganda tools in service of the military-industrial complex. Ghost Recon Wildlands developed by Frances Ubisoft is the latest and greatest propaganda piece in service of the interminable War on Drugs, now in its fifth decade since President Nixon declared it in 1971. Set in a Bolivia turned into a narco-state by a fictional Mexican drug gang called the Santa Blanca (Holy White) Cartel, gamers assume the role of the U.S. Army special forces as they parachute into the mountains and jungles of the South American nation to liquidate the cartel. The cartels capo, awkwardly named El Sueno (Dream), is a devotee of Santa Muerte who serves as the spiritual patroness of cocaine traffickers.

While the games chief developers have bent over backwards in recent interviews to claim Bolivia was chosen for its beautiful topography and that Santa Muerte is much more than just a narcosaint, it couldnt be more obvious that Ghost Recon Wildlands is but a slightly fictionalized version of the U.S.-led drug war in Mexico designed to win over the hearts and minds of a new generation of gamers who are either ignorant of the never-ending narco-battles in Mexico and other parts of Latin America or who havent been convinced of the need to carry it on to the half-century mark.

Ubisoft developers opted to set the game in Bolivia not primarily because of topography but because of the countrys exit from the War on Drugs. Since 2008, leftist president Evo Morales has refused to cooperate with the DEA, so in the eyes of Drug War strategists in Washington, reflected in the offices of Ubisoft in Paris, Bolivia is a rogue state ripe for the taking by Mexican drug cartels. The Bolivian government has lodged an official complaint with France over its depiction in the game, which of course will only boost its sales since there is no such thing as bad publicity, especially in the gaming world.

Beyond Bolivia, Ghost Recon Wildlands takes the image of Mexican folk saint, Santa Muerte to new heights as a narcosaint. The top Santa Muerte leader in the game is a character called El Cardenal (the cardinal), a defrocked Catholic priest, who is obviously based on the real-life figure of David Romo, the self-proclaimed archbishop of Santa Muerte devotion. Romo, who appears prominently in my book Devoted to Death, founded the first legally recognized Santa Muerte church in 2003 in Mexico City, which had its legal status annulled after less than two years of operation under pressure from the Catholic Church. A harsh critic of both the Church and its political ally, the conservative PAN (National Action Party), Romo was arrested and convicted in 2011 for being part of a kidnapping ring in Mexico City that targeted elderly victims. Hes currently serving a 66-year sentence while his wife runs the struggling house of worship.

Another prominent character connected to Saint Death whose notorious nickname Ubisoft didnt even bother to change is El Pozolero (the stewmaker) who also appears in my book. Santiago Meza Lopez was a Tijuana-based cartel hitman who claim to have dissolved some 300 of his bosss males enemies in vats of acid. A warped sense of chivalry spared female victims from the deadly liquid as Meza Lopez preferred to kill women in more humane ways.

As the leading expert on Santa Muerte, the fastest growing new religious movement in the Western Hemisphere, Im the first to recognize the role she plays as real-life narco-saint to some Mexican cartel members. However, the real Santa Muerte also has a robust following among all levels of Mexican law enforcement, especially municipal police officers who are on the front lines of the drug war. So in reality Santa Muerte is patroness of the Mexican Drug War in its totality, providing spiritual protection to both the cartel sicario and the local cop. This reality, of course, is obscured in Ghost Recon Wildlands where the saint of death is an evil malefactress who only protects members of the Santa Blanca Cartel. In short, by vilifying both Bolivia and Santa Muerte while turning gamers into members of U.S. Army special forces, Ghost Recon Wildlands proves a powerful medium for perpetuating the interminable War on Drugs.

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'Ghost Recon Wildlands' Goes to Battle in the War on Drugs - Huffington Post

Trump Vows to Win War on Drugs, But Doesn’t Mention Marijuana – The Daily Chronic

Phillip Smith | March 1, 2017

In his inaugural address to Congress Tuesday night, President Trump echoed the ghosts of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagannot to mention Miguel Cervantesas he vowed to defeat drugs.

If there is a silver lining, his ire appears directed at heroin and other hard drugs. The word marijuana did not appear once in his speech.

Our terrible drug epidemic will slow down and ultimately, stop, he promised as part of a litany of MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN accomplishments to come (Dying industries will come roaring back to life. Heroic veterans will get the care they so desperately need.).

And, having forgottenor more likely, never learnedthe lessons of the past half century of American drug prohibition, hes going to defeat drugs the old-fashioned way: with more war on drugs.

To protect our citizens, I have directed the Department of Justice to form a Task Force on Reducing Violent Crime, Trump said. I have further ordered the Departments of Homeland Security and Justice, along with the Department of State and the Director of National Intelligence, to coordinate an aggressive strategy to dismantle the criminal cartels that have spread across our Nation.

But talk is cheap. Drug law enforcement costs money. The DEA and other federal agencies are already waging a multi-billion dollar a year war on drugs; if Trumps budget proposals match his rhetoric, he will have to be prepared to spend billions more. Just when he wants to cut just about all federal spending but defense, too.

Trump can ratchet up the drug war in some ways without relying on congressional appropriations through his control of the executive branch. For instance, his Justice Department could direct federal prosecutors to seek mandatory minimum prison sentences in most or all drug cases, a practice eschewed by the Obama Justice Department. That, too, has budgetary consequences, but until some time down the road.

Trump did at least pay lip service to addressing drug use as a public health issue, saying he would expand treatment for those who have become so badly addicted, but that doesnt gibe with his call to repeal the Affordable Care Act. If Obamacare is repealed, nearly three million Americans with addiction disorders with lose access to some or all of their health coverage, including nearly a quarter million receiving opioid addiction treatment.

Trumps Tuesday night crime and drug talk was interwoven with talk about the border, comingling immigration, drugs, and his border wall in a hot mess of overheated, but politically useful, rhetoric.

Weve defended the borders of other nations, while leaving our own borders wide open, for anyone to cross and for drugs to pour in at a now unprecedented rate, he said, ignoring the quadrupling in size of the Border Patrol in the past 20 years and the billions pumped into border security since 2001. We will stop the drugs from pouring into our country and poisoning our youth.

Trump also said that he was already making America safer with his immigration enforcement actions.

As we speak, we are removing gang members, drug dealers and criminals that threaten our communities and prey on our citizens. Bad ones are going out as I speak tonight and as I have promised, he said.

Its too early to see who is actually being deported in the opening days of the Trump administration, but if the past is any indicator, its not gang members, drug dealers, and criminals, but, in rank order, people whose most serious crime was crossing the border without papers, alcohol-impaired drivers, other traffic violators, and pot smokers. Those were the four leading charges for criminal immigration deportations in one recent year, according to Secure Communities and ICE Deportations: A Failed Program?

Trumps drug war rhetoric is triumphalist and militaristic, but so far its largely just talk. The proof will be in budget proposals and Justice Department memoranda, but in terms of progressive drug policy, hes striking a very ominous tone.

This does not bode well.

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons AttributionlicensefromStopTheDrugWar.organd was first published here.

