The Long Shadow of Duterte's Drug War

The Long Shadow of Duterte's Drug War

March 23, 2025 29m
With the recent arrest of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte for crimes against humanity, a spotlight is again on actions taken during his presidency. Even years after Duterte declared his war on drugs, the reverberations continue to tear through the country. The loved ones of those killed are still left seeking justice and the extra-judicial killings, commonly called EJKs, that defined Duterte's war continue to sow fear amongst the people.

Today on The Sunday Story, we share an episode that originally aired last year with reporter Emily Feng. She traveled to the Philippines to understand the aftermath of Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs.

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I'm Aisha Roscoe, and this is a Sunday Story, where we go beyond the news to bring you one big story. This month, Filipino leader Rodrigo Duterte was taken into custody.
He's now in the Netherlands, where he's facing charges of crimes against humanity in the International Criminal Court over his connections to a spree of killings. Those killings were among the brutal tactics

Duterte championed in order to combat drug abuse,

starting when he was mayor in the 1990s

and later as president of the Philippines.

NPR's international correspondent, Emily Fang,

has covered the Asia-Pacific region for the last decade

and joins us now.

Welcome.

Thanks so much for having me, Aisha. Emily, what do we know about the International Criminal Court's case against Duterte? It has been a long time coming.
Duterte became president of the Philippines in 2016, and that very year, he vowed to wipe out drug abuse in the country. And almost immediately after saying that, there was a huge spike in killings outside of the rule of law.
These were known as extrajudicial killings, or EJKs, as people in the Philippines now call them in shorthand. And over the next six years, human rights organizations estimate anywhere between 8,000 to 30,000 people were killed like this on the mere suspicion that they used or sold drugs like marijuana or something called shabu, which is a mix of methamphetamines and caffeine that's popular in the Philippines.
Sometimes it was the police who were responsible for the killings, but more often people were killed by anonymous assailants that residents suspected were linked to Duterte. And that's what's prompted this investigation and now the arrest of Duterte by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, which is in the Netherlands.
What are the next steps for this ICC case against Duterte? First, there's going to be an initial hearing where the charges will be formally presented. Then his legal team will have a chance to respond to those charges.
And if a judge decides there is sufficient evidence, the case will move to a trial. That will likely last many months.
And in a statement Duterte released on his way to The Hague, he said he expects a long legal battle. How are the families of victims of these killings in the Philippines reacting to the news of his arrest.

They're thrilled. They're in shock.

There have been very few successful prosecutions to date.

And families hope they might get some justice after all these years.

But there's also a lot of backlash in the Philippines.

After the ICC started investigating Duterte in 2019,

he withdrew the Philippines from membership in the court. And now Duterte's main political rival, Ferdinand Marcos Jr., is the current president of the Philippines.
And perhaps infamously, the Duterte and Marcos families have not been getting along. So last year, Duterte's daughter, Sarah, who is also the country's vice president now, said she fantasized about beheading Marcos Jr.
and said she'd hired an assassin to kill him if needed. So the two do not like each other.
Plus, Duterte still has a lot of supporters in the Philippines, and they say Duterte's arrest is not about justice, but about President Marcos trying to eliminate his political rival. All said, this arrest has totally divided the country, and it's played into this Marcos-Tuterte family feud that defines the country's politics.
And I want to note that although extrajudicial killings have slowed by a lot since Marcos took office, they have not stopped completely. There are hundreds of people a year still being murdered in their homes or on the streets over any suspicions that they use or

sell drugs. So last year, we aired your story looking at the legacy of these killings.
Today, we want to come back to this episode since the neighborhoods you visited remain hot spots for death under the current president. That's right.
For this story, I started by visiting a poor area on the outskirts of Manila, the capital.

