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Tuesday, July 26, 2016

How to Make Drug Addicts Surrender to Authorities

Drug addicts in jail cells and dealers' bodies littering the streets: 60,000 people turn themselves in to authorities in the Philippines after the president tells citizens to 'go ahead and kill' drug users

  • Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte, dubbed 'The Punisher', has waged a war on drugs throughout the country
  • After winning elections in May this year he has urged citizens to kill suspected drug users and dealers
  • Police have confirmed killing more than 110 drug suspects since the president came to power
  • Communications Office Secretary Martin Andanar said 60,000 drug dependents have surrendered to authorities 
  • WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT   


Nearly 60,000 Filipino drug addicts have surrendered themselves to the government after President Rodrigo Duterte urged citizens to 'go ahead and kill' drug dealers and users.
Mr Duterte, dubbed 'The Punisher', won elections in May and promised a law-and-order crackdown on drugs.
'These sons of w****s are destroying our children. I warn you, don't go into that, even if you're a policeman, because I will really kill you,' the president told an audience during a speech in the country's capital, Manila.
Presidential Communications Office Secretary Martin Andanar said close to 60,000 drug dependents have surrendered to authorities since the administration began its intensified campaign against drugs.
Nearly 60,000 drug addicts across the Philippines have handed themselves in to authorities after president Rodrigo Duterte promised a law-and-order crackdown on drugs
Filipinos allegedly involved in illegal drugs handcuffed together inside a police headquarters in Manila. Presidential Communications Office Secretary Martin Andanar said close to 60,000 drug dependents have surrendered to authorities
Filipino inmates are seen inside a jail in Manila. President Rodrigo Duterte has urged citizens to 'go ahead and kill' drug dealers and users
Police officers remove packing tape wrapped over the lifeless head of an alleged drug dealer on a street in Manila
Police have confirmed killing more than 110 drug suspects since the president came to power, while local news reports suggest that figure is around 200. 
At least 43,000 alleged drug traffickers have been 'neutralised' and 300kg of shabu, a highly addictive methamphetamine, has been confiscated, according to local reports.
President Duterte has warned of widespread bloodshed as part of the government's war on drugs.
He vowed on one occasion during the election campaign that 100,000 people would die, and so many bodies would be dumped in Manila Bay that the fish there would grow fat from feeding on them, according to the South China Morning Post.
Duterte has also told police he would protect them from legal consequences if they killed drug dealers, the Post reported.  
Picture shows the body of a killed Filipino allegedly involved in illegal drugs. Police have confirmed killing more than 110 drug suspects since president Duterte came to power
Police officers investigate the body of an alleged drug dealer, his face covered with packing tape and a placard reading 'I'm a pusher', on a street in Manila
At least 43,000 alleged drug traffickers have been 'neutralised' and 300kg of shabua, a highly addictive methamphetamine, has been confiscated
Pictured, arrested Filipinos allegedly involved in illegal drugs resting inside a shanty in Manila. President Duterte has warned of widespread bloodshed as part of the government's war on drugs
President Duterte vowed on one occasion during the election campaign that 100,000 people would die, and so many bodies would be dumped in Manila Bay that the fish there would grow fat from feeding on them, according to the South China Morning Post
Last week, gruesome images showing slain drug dealers with 'I'm a pusher' signs covering their chests emerged. 
The grim scenes of alleged drug dealers found shot dead in Manila last week are growing increasingly common as police wage a bloody war on narcotics.
The government's top lawyer called for police to kill more suspected drug criminals, as he defended president Duterte's brutal war on crime against mounting criticism.
As the official death toll has mounted, and other bodies not confirmed killed by police have been found with placards declaring them drug traffickers, human rights lawyers have expressed deep concerns about the war on crime spiralling out of control.
Filipino suspected drug users and pushers participate in exercises after voluntarily surrendering in Manila
Grim scenes of alleged drug dealers found shot dead in Manila last week are growing increasingly common as police wage a bloody war on narcotics.
A Filipino allegedly involved with illegal drugs standing on top of an electric post as rescuers try to convince him to get down
The Filipino man allegedly involved with drugs is arrested by policemen after clinging on top of an electric post for hours
In response to the criticism, Solicitor General Jose Calida held a press conference on Monday at national police headquarters to insist on the legality of the police killings and to encourage more deaths of people suspected of being involved in the drug trade.
'To me, that is not enough,' Calida said of the killings so far.
'How many drug addicts or pushers are there in the Philippines? Our villages are almost saturated (with drugs).'
A lawyer and a former prosecutor, Duterte has urged law enforcers to kill those they believe are involved in the drug trade, as well as other criminals.
Members of the Philippine National Police Scene of the Crime Operatives conducting investigation following a police operation against illegal drugs
Pictured, the body of a killed Filipino allegedly involved in illegal drugs lying in a pool of blood in Manila
A member of the Philippine National Police Scene of the Crime Operatives examining recovered evidence in Manila. 
The government's top lawyer called for police to kill more suspected drug criminals, as he defended president Duterte's brutal war on crime against mounting criticism
In one of the deadliest single incidents, police reported killing eight 'drug personalities' during a pre-dawn raid on Saturday in a small southern town. 
One of the nation's top human rights lawyers, Jose Manuel Diokno, warned last week that Duterte had 'spawned a nuclear explosion of violence that is spiralling out of control and creating a nation without judges'.
Former senator Rene Saguisag, a prominent human rights lawyer during the regime of dictator Ferdinand Marcos, also criticised Duterte's statements naming and shaming alleged drug lords and police officers ahead of a formal investigation.
As the official death toll has mounted, and other bodies not confirmed killed by police have been found with placards declaring them drug traffickers, human rights lawyers have expressed deep concerns about the war on crime spiralling out of control
Solicitor General Jose Calida held a press conference on Monday at national police headquarters to insist on the legality of the police killings and to encourage more deaths of people suspected of being involved in the drug trade
Pictured, a Filipino suspected drug user takes his oath taking after voluntarily surrendering
Filipino suspected drug users and pushers take their oath taking after surrendering. One of the nation's top human rights lawyers, Jose Manuel Diokno, warned last week that Duterte had 'spawned a nuclear explosion of violence that is spiralling out of control and creating a nation without judges
'Do we still probe and have a trial as part of due process? Useless, it seems to me,' Saguisag wrote in an online column last week.
Some opposition lawmakers have also called for a congressional investigation into the spate of killings.
Calida, a Duterte appointee, said he would protect police from or during congressional probes, while emphasising it was up to critics to prove allegations of abuse rather than base inquiries on speculation.
'I am here to encourage the (police) not to be afraid of any congressional or senate investigations. We will defend them ... I am the defender of the (police),' he said. 
Filipino police officers lineup for a drug test in Manila. Some opposition lawmakers have also called for a congressional investigation into the spate of killings in the country
A Filipino suspected drug user gets a haircut after surrendering in Manila. Calida, a Duterte appointee, said he would protect police from or during congressional probes into the killings
Filipino police officers submit urine samples during a drug test
Pictured, Filipino police officers lineup for a drug test. 'I am here to encourage the (police) not to be afraid of any congressional or senate investigations. We will defend them ... I am the defender of the (police),' Calida, a Duterte appointee, said

A Filipino suspected drug user wearing a Duterte campaign wristband takes his oath taking after surrendering in Manila

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