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Trump Vows to Win War on Drugs, But Doesn't Mention Marijuana - The Daily Chronic

Phillipines Policemen Falsify Evidence in Duterte’s War on Drugs: Human Rights Watch – Newsweek

Police in the Philippines are falsifying evidence to justify war on drugs killings that have caused more than 7,000 deaths of mostly poor Filipinos, according to a new Human Rights Watch report. President Rodrigo Duterte has been accused of crimes against humanity for the deaths, and the human rights organization urged the United Nations to create an independent, international investigation into the killings.

The 117-page report found the Philippine National Police have been carrying out extrajudicial killings, claiming self defense. They planted guns, spent ammunition, and drug packets on their victims bodies to implicate them in drug activities, according to the rights group.

Dutertes war on drugs is meant to target drug pushers or drug lords, but human rights charitiesincluding Amnesty Internationalsay those affected either had low-paying jobs or were unemployed and living in poor areas in big cities.

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The war lost momentum in January when South Korean businessman Jee Ick- joo was murdered by rogue policemen and Duterte decided to halt the extrajudicial killings. Now, despite concern from international organizations, Duterte is committed to renewing the war on drugs.

At the groundbreaking ceremony for the Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway in Cordova town, Cebu on Thursday, Duterte announced that he is committed to stopping drugs.

This means there will be more killings because (criminals) really fight back. It won't end tomorrow, he said , according t o national newspaper PhilStar.

In the same speech, Duterte warned 6,000 policemen that he knew they were involved in the drugs trade. You will die. Either you kill me or I kill you,the president said. Duterte told his police chief Ronald de la Rosa that he could restart his war on drugs as before, on the condition the policemen he used had integrity.

Dutertes drug war is a widespread, systematic attack directed against any civilian population, says Dr. Pauline Eadie, an assistant professor of social sciences at Nottingham University. Technically it is a crime against humanity. These killings are often cited as self-defense but that is just not credible. The police are at the very least complicit in these killings, and they have the remit to operate without sanction.

She adds that although drug dealers cause users misery, it is not OK to ignore the rules of law when dealing with the problem. The answer to the problem is [dealing with] widespread poverty. Large sections of the community see Dutertes war as a necessary evil.

Edward Sentorias, a jobless father of three, was framed by the police, according to Human Rights Watch. A close relative saw the policeman place a gun and some sachets by Sentoriass body. I went back to where I was, and was totally shocked, the relative said. I couldnt even complain. If we go complain, what is our chance against the authorities?

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Phillipines Policemen Falsify Evidence in Duterte's War on Drugs: Human Rights Watch - Newsweek

This Church Is Running An Unconventional Resistance Against … – Huffington Post

The darkness made it difficult to photograph the blood-splattered pavement.

Since crime scene investigators had not yet arrived, the dozen or so photojournalists were able to shoot close-ups of the body that laid face down, curled up in the fetal position. As the herd of photographers inched forward, repositioning themselves to find more light, Brother Jun Santiago retreated. He wanted to capture the scene from a distance.

Im trying to get out of the brutality, he said. I want to capture the stench, the smell of the crime scene. The night is so powerful. The darkness is so powerful. Right now people are sleeping and they dont know whats happening.

Brother Jun is talking about the war on drugs in the Philippines, where more than 7,500 alleged drug addicts and pushers have been killed since president Rodrigo Duterte took office eight months ago.

Since December, Santiago has been documenting the nightly killings with local and foreign journalists on the graveyard shift in Manila to bring attention to the victims, mostly low-level drug offenders from urban poor communities. At night, hes a photographer. During the day, he attends mass and fulfills his religious duties at the National Shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help in Manila, also known as the Baclaran Church.

With little else but a camera, Santiago has quietly led an unconventional resistance movement within the Catholic Church against the governments war on drugs, although he would say hes just a man of faith taking photos to help his community. While the hierarchy of the Church hesitated to speak out against the killings for seven months as thousands were killed, Santiago helped fill the void with his images.

Just before Christmas, his photos were blown up and displayed outside Baclaran Church along with the work of other photojournalists. The exhibit made national headlines, sparking intrigue and outrage. For many churchgoers, it was an introduction to the cruel truth of a brutal and lawless war.

It was a unique way of exposing reality, said Father Carlos Ronquillo, the rector of the Baclaran. The power of images is something that I think can be harnessed if we as a church want to engage people to think deeply about whats happening. Not only through words. Not only through preaching.

Santiagos position in the church allows him to be more involved in the community. Priests are generally too tied down with official duties to be as active in the daily lives of their parishioners. As a result, the flexibility has given Santiago room to establish a more comprehensive outreach program for victims and their families.

In January, Santiago hired Dennis Febre, a human rights activist, to oversee the administrative side of the Baclarans extra-judicial killing (EJK) response program. The initiative provides a range of services for those affected by the drug war, including financial support for families, legal assistance, livelihood and employment programs, rehabilitation resources, and protection for those under threat. Febre is responsible for following up with the families of the victims Santiago documents at night. He also verifies cases of those who come to the church on their own for support.

The concrete actions we are doing are really non-political, said Febre. We respect [Duterte] as the president of the country, but at the same time the government needs to respect human rights.

Before the drug war, the Baclaran provided burial assistance of up to 5,000 pesos ($100) for families in need, but that hardly covers the full cost, which typically runs anywhere from 30,000 to 55,000 pesos.

The families have no time to grieve. Theyre always thinking of how to bury because the cost of the funeral services is too hard on them, said Santiago.

The church realized it needed to do more. By mid-February, the Baclaran had paid all the expenses for 56 families to bury their dead. Dozens more are on a waiting list. Costs are funded by donations from hundreds of thousands of devotees who flock to the church every week. The Baclaran is one of the most attended churches in the country.

This month, resistance within the Catholic Church has grown stronger. The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines released a blistering statement on Feb. 5 condemning the presidents reign of terror. Two weeks later, thousands of Catholics marched in Manila against the spreading culture of violence. Condemnations of the drug war have become commonplace during mass in many parishes on Sundays, empowering more Catholics to speak out.

Still, Ronquillo, the superior at Baclaran, questions whether these developments are enough.

The main question is what is the impact? Were in a changed time. Theres been a certain alienation that has altered peoples receptivity to what the church is saying. We are in our convents, our churches and our schools, but we are not among the people generally, Ronquillo said.

Santiagos documentation and the Baclarans EJK program strike at the heart of that disconnect. While some Church leaders continue to remain quiet or offer ineffectual criticism through words at the pulpit, Santiagos approach has paved the way for a new church order that prioritizes actions over words.

Dutertes rhetoric sometimes makes that type of advocacy difficult to carry out. He has repeatedly lambasted the Church as the most hypocritical institution, even calling it full of shit as officials ramped up attacks against his anti-drugs campaign in January. When priests and bishops speak out against the crackdown, Duterte often accuses them of womanizing or being corrupt.

He hits below the belt, said Father Amado Picardal, who has criticized Duterte for decades dating back to his time as mayor of Davao in the countrys south.

In the beginning, fear and intimidation helped stifle opposition, according to Father Atilano Fajardo, public affairs ministry director of the Archdiocese of Manila.

While many within the Church withheld criticism at the outset of the drug war to give Duterte more time to prove himself, Fajardo chose to mobilize. Less than a month into Dutertes presidency, Fajardo launched a campaign against the drug war called Huwag Kang Papatay, which translates to thou shalt not kill. As one of the first priests to speak out, Fajardo disputes the idea that the Church hasnt done enough.