One of the first places I went to was Noveliches. It's just north of Metro Manila, the capital region, and one of the most densely populated parts of the Philippines.
Noveliches is a bit of a down-on-its-lock neighborhood, full of twisty, steep alleyways which seriously flood during storms. I came here to meet a woman named Tin.
I have a two kids and we don't po. Tin is this wafer-thin young woman with big eyes staring out of a round face.
When I meet her, she's balancing one of her children, a fussy baby on her hip.

And what's your child's name here? Her name is Casitina Sirioso. She's constantly caring for

others. And until recently, that included her husband, Chris Mill Sirioso.
She often worried

for his life, mainly because police in their neighborhood here operate with impunity. She says it's a fact of life here that the police mount drug bust operations.
Nothing really changed under Marcos. In Duterte's time, the police were killing people.
And she says under Marcos, if the police say you are doing drugs, they can also do whatever they want.

And Tin knew her husband could be a target because he sometimes used shabu.

She says it took his mind off their financial troubles.

Like many young men, he could not find a stable job.

Last fall, she says a police officer shot dead an alleged drug seller who lived next to them.

Tin pulled Sirioso aside. She says she warned her husband to stop using.
She said, look at this woman who was just killed. This could be you.
Months ago, months ago.

We were still there with them when we were talking.

Her husband had already narrowly avoided death.

In 2020, he turned to... Her husband had already narrowly avoided death.

In 2020, he turned himself in to police for drug rehabilitation,

believing this vague promise from the Duterte administration

that those who sought rehab would receive perpetual amnesty.

Tin says he was scared he'd be gunned down like so many young men. Tin says Sirioso briefly quit Shabo for a few years.
He wanted to stay alive for their two children. But she says the stress of trying to make do and raise a family in the slums caused him to occasionally turn to marijuana and more shabu.
Death was still waiting for the 29-year-old and it struck last October. Chris Mel Sirioso had been out late and then gone out drinking at a bar in the neighborhood.
A police car pulled up. Tin says CCTV cameras show her husband being dragged into a police jeep.
An hour later, Sirioso was brought to the hospital and pronounced dead on arrival.

She says the official cause of death was lack of blood due to two gunshot wounds.

The initial police report said the cop had shot Sirioso because he'd been selling drugs,

a charge his family denies.

Yes, he sometimes used shabu. But Tin says just because you use drugs does not mean

you deserve to die. Sirioso is one of 342 people killed in drug-related operations in 2023 alone,

entirely without due process. This statistic, it's not coming from the police or the Marcos

Thank you. in drug-related operations in 2023 alone, entirely without due process.
This statistic, it's not coming from the police or the Marcos administration, but from a small group of independent researchers. They've made it their mission to document the true toll of the drug war on Filipino society.
You're listening to The Sunday Story. We'll be right back.
In the Philippines, getting official data on drug killings isn't easy, but one group has made it a priority. NPR's Emily Fang picks up the story.
So this is where we input the weekly killings. In March of 2024, I went to the University of the Philippines in Manila and wound my way through the sunny campus to a shady office tucked in the back of one of the buildings.
Because I wanted to understand more about how we have these numbers about extrajudicial killings. And it turns out they've been meticulously documented by this small team of researchers here.
I'm Joel Ariate. I'm a university researcher of the Third World Study Center.

I met Ariate and his colleague Lara Del Mundo

just as they were about to release their weekly report

on the latest state-sanctioned drug killings.

The figures for those seven days alone that March

was 11 people killed.

Everything is double-checked by Del Mundo and based on police

reports, media reports, and security camp footage. Some weeks are more difficult than the others.

Some weeks are more violent than others. This week, you get to see, well, you're forced to see

photos and videos of killings. So it's not easy to go through that on a bi-weekly basis.

In April 2024, the current president, Marcos, touted the new direction his crackdown on drugs is taking, insisting that it is bloodless.

But given what he sees each day, Joel Ariate does not buy it.

It's utterly untrue under the Marcos administration.

I don't know. But given what he sees each day, Joel Ariate does not buy it.

It's utterly untrue under the Marcos administration.

