How
many people have been killed in the Philippine President Duterte’s antidrugs
campaign?
The police have been less than
forthcoming. They tried the old redefinition trick, creating different
categories. They gave conflicting numbers. They even raised what the Supreme
Court called a “ridiculous” argument that submitting police documentation on
the killings to the Court, in a pending legal case, would compromise national
security.
After the Court warned
them, through the Office of the Solicitor General, that “the OSG’s continued
refusal... will lead this Court to presume that these information and
documents, because they are willfully suppressed, will be adverse to the OSG’s
case,” the Philippine National Police (PNP) finally began submitting the
information, but only in parts.
The result is a climate
of impunity based in part on confusion: Most Filipinos know that thousands have
been killed in the Duterte administration’s antidrugs campaign, but both the
details on the deaths and the patterns behind the killings have been largely,
and even deliberately, left obscured.
Today’s forum at Ateneo
de Manila on “emerging evidence and data” — emerging, that is, from the
government’s antidrugs campaign — promises to bring much-needed clarity to a
murky situation.
The forum will showcase
the first findings of an unprecedented research project by a consortium of
universities that include Ateneo de Manila, De La Salle University, the
University of the Philippines and the Columbia Journalism School (through its
Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism).
It will feature scholarly
studies done on community-based drug rehabilitation and on the role of local
governments. But its highlight would likely be the public presentation of what
its researchers believe to be the most comprehensive database on drug-related
killings since the 2016 elections.
By comprehensive, the
scholars do not mean the most number of killings or the most recent set of
data; rather, they mean the most complete documentation of the killings:
information about the victims (a vast majority of whom are named), about the
incidents, about the types of killing.
The database is based
substantially on the “kill lists” compiled, edited and produced by news
organizations like the Inquirer, ABS-CBN and GMA.
But the researchers
looked for other sources, cross-checked the available information, encoded all
the data, and analyzed the result. (We understand that today’s public
presentation is only the first; more presentations will be scheduled as the database
is updated.)
Much of the data, even
those included in the lists maintained by the news organizations, are based on
police reports, with all their attendant limitations. And all of the data the
scholars used were publicly available.
Much of the reporting on
the forum will, in all likelihood, focus on the patterns that the consortium’s
research team has discovered, after integrating and processing the data from
various sources.
The first patterns they
discerned are truly disconcerting.
While we should rightly
be provoked by the troubling patterns in the administration’s antidrugs
campaign, however, we should also direct our attention to other questions the
landmark research project raises. Here are two:
First, what does almost
complete dependence on police sources at the precinct level mean for the
documentation of the killings?
It is true that very few
news organizations have the resources necessary to mount independent
investigations of every drug-related killing, but as long as the paperwork at
the blotter level is reliable, news organizations can still depend on them.
What happens if the
killings have reached such a scale that police precincts are instructed to
fudge the details, to deliberately downplay the numbers?
Second, the picture that
the consortium’s research project describes is based almost exclusively on
media coverage.
What happens in those
areas (many outside the National Capital Region) where lack of resources
prevents local news organizations from covering or reporting drug-related killings?
The researchers are
upfront about this serious limitation of the database; but it also means that
the complete picture of drug-related killings must be worse than reported.
“How many deaths will it
take before he knows that too many people have died?”
The answer is no longer
blowing in the wind; it has been codified into hard data.
This article appeared on the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
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