Its not true, said Fajardo, referring to criticisms that the Catholic Church didnt do anything for months. Go to the parishes. Get out of your subdivisions and see what the Church is doing.

Beyond condemnations of the drug war during homilies, Fajardo points to the many parishes that are also offering rehab services, trauma counseling, and refuge for drug users and victims families.

He acknowledges, however, that these efforts need to be accompanied by mass movements and actions.

It is that belief that drives Fajardo to keep organizing and Santiago to continue covering the night shift. Without them, the dead remain nameless and the bodies become mere statistics.

The people must say this is enough, Santiago pleaded. People must mobilize because the church cannot do it alone.

This article originally appeared on Quartz.

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War on Drugs | The Huffington Post

What some international groups say about the Philippine war on drugs – Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines The tide of international criticism of the governments war on drugs continued this week after two international groups criticized the Philippines for its bloody campaign to eradicate the problem of illegal drugs.

On Thursday, the New York-based Human Rights Watch and the International Narcotics Control Board released their reports denouncing the Philippine government for its bloody war on illegal narcotics that has been blamed for the deaths of more than 7,000 people since July 2016.

These groups follow a long wave of international condemnation aimed at the Philippines since President Rodrigo Duterte won the presidency on the back of a strong anti-crime and anti-corruption platform and launched his flagship war on drugs.

The government has dismissed the criticism as interference in a domestic issue. The Palace has repeatedly said that there is no policy to sanction the killings. President Rodrigo Dutertehas often talked about killing drug dealers and drug lords, however.

He has also expressed the opinion echoed by officials like Justice Secretary VitalianoAguirreII and Solicitor General Jose Calida that criminals are not human and that killing them is justified.

The United Nations-affiliated International Narcotics Control Board denounced the Philippine government in its Thursday report over the spate of extrajudicial killings that transpired in the wake of its vaunted campaign to eradicated illegal drugs.

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It said that extrajudicial action taken to control and exterminate drug problems was against international drug conventions.

INCB said that it had earlier issued a statement calling on the Philippine government to issue an immediate and unequivocal condemnation and denunciation of the killings of individuals suspected of involvement in the illegal narcotics trade.

The board also called on the country to reconsider proposals to revive death penalty being debated in Philippine Congress.

It said countries should consider abolishing death penalty and commuting the sentences of drug suspects sentenced to death.

Human Rights Watch, in its report released Thursday, accused the Philippine government of creating a climate of human rights calamity.

It indicated that President Rodrigo Duterte and senior government officials could be charged with crimes against humanity for actions and words that incited the commission of murder and other acts of violence against drug suspects and criminals.

Senior government officials and the police are likewise liable of many of the deaths according to HRW.

It said that government officials such as Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II, Philippine National Police chief Ronald Dela Rosa and Solicitor General Jose Calida could be charged for encouraging violent acts in the campaign against drugs.

They could also be charged for blocking meaningful investigations into deaths that have occurred over the past few months of the Duterte administration.

In a report released on Februaty 1, Amnesty International severely criticized the government and the police for the conduct of the Philippine war on drugs.

AI said that the police planned extrajudicial killings in its controversial campaign. AI said that these killings might constitute a crime against humanity.

In addition to the systematic use of violence in its drug war, the police also planted evidence and falsified reports to cover their tracks.

There also appeared to be payments made to policemen who killed suspected individuals.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime condemned last year the apparent endorsement of extrajudicial killing in the campaign against illegal drugs of the government.

It said that such an endorsement was illegal and a breach of fundamental rights and freedoms.

Yury Fedotov, the UNODC executive director, said that the increasing number of extrajudicial killings in the country contravened international drug control conventions and did not serve the cause of justice.

In statements from these two groups, they called on the president to stop the extrajudicial killings happening in the wake of his war on drugs.

The two groups said that instead of ensuring the protection and the rights of people who used drugs, the president called for their killing.

The two groups also called on the UNODC and the INCB to denounce the killings and campaign to end the violence.

Even before Duterte assumed the presidency, he was already warned by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad Al Hussein for his offer of a bounty to anyone whole kill drug suspects and plan to reintroduce death penalty in the country.

Zeid said that such actions were steps backward which could lead to widespread violence and chaos.

He also reminded the president at that time that he was bound by international law to protect all Filipinos.

Zeids criticism came after two UN special rapporteurs condemned the former mayor of Davao City for his statements against journalists that could foment violence against the press.

In September last year, members of the European Union parliament called on the Philippine government to put an end to the wave of extrajudicial killings and executions of individuals suspected of involvement in the illegal drug trade.

At the same time, the EU parliament also directed the EU delegation and the embassies of the member countries of the EU to monitor the abuses of human rights in the country.

EU MPs said that Dutertes repeated public pronouncements of violence against drug suspects might have encouraged the mass killings.

Then United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon denounced then president-elect Duterte for his apparent support for extrajudicial actions.

Ban said that such endorsement of extrajudicial killings was illegal and a breach of fundamental rights and freedoms.

He said that such comments by the incoming Philippine leader were worrying given the rise in violence against the media in the country.

While generally declining to use strong words to denounce Dutertes bloody campaign, the US has repeatedly expressed its concern over the governments drug war and the rising number of extrajudicial killings in its wake.

It has also repeatedly urged the government to ensure that law-enforcement authorities abided by human rights norms.

Individual senators including US Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), author of a law barring the US for granting aid to security forces implicated in human rights violations have warned that human rights concerns might affect US aid to the Philippines.

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What some international groups say about the Philippine war on drugs - Philippine Star

State Dept. Official Praises Mexican Efforts in War on Drugs – The … – New York Times


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State Dept. Official Praises Mexican Efforts in War on Drugs - The ...
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Walls between Tijuana and the United States. President Trump has criticized Mexico as a source of dangerous illegal immigrants and drugs, and promised to ...

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CHR: Continue war on drugs but drop ‘Tokhang’ | Headlines, News … – Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines The Commission on Human Rights on Friday urged the government to continue its war against drugs but without resorting toOplanTokhang.

"The Commission on Human Rights denounces the resumption of Operation Tokhang by the Philippine National Police," CHR said in a statement on Friday.

It added that the Philippine National Police should only reinstate the operation when concrete reforms have been introduced and after serious investigations into the extrajudicial killings have been made.

On Monday, President Rodrigo Duterte said that he is open to the resumption of Oplan Tokhangless than a month since the Philippine National Police suspended anti-drug operations over the death of a Korean businessman allegedly abducted and killed by rogue police officers from an anti-narcotics unit.

"I dont know. I would leave it to the PNP to decide. What do they need? What do they have to do to succeed? I do not meddle in the mechanisms there. What is important for me is finish it, do it, I do not inquire into how, where, what," Duterte said on Monday.

Tokhanginvolves police going to thehouses of people on a list of alleged "drug personalities" and telling them to surrender or be arrested. Surrenderees are made to sign an admission of their involvement in drugs and a promise to stop. Concerns have been raised on the accuracy of the drug lists.

