Huge backlash against the war on drugs

Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of the Philippine capital of Manila and around the world to denounce President Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs which has claimed thousands of lives.
Overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) joined the global Black Friday protest on August 25, to condemn the death of 17-year-old Kian delos Santos and other extrajudicial killings linked to the Duterte administration’s war on drugs.
Organized by the Stop The Killings Network, Rise Up for Rights and Life, Bayan, and Migrante International, protests were held in different cities in the Philippines and overseas.
In Canada, Kian was remembered in song, prayers and poems in Toronto, Montreal and Winnipeg at rallies under the #OFWsForKian campaign.
Human rights, faith-based, and indigenous groups were among the sectors that have also come together this week, to launch the Movement Against Tyranny (MAT), in an effort to end the culture of impunity and fear bred by Duterte’s war on drugs
More than 1,000 mourners attended a funeral procession in Manila for the high school student, whose killing last week by anti-drug officers has caused rare public outrage over the country's war on drugs.
Crowds chanted for "justice" last weekend in the Philippine capital in what became one of the biggest protests in the country against President Rodrigo Duterte's anti-drug drive.
Kian Loyd Delos Santos was dragged by plain-clothes policemen to a dark alley in northern Manila, before he was shot in the head and left next to a pigsty, according to witnesses whose accounts appeared to be backed up by CCTV footage.
The death of the 17-year-old has drawn domestic attention to allegations by activists that police have been systematically executing suspected users and dealers, a charge the authorities deny.
"I came to support the family. I want justice for Kian and all victims - including my son," Katherine David, 35, whose 21-year-old son was shot dead by police with two other men in January.
Mourners carried placards reading, "Stop the killings," "Police, murderers" and "Justice for Kian" as they marched for about five kilometres from a church near Delos Santos' house to the cemetery where he was buried.
The parents and lawyers of Delos Santos filed a murder complaint against the three anti-narcotics policemen on Friday.
"Kian was a very good son," Saldy Delos Santos said in a message at the last mass for his son. "The entire community knew him as a good person ... He was begging for his life ...They [the killers] probably have no heart."
Richard Heydarian, political science professor from Manila's De La Salle University, said public anger had exploded because of Delos Santos' young age.
"This is a second coming of Duterte's war on drugs and what happened this time is not about the killing of a likely innocent person, but we're talking about the minor who was killed, and the killing of the minor was caught on CCTV," he told Al Jazeera. "That is why you see a huge backlash against the war on drugs."
Public support for the anti-drugs drive had until recently been strong.
"The number one concern for people here is not against Duterte himself, but they feel like he is relying on the wrong agent, which is the national police of Philippines to wage this war," said Heydarian.
"You cannot wage a holy war with unholy men, so what people want here is to clean up the police force and to make sure that within the police forces there is accountability and discipline."
"It remains to be seen whether this will change the approach of the president when it comes to his so-called war on drugs," she said, "or if it even will lead to reform within the police institution in this country."
"We march today to bring Kian to his final resting place and to support the call for justice for all victims of Duterte's fascist drug war," said Renato Reyes, secretary-general of left-wing activist group Bayan (Nation), said in a statement.
Bayan criticised the campaign for corrupting the police force "through a system of quotas and financial rewards for police officers".
"We call for accountability of the police officers directly involved in the killings as well as accountability of the commander-in-chief who sanctioned the killings," Reyes said.
Delos Santos was among more than 90 people killed in the bloodiest week in Duterte's anti-drug war since he took office on June 30, 2016.
The case has highlighted the allegations of abuse by police in the anti-drug war, in which at least 3,500 people have been killed over the last year.
Duterte has assured the public that police officers involved in Delos Santos' death would go to jail if found guilty.
But this week, Duterte told Philippines police they are allowed to kill “idiots” who violently resist arrest.
Duterte broke off midway through a prepared speech at the Heroes’ Cemetery on the outskirts of Manila on Monday and addressed impromptu comments to Jovie Espenido, the police chief of a town in the south where the mayor was killed in an anti-drugs raid.
“Your duty requires you to overcome the resistance of the person you are arresting ... [if] he resists, and it is a violent one ... you are free to kill the idiots, that is my order to you,” Duterte told the police officer.

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