I mean, the average is from 0.8 to 0.9 killing a day, meaning one Filipino gets killed a day.

And in the first quarter of 2024, we've counted 75 killings, and that's for 73 days.

So there's even a bit of a surge there.

Thank you. First quarter of 2024, we've counted 75 killings, and that's for 73 days.
So there's even a bit of a surge there. Ariati is a philosophy professor, and he kind of fell into this work as a volunteer and just found he could not stop even when it basically became a full-time job.
Because we're the only one left counting, so might as well continue.

And if you don't do it, no one knows the real scale of the problem?

No, because I have some friends in the media, and they tried asking data from the Philippine

National Police. Actually, we got into a bit of trouble with the police because we're issuing particular numbers and they're denying it.
The Philippines police does release its own data on drug killings, but their figures are inconsistent and they're not released regularly. For example, for all of 2023, the police said about 47,000 people surrendered, were arrested, or died in drug operations, but did not break that figure down.
They also did not respond to repeated requests for comment from NPR for this story. Even Ariante says his figures are almost certainly an undercount.
Another reason why it's hard to count is while stories of killings are common, especially in poor neighborhoods, many of these killings go unreported. But they're well known within the community.
I met with a man named Romeo Grutas. He's the neighborhood president of a community watch organization in a region called Bulacan on the northern outskirts of Manila.
When I spoke to him, Grutas said just the week prior, he heard five people were killed. NPR confirmed the deaths with the families, but there are no media reports and no police reports of the deaths.

This is the kind of news that spreads through word of mouth. In large part because those who are killed are from these poor areas.
Their lives are seen as dispensable. And also in these areas, selling drugs is often the most reliable source of income.
Because of lack of jobs, lack of employment, even the grandmothers are forced to sell drugs just to augment the economic. Grutas describes corruption and a reign of terror by police in Bulacan.
They are very afraid. So their house, they padlock their house.
Gruta switches to Tagalog to say, people are desensitized to all this death. When a killing happens, it's just an everyday tragedy.
People barely take notice anymore. When current President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.
took over, he set to work trying to burnish the Philippines' international reputation and differentiate himself from his father, Ferdinand Marcos Sr. The elder Marcos was ousted as president after a decades-long reign marked by violence and massive corruption.
His wife Imelda is famous for having over 3,000 pairs of designer shoes. Part of a vast collection of wealth, the Marcos family accrued before going into exile.
Bongbong, as the current president is nicknamed, is painting himself as a progressive leader, especially in the war on drugs. His office did not respond to a request for comment

for the story, but President Marcos Jr. did hold a press conference in April of 2024

when the police had a huge drug bust. And he pointed out there that the police did so

without killing anyone. Not one person died.
Marcos Jr. also wants to focus more on drug

rehabilitation, setting up more local treatment clinics to treat addicts, not kill them. This is The Sunday Story.
Stay with us. Do you have outpatient cases today? I paid a visit to this public rehab clinic in Manila, one of the most established clinics the state funds.
At any given time, it might have two or three dozen inpatient cases, people brought in by their families or more commonly ordered by the court to serve part of their sentence here, rather than face potential death on the streets. The clinic offers addiction counseling and therapy, and as one patient told me, moral counseling and so-called social etiquette classes.

Social etiquette means what behavior that I should have,

especially when I finish this program and I'm going outside world,

and how I will interact with other people efficiently.