Tokhang has also been associated with more than 7,000 deaths in the war on drugs. Around 2,500 of the deaths were in police operations while the rest have been blamed on vigilantes and drug syndicates killing potential informers. Some of those killed were on the drug lists and had surrendered to authorities.

He added that it will be up to the PNP to decide whether to resume the operation or wait for a few months despite reports indicating a rise in sale of illegal drugs on the streets.

PNP Director General Ronald dela Rosa, meanwhile, said that the resumption of the operation would still depend on the president.

"If he sees that we (PNP) are done with our internal cleansing, that we have cleansed our ranks and we are ready to take on the war against drugs, then maybe and hopefully (he will revive Tokhang)," Dela Rosa said during a speech in Zamboanga Citys 80th Charter Day celebration last Sunday.

CHR however said that the internal cleansing of the PNP has just begun and has not yet produced concrete results.

Police officers, whom the PNP leadership described as scalawags, were ordered transferred to Basilan. But some of the police officers questioned their inclusion on the list, saying their administrative records were clean. Other police officers did not show up for the transfer.

"No true and meaningful investigation has been concluded on the extrajudicial killings yet and worse, no single person, to date has been held to account," CHR said.

It added that the killing of South Korean national Jee Ick-Joo inside the PNP headquarters in Camp Crame only shows that Oplan Tokhang is "susceptible to abuse" by police officers.

CHR said that it stands up for the victims, both accused and innocent, who were denied due process.

"It (CHR) advocates for the rights of every single person, including every policeman or policewoman who deserves a day in court before being meted with sanctions including death," CHR said.

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CHR: Continue war on drugs but drop 'Tokhang' | Headlines, News ... - Philippine Star

Marwa steps up war on drugs, shrugs off ‘death threats’ by barons … – The Star, Kenya

Coast regional coordinator Nelson Marwa has said intimidation will not derail him in the fight against drugs.

Marwa said barons started issuing threats after President Uhuru Kenyatta issued an order for drug dealers to be arrested and possibly extradited.

But he said he won't be deterred by the threats as his actions are informed by a good cause.

"I'm ready to put my life on the line," he said on Friday, adding drug dealers were on the brink of elimination.

"How can you fight a legitimate government? It does not add up," he added.

[VIDEO] Kenya will eliminate drug barons wiping out Coast, Uhuru warns

Read: State closing in on drug-dealer politicians, Kiraithe warns

Marwa said they had devised a strategy to completely weed out drug lords at the Coast and Kenya at large.

"The first strategy is to cut off demand by taking addicts to rehabilitation. This will disrupt supply and force dealers to seek other markets," he said.

The regional boss also said assets belonging to barons will be confiscated.

"The war is neither personal not general. It is specific," he said, adding that arrests were based on intelligence.

He also asked politicians to join the war on drugs, saying it must be won.

[VIDEO] Joho wanted suspected drug baron released, was not arrested, says Marwa

More on this: Police probe Joho link to alleged drug trade by kin

Marwa accused ODM bloggers of being behind claims that he had been transferred and called for their arrest.

"My supervisors are surprised. One is not transferred through social media," he said.

Marwa spoke at NYS, Miritini, after inspecting the rehabilitation centre to be officially commissioned by Uhuru.

The centre that sits on a 13-acre plot will have fully-fledged sports and health facilities and a learning institution. It is expected to house 1,500 addicts.

About three weeks ago, Marwa said Kilifi had more than 329,000 addicts and Mombasa more than 323,000.

He said Kwale followed with 168,000, Tana River with 88,000, Taita Taveta with 58,000 and Lamu with 32,000.

After Uhuru's order, 17kgs of heroin and Sh18.4 million cash were nabbed in Mombasa.

The crackdown was carried out by detectives who were behind the arrest and extradition of four suspected drug traffickers to the US.

Baktash (40) and Ibrahim Akasha (28) and foreigners Vijay Goswami (Indian) and Hussein Shabakash (Pakistani) were flown to New York on January 31.

They were arrested in Mombasa for conspiracy to smuggle heroin and methamphetamine into the United States.

[VIDEO] Five more suspected drug barons arrested, Sh18m cash, Sh170m heroin found

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Marwa steps up war on drugs, shrugs off 'death threats' by barons ... - The Star, Kenya

Singapore will be relentless in its war on drugs – TODAYonline

A drug-free society is within reach when the right policies are properly executed, said Minister for Home Affairs K Shanmugam on Friday (March 3), as he dismissed suggestions that international pressure will cause Singapore to deviate from its policies on drugs as delusional. Speaking at the Ministry of Home Affairs Committee of Supply debate in Parliament, he also outlined three challenges Singapore is facing in the fight against narcotics.

Below is an excerpt from his speech:

The New York Times ran an article in January this year, on the Killer Drug Epidemic in the United States. Across the US, cheap smuggled heroin is handed out like candy. In 2015, more than 33,000 people died from opioid abuse, greater than the number killed in gun homicide. Babies are born with heroin dependency. Entire neighbourhoods are affected and there is little hope for their young people.

The article told the story of a young 24-year-old girl who was doing well in school. Unfortunately, she developed anorexia. That led on to alcohol, then drugs. She got addicted, and went in and out of rehab eight times, but was still unsuccessful. To pay for her drugs, she lied to her family, pawned her mothers jewellery and went into prostitution. Countless others die, either through drugs, or through drug-related violence. There are hundreds or thousands of such examples across the world.

Singapore is one of the few countries in the world that have dealt effectively with the drug problem. Our approach: We have a tough legal framework against traffickers and abusers. We are firm and relentless in enforcement. We carry out intensive efforts to educate Singaporeans on the dangers of drug abuse and all these are complemented by comprehensive rehabilitation measures.

The Economist ran a major article in January this year. It said that Asias harsh anti-drug policies are falling out of step with the rest of the world. It criticised these policies as needlessly severe and probably ineffective. Yet, it conceded that Singapores drug consumption is admirably low. It caveated that by saying this is because we are small, we have secure borders, little corruption, effective anti-drug education, and laws that allow searches without warrants and detention without trial. Apart from our size, none of the other factors happened by themselves. They are the result of our policies and many years of hard work. There is strong public support both for our tough laws and our approach. Singapores example demonstrates that the vision of a drug-resistant society is not impossible with the right policies properly executed.

The same Economist article referred to me as Singapores fearsome Law and Home Affairs Minister and it quoted my speech at the 2016 United Nations General Assembly, where I said: Show us a model that works better, that delivers a better outcome for citizens, and we will consider changing. If that cannot be done, then dont ask us to change. I dont accept the description fearsome. But I will not flinch from taking a position, in Singapore and outside Singapore, that I believe is in the interests of our people.

In this context, let me also put to rest one other myth. Recently, there have been some suggestions that international pressure will cause us to deviate from our policies. And the death penalty was referred to in that context. Such suggestions are delusional. We do what is right for Singapore. A penalty will be in the books if we believe it to be right. And it will be removed if we believe that removal is the right thing to do. And not because of any international pressure.

The challenge of keeping Singapore drug-free is increasing. First, there are growing threats from the region. South-east Asia continues to be a major market and producer of illicit drugs. Myanmar and Lao PDR account for 22 per cent of the total global area used for illicit opium poppy cultivation. The trafficking of ice and heroin in the region generates over

US$32 billion (S$45.2 billion) annually. This lucrative black market has attracted criminal syndicates from Africa, Iran, South Asia and Mexico and, of course, China. Singapore will be overrun by these syndicates if we do not take a tough approach. Our neighbours share our concerns. They, too, want to be drug-free. We will continue to partner them as we work towards a united position in Asean.

