MANILA, Philippines (84th UPDATE) Exasperated by the illegal drugs menace in the country, President Rodrigo Duterte has waged an all-out campaign against it since he assumed office.
True to the Presidents word, the war on drugs has been bloody more than 5 years into his administration.
Here are the numbers in the anti-illegal drug campaign according to the government, and from other sources that keep track of these statistics.
This page will be updated regularly.
Noticeable is the huge disparity between official statistics and numbers cited by human rights groups that have contact with people on the ground.
6,191
Drug suspects killed in police operations as of August 31, 2021, based on Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency figures in the #RealNumbersPH campaign
6,600
Drug suspects killed as of May 31, 2019, as reported by the Philippine National Police (PNP) on June 18, 2019
7,884
Drug suspects killed as of August 31, 2020, as counted by the PNP in September 2020
8,663
Drug-related deaths since the start of the anti-drug campaign, as reported in June 2020 by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, based on official figures
27,000 to 30,000
Estimated deaths by human rights groups (up to December 2018) and the International Criminal Courts Office of the Prosecutor (up to March 2019)
Based on the governments official count through its #RealNumbersPH campaign, only 6,191 drug personalities have been killed in legitimate police operations as of August 31, 2021.
Before that, however, the Philippine National Police (PNP) itself reported higher numbers: 6,600 drug suspects killed as of May 31, 2019, then 7,884 as of August 31, 2020. Given delays in reporting of data, these figures could be higher as of late 2021.
Meanwhile, a report by the United Nations (UN) High Commissioner for Human Rights to the UN Human Rights Council in June 2020 said that around 8,663 drug-related killings have occurred: 5,601 deaths in police operations from July 2016 to January 2020, plus 3,062 deaths under inquiry which are drug-related from July 2016 to February 4, 2019.
Human rights organizations said that as of December 2018, the death toll could reach as high as 27,000, to include those killed outside police operations.
Citing news reports and human rights groups, the International Criminal Courts Office of the Prosecutor in its June 2021 request to open a probe into President Rodrigo Dutertes war on drugs said there have been estimates ofbetween 12,000 to 30,000 deaths from July 2016 to March 2019.
The PNP and the #RealNumbersPH campaign previously included statistics for deaths under investigation (DUI) or homicide cases under investigation (HCUI) which were broken down into 3 categories of cases: drug-related, non-drug-related, and those with motives still undetermined.
These HCUI figures are no longer included in the governments latest releases, with a presidential communications official explaining that theyve decided on this to avoid these figures being mangled with other numbers.
Based on data that Rappler obtained in June 2018, heres a breakdown of HCUIs, as recorded by the PNP:
From July 1, 2016 to June 11, 2018:
23,518
total homicide cases under investigation
2,668
drug-related cases
10,712
non-drug-related cases
10,138
cases with motive to be determined
In March 2019, Rappler got updated data, showing that as of March 18, 2019, there have been a total of 30,145 homicide incidents or cases, but of the number, 11,098 were under investigation because the remaining 19,047 were tagged as cleared, with at least one suspect identified. The March 2019 data did not contain the 3 categories earlier listed for HCUIs.
[Editors Note: Rappler previously reported at least 7,000 deaths in the #WarOnDrugs as of April 2017, based on figures from the PNP. Read our explanations on the changing figureshere and here, as well as view a timeline of the PNPs use of the term deaths under investigation.]
The government has also released the following statistics related to the drug war.
These were recorded from July 1, 2016 to August 31, 2021 through its #RealNumbersPH campaign.
Anti-drug operations
213,504
anti-drug operations conducted
307,521
drug personalities arrested
3,922
minors rescued
875
drug dens dismantled
18
clandestine laboratories dismantled
P64.09 B
total value of drugs seized
8,374.29
kilos of shabu seized
P52.96 B
value of shabu seized
22,858
barangays declared as drug-cleared
High value targets arrested in anti-drug ops
13,244
total high value targets arrested,broken down as follows:
5,692
arrests from high-impact operations
3,696
listed as targets
1,353
drug den maintainers
791
drug group leaders/members
498
government employees
390
elected officials
322
foreign nationals
283
listed as wanted
120
uniformed personnel
75
armed group members
24
celebrities or PRC license holders
Heres a timeline of the changes in the governments manner of reporting its war on drugs statistics to the media since the start of the anti-drug campaign.
As of 6 am of September 14, 2016, the number of suspects killed in police operations reached 1,506. But during a Senate probe on extrajudicial killings that day, then PNP chief Ronald dela Rosa said that after validation by its Directorate for Operations, the figure was corrected to only 1,105 deaths.
As of October 15, 2016, the number of policemen killed during operations stood at 13, while there were 40 wounded.
On October 19, 2016, deaths among police personnel rose to 15, while the number of wounded was revised to 36 after validation. The PNP broke down the casualties into drug-related and non-drug-related incidents, then reported only the drug-related casualties afterwards (7 dead, 24 wounded).
On October 26, 2016, the PNP launched Phase 2 of Oplan Double Barrel. After this, the statistics that the PNP started sending to media were reset to zero. However, on November 2, the PNP returned to its cumulative count from July 1.
On November 7, 2016, the PNP returned to reporting the total casualties, doing away with its categorization the month before.
Police involvement in the war on drugswas temporarily suspended on January 30, 2017, when Duterte instructed the PNP to first rid its ranks of corrupt personnel. This was after some policemen reportedly got involved in the kidnap and murder of a South Korean businessman in October 2016.
Weeks later, on February 27, 2017, the President allowed the PNP back into the war on drugs campaign, but with limited participation through smaller task forces.
On March 6, 2017, the PNP officially relaunched its participation in the war on drugs, in a campaign dubbed Oplan Double Barrel Alpha Reloaded.
The PNP initially started keeping track of Double Barrel Alpha Reloaded statistics from March 6, based on messages sent to the media. But in its data update on March 30, 2017, the PNP readjusted the start date earlier, to March 1.
Around March 2017, the PNP changed the term, deaths under investigation. In a report that Rappler requested, the PNP used the term homicide cases under investigation or HCUI, which were further classified into 3 types of incidents: drug-related, non-drug-related, and those whose motives had yet to be determined.
On May 2, 2017, the government launched its #RealNumbersPH campaign, its new manner of disseminating statistics related to the war on drugs. Compared to past media releases, it no longer included figures on the number of houses visited as part of Oplan TokHang.
Starting in its August 2017 update, the #RealNumbersPH social media graphics also no longer included the number of surrenderers.
In October 2017, the PNPs role in the war on drugs was suspended a second time, after President Duterte made the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) the sole agency in charge of the anti-illegal drug campaign. The PNP resumed providing active support to PDEA in December 2017.
The #RealNumbersPH figures that were released showed complete HCUI figures from March to June 2017 only. From January to March 2018, only drug-related homicide cases were announced. Since then, #RealNumbersPH figures totally excluded HCUI statistics.
In an August 17, 2018 press briefing on #RealNumbersPH, Presidential Communications Operations Office (PCOO) Assistant Secretary Ana Marie Banaag explained that they stopped presenting HCUI figures because it gets mangled with other numbers; it gets confused with other numbers, so we chose not to.
Banaag said, however, that HCUI figures can be requested from the PNP Directorate for Investigation and Detective Management (DIDM). Rappler.com
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