So I must learn how to interact properly. We can't use his name because he is still a patient and protected by medical data laws.
He says he was sent to the clinic after turning himself in. He said he was using LSD, cocaine and marijuana and knew the police were tailing him already.
First of all, I might be killed or I might be arrested. That's why I asked for help Bienvenido.
He runs this clinic and is at the forefront of the country's efforts to mainstream drug rehab. But of course, the extrajudicial killings of the last eight years have made people fearful of coming forward.
Social stigma will always be there. So we try to educate and teach people, let them learn that our drug users are victims and their patients.
It's a medical condition that we can help them through it. The stigma should not be there.
It's going to take a while. It's going to be continuous.
Dr. Bienvenido is cautiously hopeful at the turn in policy under Marcos, but says they need more support.
In terms of drug rehabilitation centers, it's still the same. No additional funding has been given, but we are lobbying for additional funds and infrastructure.
And? And when you produce them, you need to train them for specializations. Like in drug rehab, they have to be trained in addiction medicine.
There's very few trainings. We have to go abroad for that.
So rehab as a policy will take years to implement. and there's been a lack of judicial oversight.
The number of court cases that successfully found a police officer guilty of extrajudicial killings, or EJKs, is in the single digits. The Philippines left the International Criminal Court in 2019 after the court said it would investigate EJJ case.
Perhaps the biggest complication, however,

is people here still support former President Duterte.

Duterte and his daughter, Sarah, remain highly influential.

Yeah, I love him.

Even by drug users themselves.

Like this other patient we met at the rehab clinic,

a former scuba diving instructor caught last year for dealing large amounts of shabu. We're not naming him because of medical privacy laws as well.
I feel in my case when my country's safe with him I I I just feel good at him. I just feel he's real man.

This is despite the fact that he says he's had friends shot dead for selling drugs. And he could have met the same fate.
What about people who were killed under the war on drugs? Did you see that as an issue or feel unsafe because of that? Maybe, that's why I can say some of these mistakes is maybe. It's a mistake, but it's a people's choice.
They did that. As in, it's the victim's fault.
They should have known the price of doing drugs was potential execution. They already know.
Our president already warned them. War on drugs, he gave time, he warned.
But it's people's choice. They did still.
They do what they want.

So maybe that's also get back and return.

I also went to Novotas, a slum neighborhood outside Metro Manila that has had one of the highest concentrations of killings under Duterte. Along the sewage-clogged river in Novotas, residents show me where a 17-year-old boy named Jemboy Baltazar was shot to death by police last August, during the second year of Marcos' presidency.

Jimboy had been with a friend,

cleaning his fishing boat that morning when he was shot by police. His uncle dragged the body out of the water.
Jimboy's father, Jesse Baltazar, also ran over when he heard the news. He says he saw his son's body floating in the shallows of the river and cried to the police, I thought you said you'd only fired warning shots.
Police later said they'd gotten intel his son was an accomplice to another crime

and possibly selling drugs, something a court later found not true.

But Baltazar's sister Jessa says casting the victims of extrajudicial killings as drug sellers is pervasive

and is used so law enforcement avoid prosecution.

She says when Jimboi's body was in the river,

she saw someone connected to the police try to plant drugs on her brother's body.

The Baltasars brought the police to court.

Turns out the police had mistaken Jenboy for another guy.

And Jenboy's case made national headlines when the five officers involved were fired

with one given an extremely rare sentence of four years in prison.

Still, the family points out there is plenty wrong with the case.

For example, the same police unit who killed Jemboy also investigated the killing.

The both is our family and the case's star witnesses are now in hiding.

They fear the same police officers who killed Jemboy will take revenge on them.

I visited them at their hiding place. It's peaceful by the ocean.
Sonny Agustilo, Jemboy's childhood best friend who was in the boat with him when he was shot, is hiding here too. Just 20 years old, he says he does not know what his future holds.
He says the police are like the gods of Novotis. They can just kill anyone.
Djemboi's mother Rhoda says her only mission in life now is revenge. revenge.
She says she cannot accept that Jumboi's killing was a mistake by the police.

My son was shot 10 times, she says.

If it were a mistake, he would have been shot once.

But he was shot 10 times by different officers.

How can you call that a mistake? And the cycle of violence continues. Less than a month after her son's funeral, Jemboi's friend, 20-year-old Daniel Soraya, was shot dead by an unknown assailant.
Daniel Soraya, another death, and this time, an unsolved murder.