The second challenge is that the number of new drug abusers in Singapore has increased. Close to two-thirds of new abusers in 2016 were under the age of 30. A survey conducted by the National Council Against Drug Abuse in 2016 found that young people below the age of 30 were more open-minded towards drugs, as compared with a similar 2013 survey.

This is worrying. Dr Tan Wu Meng (Member of Parliament for Jurong GRC) also raised this concern.

This problem is compounded by the rise in online drug availability. Online black market sites allow users to buy drugs anonymously. The drugs are couriered in small parcels, unmarked, innocuous-looking and difficult to track. The young are especially susceptible. Many of us may think that only young people from low-income households are vulnerable. But the Task Force on Youths and Drugs commissioned a study in 2014. It found that most young cannabis abusers came from either middle or high socioeconomic backgrounds. Many of them did well in school.

The Central Narcotics Bureau will take active measures, together with our community partners, to tackle this concern.

Third, there is increasing international pressure to adopt a softer harm reduction approach. We have to remain steadfast in our resolve to keep Singapore drug-free. We will continue to work with our partners, at regional and international platforms, to safeguard our position.

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Singapore will be relentless in its war on drugs - TODAYonline

Duterte to call police back to war on drugs – Inquirer.net

President Rodrigo Duterte. (File Photo by NOEL CELIS/AFP)

President Duterte on Tuesday said he would have to call the police back to his war on drugs, as the narcotics menace became resurgent during the campaigns suspension.

Mr. Duterte said the recall would mean all police would return, but only some. He did not elaborate.

But the chief of the Philippine National Police, Director General Ronald dela Rosa, told reporters that only select police would be deployed to press the war on drugs.

We have to make sure all drug enforcement units are already clean. The vetting process will be stricter so that [undesirables] will not be able to get in, Dela Rosa told reporters.

All of those involved will have to be selected very carefully. There are many who are capable and are just waiting to be tapped. They should just wait, he added.

Dela Rosa earlier said many local government officials had complained to him that drug pushers and users had become bolder after the PNP suspended its campaign against drugs.

The longer we are not in the war on drugs, the more the problem is coming back. The situation is getting worse, he said.

Its like the gains of the last seven months in our war on drugs are going to waste. So, the sooner [the PNP gets back], the better, he added.

The PNP chief made the comment after Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano urged President Duterte over the weekend to relaunch the drug war.

More than 7,700 people have been killed by police and unknown assailants since Mr. Duterte launched the crackdown after taking office at end-June last year.

Mr. Duterte suspended the war on drugs in January after a series of scandals involving narcotics officers, including the kidnapping for ransom and murder of a Korean businessman.

The President dismantled the police narcotics force and ordered the filing of charges against the officers involved in the murder of Jee Ick-joo, whose wife the narcs tricked into paying P5 million in ransom after killing him.

With the PNP sidelined, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) took the lead in the fight against drugs.

Mr. Duterte also ordered the military to help the government fight drugs.

On Tuesday, the PDEA and the Armed Forces of the Philippines signed an agreement for cooperation in the crackdown.

Under the agreement, the PDEA will be the lead agency in fighting drugs, with the military providing force in high-impact operations that involve the arrest of high-value targets, according to Col. Edgard Arevalo, chief of the militarys public affairs office.

The military will also expand its counterintelligence task force to help the PDEA identify, investigate and dismantle drug gangs, including people in the government and influential groups with links to drugs. WITH REPORTS FROM CYNTHIA D. BALANA AND THE WIRES

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Duterte to call police back to war on drugs - Inquirer.net

Duterte renews attack on Church as he defends war on drugs – Inquirer.net

President Rodrigo Duterte delivers a speech on Thursday, March 2, 2017, at the groundbreaking ceremony of the Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway. (Photo from a video by RTVM)

CORDOVA, Cebu President Rodrigo Duterte stepped up his attacks again on Thursday against the Catholic Church, whom he had been accusing of hypocrisy as he defended his administrations war against illegal drugs.

In a speech laced with profanities, Duterte pointed out that priests were fond of wearing golden cross on their chests and using golden chalices while living in palaces.

In contrast, he added, Jesus Christ was nailed to a simple wooden cross and used wooden cups.

Mga pari wa nay gibuhat ug dili magyawyaw. Gwapog mga palasyo. Ibaligya na ninyo. Palit ninyog bugas ihatag sa pobre. Nya undang nag pang (kolekta). Kung dili, ipadakop ta mo. Extortion, he said, speaking in Cebuano, his native tongue.

(Priests do nothing else but rant. They live in palaces. You should sell those and use the money to buy rice for the poor. And stop collecting money. If you dont, I will have you arrested for extortion.

Duterte was here to grace the groundbreaking ceremony for the third bridge that would connect Cebu Island and Mactan Island.

The Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway (CCLEX) in Cordova town is a Public-Private Partnership between Cordova town and Cebu City and the private proponent Metro Pacific Tollways Development Corp. (MPTDC), which is owned by Manny Pangilinan.

Duterte was supposed to arrive at 3:00 p.m. at the boundary of Barangays Dapitan and Pilipog in Cordova to head in the lowering of the time capsule on the site where the bridge would be constructed.

But he arrived at 4:50 p.m.

His 30-minute speech was focused mostly on defending his war on drugs and his scathing attacks against the Catholic Church.

Catholic Church leaders have repeatedly condemned Dutertes war on drugs, which has claimed at least 7,000 lives.

But Duterte maintained that he was committed to stop illegal drugs in the country.

Fathers, monsignors, bishops, this means to say: Marami pang patayan to, kasi lalaban talaga yan, he said.

(Fathers, monsignors, bishops, this means to say: There will be more killings, because they will really fight back.

It wont end tomorrow for as long as there is a drug pusher and drug lord, he added.

He pointed out that while the Catholic priests would not want any more deaths in the ongoing war against drugs, the list of identified drug personalities could not just be disregarded.

He said he would order the precinct commanders in towns and cities all over the country to give the Catholic priests a list of all persons playing drugs and destroying lives of innocents.

Theres a whale of a difference between killing an innocent person and killing a criminal. They ought not to be mixed up, he stressed.

I do not need martial law, he went on. I do not need to declare a suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. You destroy my country, you destroy the youth, I do not give a shit kung tanan pari magluhod, maghangad langit, mag ampo (if all the priest kneel down and pray and beg). I have a country to preserve and that is the Filipino nation. It has nothing to do with religion.

The President also alludedthe contents of the report of the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW).

According to the 124-page report, more than 7,000 people have been killed mostly by unidentified gunmen and some during police operations since Duterte assumed office in July 2016.

But Duterte pointed out that the government had also lost its share of law enforcers. Among them, he said, were the 32 soldiers and 29 police officers who went after the drug laboratories, including in Mindanao.

He said it was his order to the police and military to hunt down drug personalities. If they would violently resist, then law enforcers should just kill these personalities instead of being killed themselves.

