Drug lord
or dehumanized victim?
First, dehumanize the
targets
Six months after the
election of Rodrigo “Digong” Duterte as President of the Philippines, the
country remains divided as to whether this represents a new era in Philippine
politics or the country’s tragic downfall.
Regardless
of where one stands on the political spectrum, the tragic loss of life caused
by the ‘war on drugs’ cannot be overshadowed by Duterte’s progressive
ambitions, many of which have been praised by Filipino society. The right to
life must always be respected, even for those considered undesirable by our
leaders.
Since
Duterte gained power, it is estimated that 6,000 people have been murdered. The most
dangerous aspect of these murders is the dangerous philosophy behind it. Under
the banner of ending the country’s ‘endemic’ drug problem, Duterte has lead a
brutal campaign targeting anybody with a relation to drugs, whether it is a
long-time dealer or a one-time user. He made it his mission to remove these bad
elements of society at any cost, even encouraging society to take part in the
mass killings.
The loss
of life, according to many Filipinos, is a justifiable means if it results in
ending the drug-related problems society has faced for decades. It is much more
than murder, however, for the campaign lead by Duterte has dehumanized much of
the population.
Critics
say the drug problem facing the Philippines has been exaggerated by Duterte to
justify his campaign. If one is to believe the government, there are 4 million
drug addicts in the Philippines. But according to a 2015 study by the Dangerous
Drugs Board, a Philippine government agency, the prevalence rate of
current drugs users among Filipinos 10-69 years is 2.3 percent (1.8 million
people). Marijuana users comprise 72.3 percent of total drug users, whereas
Shabu users make up 48.9 percent (the overlap is because some use both).
Duterte has evidently ignored the facts provided by his own government to
propel society into action.
The
problem with Duterte is thus that his determination to rid society of a threat
that remains unclear. The obvious disregard for human life is a dangerous
precedent for all of society and should not be ignored. Duterte claims to be
targeting those involved with illegal drugs, but as a result poor urban
dwellers have been the prime targets of the executions. Carried out to its
extreme, Duterte apparently would execute all 1.8 million current drug users,
an ambition so twisted as to be grotesque.
Even
working under the unlikely assumption that all those targeted were involved
with drugs, Duterte has taken a singular aspect of human life and justified
execution on such grounds. There are no longer human beings who have dealt or
used drugs, only ‘drug-dealers’ and ‘drug-users’. Through dehumanizing this
group of people, Duterte has been able to justify to society the necessity of
weeding them out of everyday life.
In a
historical parallel, the same method has been used during a number of genocides
from across the world. Judaism, a religion, became an all-encompassing aspect
of victims’ lives during the Holocaust. Human beings began to be referred to as
“Jews,” a derogatory term at the time that dehumanized the country’s Jewish
population. This process of dehumanization enabled genocide as society either
participated or stood by. A similar process happened in Rwanda, Hutus beginning
to refer to Tutsis as cockroaches, resulting in 800,000 dead.
In the
same way, today we witness human beings who have dealt or used drugs being
removed from Filipino society after no longer being considered human beings
worthy of life. The parallel between the victims of these atrocities remains
starkly different, but the method of the guilty remains grossly similar.
Duterte
has his own ideas for the future of the Philippines, in the same way
that Adolf Hitler had his own ideas for the future of Germany. To change
society, the exclusion of certain people becomes necessary for such a process
to take place in the eyes of despots. It is part of the process of modernity,
where society strives to create the best version of itself through excluding
minority groups.
Victims
were rendered unable to change an aspect of their identity to become model
citizens of the new society being created. As many of those who converted from
Judaism failed to be spared, many Filipinos too poor to seek rehabilitation are
denied a place in the country’s future. Duterte’s idealism is not the
problem, but rather the way that murder is the only way he believes he can
achieve this vision.
A
further product of modernity is the division of labor, allowing society to
blindly take part in mass murder. During the Holocaust, murder became a job.
Everybody played their part: the train driver, the engineer, and the gunman. It
wasn’t murder, it was work, or so they say. Across the Philippines people are
willfully choosing to become a part of the system, denouncing neighbors and
forming vigilante groups that participate in murder. In such a process, even
those guilty of committing murder become dehumanized, merely becoming a clog in
the machinery of mass murder.
Another
worrying aspect is Duterte calling upon society to act upon his rhetoric,
encouraging Filipinos to take part in the killings. During an election celebration in Davao City, he
called upon armed citizens to “[d]o it yourself if you have guns, you have my
support.” People are also able to rid themselves of any guilt or responsibility
by claiming superior orders. After all, the government not only allows citizens
to kill suspected drug dealers or users, but encourages it. During the
Holocaust, even those in charge of administering gas chambers tried to absolve
themselves of responsibility by claiming they were merely following the orders
of a multilayered bureaucracy.
The
average person found solace in such backward thinking, and many Nazi-criminals
argued along similar lines upon trial in the aftermath. Adolf Hitler, Hans
Frank or Adolf Eichmann may have made the orders, but society followed them
through. This explains why the death rate in the Philippines continues to
rise, society has been lead to believe that the government has the right to
carry out such executions and it’s their duty to assist. People effectively
dehumanize themselves through giving up their agency.
Through
attempting to fix a societal ill, Duterte has resorted to methods that place
him on a long list of mass murderers. Framing the campaign with a
historical lens allows us to realize the dangerous precedent it sets for the
future of the Philippines. Society may be easily convinced that violence is the
best way forward, but this brutal campaign will become an atrocity few remember
fondly. As in other historical episodes of violence, society gets caught up in
the moment with an idealistic vision of the future, only to regret the atrocities
in hindsight.
From
Germany to Rwanda, society becomes irreversibly damaged through allowing
violence to become the norm. With the rise of the Duterte, the Philippines
is likely to become yet another country afraid of its past.
Matthew Abbey is a freelance journalist
and political analyst based in Australia.
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