We met his mother, Irina Soraya,

the night before what would have been

her son's 21st birthday.

She looked so young herself.

Dyed blonde hair, flushed face,

nervous hands.

Soraya says,

I could not believe my son was dead.

It was like my world was ending. We were sitting next to the San Lorenzo Ruiz Parish Church, where several Catholic brothers and priests have set up a cooperative making votive candles to give the families of the dead some meaningful employment.

Despondent that she may never get justice with law enforcement, Soraya has instead turned to the Catholic Church for solace.

As she tells us her story, the woman around her cluck in sympathy while they shape votive

candles.

They're melting and shaping raw wax and cutting candle wicks.

Thank you. As she tells us her story, the woman around her cluck in sympathy while they shape votive candles.

Through melting and shaping raw wax and cutting candle wigs,

every one of them has lost loved ones in the war against drugs. One of them, who everyone calls Mother Marianne, cannot hold herself back.
It's a culture of the government that they just use the ones who are in the lower.

Marianne says things are the same even though we've changed presidents. The culture is still the same, as is the culture of impunity in the police and the government.
It's the status quo. They've done it here in the country.
They've done it right. They don't know that other people, that other Filipino people, are doing it in our hearts.
Saraya is silent. I don't think she has the energy to agree or disagree.
She shuffles the bags of rice noodles with her, her son's favorite snacks. She had actually been on her way to his grave to wish him a happy birthday before she sat down with me.
But she stays a bit, starting to make votive candles even though she's not yet officially part of the cooperative. The week before, she tells me, she submitted her application to join the circle of grieving women.

The application is being processed.

Candle making is a way for her to make some extra cash and to be about this story is just the feeling of powerlessness that these family members feel about the safety of their loved ones, you know, whether they are drug users or sellers or not, because it could all be so arbitrary, like with Jim Boy. Just a case of mistaken identity, right yeah i.
I mean, so zooming out for a moment, what, if anything, has like international scrutiny in the wake of Duterte's presidency done for the victims and their families? There has not been much done. The International Criminal Court did open a probe on the war on drugs, but no one has been charged.
Marcos is not cooperating with the court, and the Philippines is no longer part of the ICC, actually, despite the fact that more than half of Filipinos in a recent poll said they are in favor of the court's investigation. Meanwhile, Duterte and his daughter Sarah, who was also a politician, remain highly influential from their base in Davao City.
This is in the Southern Philippines. And listen, compared to the dozens of people a day who were being killed in 2016, 2017, during the height of the killing, the numbers of EJKs now are lower.
But three to four hundred people are still being killed a year. And that's probably 300 to 400 people too many.
What also struck me was that there isn't a culture of rehabilitation in the Philippines yet. What they have instead is a culture of punishment.
What are some of the challenges of shifting from punishment to rehabilitation? One of the challenges is this normalization of violence. People become desensitized to it.
They become more willing to tolerate brutal policing policies because they think it may end this cycle of death and violence. But based on my reporting, I don't think it does.
Well, Emily, thank you for bringing us this story. Thanks so much for having me, Aisha.
How did the current president of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos Jr., come to power? Our friends over at ThruLine made an episode telling the story of the Marcos family, one of the Philippines' most infamous political families,

and how they rewrote history to come back to power in 2022,

despite being overthrown decades ago.

It's about how melodrama and nostalgia can create a myth capable of resurrecting a dynasty.

And it's got a lot to say about the dangers

democracies around the world are facing.

You don't want to miss it. Listen to ThruLine wherever you get your podcasts.
This episode was produced by Justine Yan and edited by Jenny Schmidt. Thanks to Marjorie Rosas and Ashley Westerman.
Our audio engineer was Robert Rodriguez. The Sunday Story team also includes Abby Wendell and Andrew Mambo.

Our supervising producer is Liana Simstrom, and Irene Noguchi is our executive producer.

I'm Aisha Roscoe. Up First is back tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week.