I will kill you if you destroy the youth of my land. They are our assets, Duterte said. /atm

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Duterte renews attack on Church as he defends war on drugs - Inquirer.net

Couple Gunned Down in Philippines Suspected Victims of President Duterte’s War on Drugs – Newsweek

Jomar Palamar and his girlfriend Juday Escilona were killed in the early hours of Wednesday, cut down in a hail of bullets fired by unknown gunmen in a rundown backstreet of the Philippines capital Manila.

Described by a family member and community leaders as drug users, the couple appeared to be the latest victims of the deadly war on drugs launched by President Rodrigo Duterte in which over 8,000 people have died. Most have been small-time dealers and users killed in police operations or shot dead by unknown gunmen.

Duterte said on Tuesday he would recall some police to anti-drugs operations to provide fresh impetus to the campaign. He had suspended police from operations a month ago after which the killings slowed but did not end.

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Police said they did not know who killed Palamar, 22, and Escilona, 20.

"They were on a watch list, because they were users," said Nestor del Rosario, the deputy leader of the local barangay, or community, who was huddled along with dozens of neighbors behind a police cordon at the crime scene.

Police and barangay officials said the two died in shots fired by gunmen on motorcycles as they stepped out of a ramshackle convenience store in the Pasong Tamo area of Manila. At least a dozen shots were fired, they said, going by spent bullet casings on the street.

Palomar died on the spot, shot in the head. His body was lying on the street when a Reuters team arrived at the scene, his face covered in blood. Escilona was taken to hospital but didn't make it there alive.

No one in the crowd claimed to have witnessed the shooting. Del Rosario said four security cameras on the street could have captured the killing. But none were working.

Duterte suspended the national police from his war on drugs in late January after rogue officers kidnapped and killed a South Korean businessman and handed charge to the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA).

More than half a dozen drug users and dealers in some of Manila's toughest areas told Reuters that the drugs trade had come out in the open after the suspension, although it was not possible to verify their comments.

The "vigilante-style" killings of drug suspects slowed, down to about 400 in February, but it was unclear how many were drugs-related.

On Tuesday, Duterte said he needed more men to fight drugs, and had no choice but to put some police back in the campaign. He said the PDEA would remain in charge of the crackdown, with the support of the police and the military.

However, authorities have not spelled out when police are likely to return to the campaign.

In one of a series of investigative reports last year into the war on drugs, Reuters found that low-level officials in poor neighborhoods helped police assemble "watch lists" of alleged drug users and pushers that were effectively hit-lists, with many of the people named ending up dead.

Authorities strenuously deny that, and dismiss allegations that police are behind thousands of these shadowy killings, either pulling the trigger themselves, or paying hit men to do it.

National police chief Ronald dela Rosa warned on Monday that lawlessness and narcotics were returning to the streets and gains in the drug war would soon be lost unless police were allowed to tackle the problem.

In another part of Manila after midnight on Tuesday, the body of a man was pulled out of a swamp behind a labyrinth of slums in the city's Malabon area.

The victim, Jonathan Lapuz Valles, 28, was shot through the side of the head. Police at the scene declined to give details.

"Still under investigation," said the lead officer.

Funeral home workers hauled his black body bag awkwardly through winding, narrow alleys, repeatedly dropping it and as they stumbled on planks of wood and rocks sunken into the mud.

His girlfriend howled as the body was loaded into a van on a stretcher in front of crowds of onlookers and taken to the funeral parlor before it was laid out on a table. One of the workers at the parlor said the victim was a small-time seller of drugs.

"He had no job. I don't know if he was into drugs," said Valles's younger brother, Julius, his next of kin, who showed no emotion as identified the body.

"I didn't know him so well."

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Couple Gunned Down in Philippines Suspected Victims of President Duterte's War on Drugs - Newsweek

Military involvement in drug war to worsen rights abuseKarapatan – Inquirer.net

A human rights groupon Thursdayclaimed that the involvement of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) in President Rodrigo Dutertes war on drugs will only worsen abuse on human rights.

AFP signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) with the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA)on Tuesday. The said memorandum stated that the military will lead anti-drug operations in conflict-affected areas.

It will worsen the impact on the civil and political rights of poor Filipinos, without addressing the social, economic and political bases of the problem of illegal drugs, Karapatan Secretary General Cristina Palabay said.

With the AFPs notorious record of human rights abuses against civilian communities through counter-insurgency programs like Oplan Kapayapaan and its all-out war campaign, there is no doubt that the AFP will further its militarist policies and approach in suppressing struggling communities using the mantle of the war on drugs, she added.

READ:PNP memo cited as proof kills authorized

The group reiterated that the government should instead uphold social and economic rights of people, instead of curbing peoples civil and political rights.

The provision of secure jobs with living wages, access to social services, and empowerment of the people through organizations, unions, and cooperatives are the most effective deterrents against the use and trade of drugs, Palabay said. ASU/rga

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Military involvement in drug war to worsen rights abuseKarapatan - Inquirer.net

A Catholic church is running an unconventional resistance against Duterte’s war on drugs – Quartz


Reuters
A Catholic church is running an unconventional resistance against Duterte's war on drugs
Quartz
With little else but a camera, Santiago has quietly led an unconventional resistance movement within the Catholic Church against the government's war on drugs, although he would say he's just a man of faith taking photos to help his community. While ...
Philippine president to bring police back into war on drugsReuters
Duterte to call police back to war on drugsInquirer.net
Duterte resumes police's war on drugs in PhilippinesUPI.com
Newsweek -Nasdaq
all 148 news articles »

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A Catholic church is running an unconventional resistance against Duterte's war on drugs - Quartz

Cayetano urges public to back resumption of war on drugs – Inquirer.net

Senator Alan Peter Cayetano. INQUIRER FILE PHOTO / GRIG C. MONTEGRANDE

Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano, a staunch ally of President Rodrigo Duterte, has called on the public to support the possible resumption of the governments war on drugs after it was ordered suspended last month.

It should now be our peoples war against drugs, not just President Dutertes drug war, because it is our fight for our families safety, rights and values. We thank the President for reiterating his commitment to ending our countrys perennial problem on illegal drugs, Cayetano said in a statement.

A successful anti-drug campaign will mean fewer crimes and more peaceful communities, with our families as the biggest gainers in the process. This is our peoples war on drugs, our fight for the right of every family to a peaceful and safe community, to uphold the right of every peace-loving Filipino to be protected, he added.

Cayetano also called on professional and decent law enforcers to continue to be vigilant to prevent rogue cops from pursuing their criminal activities in the guise of the war on drugs.

Duterteon Tuesdaysaid he would have to call some of the police back to his war on drugs. He said he would leave it to the PNP whether to resume its Oplan Tokhang.

PNP chief Dir. Gen. Ronald Bato Dela Rosa earlier said the police force was ready to resume its antidrug operations following reports that drug perpetrators were supposedly back on the streets during the campaigns suspension.

Duterte suspended the war on drugs in January at the height of controversy surrounding the murder of South Korean businessman Jee Ick-joo inside police headquarters in Camp Crame. JE

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Cayetano urges public to back resumption of war on drugs - Inquirer.net

De Lima: Putting police back in war on drugs reckless, arrogant – Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines Detained Sen. Leila De Lima criticized the governments decision to restart its renewed war on drugs, saying the problems that led to its suspension have not been addressed.

De Lima described as the height of arrogance the governments plan to lift the suspension of police operations against drug peddlers and traffickers without addressing the defects in in its anti-narcotics campaign.

The senator, detained at the custodial center in Camp Crameon drug charges, said that the government should heed the advice of local and global experts against problems in its war on drugs program such as police corruption and lack of an accountability system meant to check police abuses.

Itd be the height of arrogance if our government would resume its most murderous war on drugs without correcting its defects, without getting rid of corrupt policemen, and without making them accountable for their crimes, De Lima said.

Like many of you know, the illegal drug abuse and trafficking present a persistent problem not only for the Philippines but also for other countries. We are against drug trade, but we should not allow innocent people summarily killed, she added.

President Rodrigo Duterte announced on Tuesday that he was tapping the police again in his drug war because of lack of manpower.

Headlines ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1

The president bared that he had ordered PNP Director General Ronald Dela Rosa to recruit young men imbued with the fervor of patriotism to be members of police groups that would run after drug syndicates.

Every station should have one (task force) pero piling pili, yung walang kaso at walang history ng corruption (they will be selected thoroughly, they should have no cases and no history of corruption), he said.

I have to do it because kulang ako ng tao (I lack manpower), the chief executive admitted.

This rebooted war on drugs by the government however will be different from its previous version because of the involvement of another element: the military.

The Armed Forces of the Philippinessigned a memorandum of agreement with the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency making it the campaigns force provider.

The military will aid PDEA in going after high-value targets and help the agency in activities such as counterintelligence, investigation and neutralization of persons involved in the drugs trade.

This move from the AFP came despite warnings from the Center for Strategic and International Studies that the United States would be forced to suspend its military aid should the military become part of the drug campaign.

De Lima said that allowing the PNP to resume its anti-drugs operations would be a reckless move on the part of authorities.

It is reckless, to say the least, to allow the resumption of the anti-drug operations of the Philippine National Police which is more interested in the incentives given them than in investigating and preventing death-squad- style killings, De Lima said.

She said that the government should discard its Double Barrel Project and come up with a better program that respects and protects human rights of individuals, including suspected drug offenders.

The present war on drugs is a dismal failure because there were innocent individuals who were summarily killed, those who were apprehended were not accorded due process of the law, and only the poor were targeted, she said.

De Lima also called on the government to have a look at the Alternate Report the Ateneo Human Rights Center submitted to the United Nations Human Rights Council.

According to De Lima, the report underscored the defects in the governments anti-drugs program which claimed thousands of lives including those of innocent individuals and children who are treated as mere collateral damage in its campaign.

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De Lima: Putting police back in war on drugs reckless, arrogant - Philippine Star

The Liberator: Susan Burton on the War on Drugs, Black Motherhood and Freedom – The Root

Editors note: Drug policy is race policy. To honor drug-policy reformers on the front lines, for Black History Month, the Drug Policy Alliance, in partnership with The Root, is bringing you the stories of four phenomenal people who have been instrumental in shaping conversations around drug policy and its lethal effects on black communities around the country. To launch the series, we spoke with Wanda James, CEO of the Denver-based cannabis dispensary SimplyPure. Next, we spoke with Columbia University professor Samuel K. Roberts Jr. about the history of the drug war and how it violently pierces black history in the United States. Here, we bring you the story of Susan Burton, founder and executive director of A New Way of Life Reentry Project.

In 1981, Susan Burtons 5-year-old son, her baby, ran into the street outside their home in South Los Angeles and was killed when a Los Angeles police officer struck him with his car.

And he kept going.

The policeman never even stayed around, Burton, 64, told The Root. It was almost like it was a hit-and-run. And all I knew is when I was sitting in the hospital, a whole army of police officers descended into the hospital.

They never ever ever even said, Ms. Burton, Im sorry, Burton said, hurt and anger still evident in her voice. And that just added, you know, another layer of pain and feeling like ... like, worthless that these people didnt even acknowledge me.

Burton could not escape her grief, so she sought refuge in crack cocaine, the only relief she could find from an all-encompassing, debilitating pain that no mother should ever have to bear. And for nearly 20 years, she spiraled in addiction as she cycled in and out of prison on nonviolent drug charges.

In 1997, as Burton exited prison for the sixth time, a prison guard said, Ill see you back in a little while.

She would not return, but her road would not be easy.

Burton could not find a job because of her criminal record. She could not access food stamps or housing assistance. Determined to stay drug-free despite the immense hardships she faced, she entered into a rehabilitation facility, and upon her release, a friend helped her find a job caring for an elderly woman.

And a vision was born.

Burton knew there were other women like her in need of assistance, love and support to navigate a world slowly killing them from the inside. So she began inviting women she knew who had been recently released from prison to stay at her home in South Los Angeles.

She transformed her home into a refuge, a warm place to heal and start over. In 2000 she incorporated her growing efforts into A New Way of Life Reentry Project, which currently assists 32 women and about four children re-enter society with the support system they need. Since 1998, the organization has helped more than 1,000 women discover a new way of life, serving about 60 women per year.

Black women, in particular, have to fight to be mothers in a white supremacist society we were not meant to survive free. We have to fight to raise our children in relative safety, to provide for them, to feed them and clothe them, to educate them, to love them in a society that threatens to snatch their lives away from us while we reach for them with desperate hands.

So, what happens when you compound these conditions with the carceral state and the drug war in which black women are primary targets, not simply adjacent to the criminalization of black men? What happens when we are pathologized as bad mothers, unstable mothers, unworthy mothers?

What happens when our lives become fathomless pits of institutionalized cruelty, grief and despair, and drugs offer the only fleeting relief available?

Every time I was released, I swore I wasnt going back, said Burton in a 2010 CNN interview. But I know now that without the resources and support, its next to impossible. ... If you dont have a new door to walk through, the only thing is the old door.

In the conversation below, Burton talks about the stigma placed on black mothers, the institutional barriers black women face trying to access freedom for themselves and, if they have them, for their children, and how whiteness functions with deliberate cruelty.

The Root: Addiction and poverty are symptoms of the malignancy of white supremacy, but society, especially when it comes to black women, never wants to treat the disease, it wants to criminalize the people suffering from it. Speak to those issues that black women face on an intimate level.

Susan Burton: What I see overall is poverty in this country treated as a weakness and people who are impoverished are used by other people to enhance their wealth. For instance, in my community, there are places with payday loans on every corner. There is over-policing and excessive use of force and just excessive police presence and lack of services, trauma services, services to address violence. So everything is always met with a gun or handcuffs by law enforcement.

And I mean, theres just better ways to address the poverty, which is a symptom of everything else. Poverty produces symptoms of other things like drug use and violence. People want to escape through drug use. And instead of treating and supporting people to divert them from drug use or understanding that this is their bodyand what they put in their body you should not be able to control it or demonize it or criminalize itthey are punished. Punishment on top of suffering.

TR: I completely respect and understand that this may be difficult for you to discuss, and I dont want to place an emotional burden on you at all. So, if we can, Id like to talk about your son. You began to self-medicate, and that path led you into the criminal-justice system?

SB: When I was suffering the grief and loss of my son, you know, I medicated that. It felt like there was a, just a ball of nothing, nothingness, painful nothingness, in my center, and see, it was a policeman that killed my son. It was an LAPD detective that killed my son. I felt so angry and hurt that they never even acknowledged it, never even acknowledged me and what they took from me. My son.

TR: Im thinking right now about reproductive justice. You had an LAPD officer take your son from you, steal your sons life from you, from him, and then you have them killing us, gunning down our children in the streets, and then you have them criminalizing parents in these conditions that this white supremacist societythat hates women, hates blackness, hates povertycreates in the first place. And then you have police officers with a license to kill.

SB: Yes, and then, speaking on reproductive justice, they are locking us up in our reproductive years. So many men and women are locked up through their reproductive years. Its genocidal, what theyre doing. And out here in California, 6 percent of the overall population is black women, but black women make up 29 percent of the prison population. It is genocidal.

(Editors note: From fiscal years 2005-06 to 2012-13, the state of California sterilized women without proper consent, a state audit found. At least 35 black women were sterilized during this time period, but the number is potentially much higher. Most of the women who were coerced into undergoing tubal ligation had low education levels and had been pregnant multiple times. California banned forced sterilization in 1979.)

TR: Also, the system is so quick to label black women as bad mothers.

SB: Exactly. I have a woman here, Ingrid, who just got out of prison. She ran into the store to grab milk and Pampers for her baby, and came back out and got arrested for child endangerment. She was sent to prison for three years. Still in the midst, I believe that what she was suffering from was postpartum depression. The way black women with mental-health issues are treated in this country is just horrible.

TR: Some years ago, I reported on a black mother, Frankea Dabbs, who was clearly suffering from mental illness after experiencing immense trauma in her life. She left her 10-month-old daughter on a subway platform and was instantly vilified. But we have white women who kill their children and empathy is widespread. And, according to a 2009 study conducted by the U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health study:

The rates of mental-health problems are higher than average for black women because of psychological factors that result directly from their experience as black Americans. These experiences include racism, cultural alienation, and violence and sexual exploitation. ... African Americans in low-income, urban communities are at high risk for exposure to traumatic events, including having relatives murdered and their own experience with physical and sexual assaults, all of which are associated with the onset of post-traumatic stress syndrome and depression.

SB: And that depression, that grief, often leads to drug abuse, right? And you know, those drugs just didnt pop up in our community. They were sent to our community. Im really clear that, that the amount of drugs that came into our community didnt come in there by our community members. You know, this was a deliberate tearing apart of our black community. And everything theyve done to us has been deliberate.

And Im watching now, the opiate use by other folks and, all of a sudden, its, Oh, we have a health problem here. But with the cocaine use, we had a criminal problem. So Im watching that and saying, you know, this is what they do. This is what white folks do, you know, they criminalize black people, they offer support to other people. Ive watched the breaking down of our family structures through incarceration and separation and criminalization of our communities.

I remember in a movie I saw, it may have been Roots, and I remember the woman saying, Master, master please dont sell my baby. Master, master please, Ill do anything, dont take my baby. And I watch black women go through the court system and they say, Judge, judge, please let me have my baby back, Ill do anything. Judge, judge please let me have my baby back.

And because a woman is criminalized doesnt mean she is unfit or shes not a good mom. But I watch that judge, regardless of what that woman tries to do in dire, dire circumstances, not give that woman back custody of her child. And its heart-wrenching and its heartbreaking.

TR: And thats another way the criminal injustice system robs black women of motherhood.

SB: So, what do you do? Where do you run to? That woman is pretty much powerless to do anything but curl up in a ball or self-medicate, right? So, you know, I know what it feels like to lose a child. But sometimes, its that that child gets put in the foster care system and, many times, they end up feeling abandoned, no love, and they self-medicate that pain, too. I see the breaking, the criminalization, the hurt and the pain through these systems that is just, oh, its unconscionable.

TR: And that leverage is also used to assault black women, right? Sexual assault is the second-highest reported form of police brutality after excessive force, and women of color are more likely to be attacked. So, you look at someone like [former Oklahoma City Police Officer] Daniel Holtzclaw, who targeted women like you, with prior charges. He targeted black women that he knew were vulnerable, black women (and one black girl) who were fearful of the criminal-justice system, and he raped them.

SB: This goes on, and I know that you know that to law enforcement, black women are criminal. At every level, they abuse women, whether its rape, you know, whether its strip searches, whether its dehumanizing them. I walk into a jail now to visit women, and the women are trained to turn from me and look at the wall. And I just want to cry for them. So all of these are forms of violence and dehumanization. All of them.

TR: You said something earlier about how society should not police what people put into their bodies, and thats such an important point. We talk about the shame and the stigma attached to what is put into our bodies. They will criminalize the body; they will shackle the body, and they will do all these things to control us, as opposed to looking at this system that really needs to be broken, because its functioning exactly as its supposed to. They wont address poverty, but theyll police those living in poverty. They wont address public schools that are intentionally allowed to fail in the service of privatization, but they will keep the school-to-prison pipeline running smoothly.

SB: Thats exactly it. It is a system that needs to be interrupted. When I, when my son died, the grief, the pain that I was in, you know, I needed something to help me cope with that. Ive seen people in physical pain, and Ive seen people in dire mental distress. The level of grief I was in, I needed something to deal with that pain, that rage. I dont know what Id have done to get through that. So I used drugs; I used until I found another solution.

I was never offered help when I stood in front of the judge and told them what had happened in my life. They hit the gavel and sent me to prison, had me stripped down and inspected like a slave. Handcuffed and sent me to work for 8 cents an hour.

I know that given my circumstances, there could have been services and trauma centers available to help me through such a difficult time, but there was not. So what I do now is free women up from that same system. If I can, I help them get their baby back; I do that. I take them to court. I write letters. I stand in front of that judge. I help them meet that court requirement.

Because what I know is, I cant get my baby back, but I can help another woman get hers. I cant take back the years, the time stolen from me, but I can stop another woman from giving all of her years. And thats what I do.

There once lived a woman with deep brown skin and black hair who freed people from bondage and ushered them to safety. She welcomed them to safe homes and offered food, shelter, and help reuniting with family and loved ones. She met them wherever they could be found and organized countless others to provide support and aid in various forms so they would not be recaptured and sent back to captivity. This courageous soul knew well the fear and desperation of each one who came to her, seeing in their eyes all the pain she felt years ago when she had been abused and shackled and finally began her own journey to freedom.

Deep in the night she cried out to God begging for strength, and when she woke she began her work all over again, opening doors, planning escape routes, and holding hands with mothers as they wept for children they hoped to see again. A relentless advocate for justice, this woman was a proud abolitionist and freedom fighter. She told the unadorned truth to whomever would listen and spent countless hours training and organizing others, determined to grow the movement. She served not only as a profound inspiration to those who knew her, but as a literal gateway to freedom for hundreds whose lives were changed forever by her heroism.

Some people know this woman by the name Harriet Tubman. I know her as Susan. Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, from Becoming Ms. Burton: From Prison to Recovery to Leading the Fight for Incarcerated Women (May 2017)

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The Liberator: Susan Burton on the War on Drugs, Black Motherhood and Freedom - The Root