Panel formed to react on the findings:
1. Mel Sta Maria, FEU Law Dean
2. Malou Mangahas, PCIJ executive editor
3. Jayeel Cornelio, ADMU Devt Studies program director
Conversation
Have questions on the PH anti-drug campaign? Just tweet them over. Open forum to follow after this panel discussion.
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WATCH: Panel discussion on the PH anti-drug campaign happening now at the Ateneo Leong Hall.
FEU Law Dean Mel Sta Maria reacts to the campaign's high death toll.
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PCIJ executive director Malou Mangahas: "Impunity has overtaken rule of law."
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Mangahas reminds journalists: The drug war is an all hands on deck project today.
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Mangahas says reporters must not be made by policr as court witnesses for anti-drug operations.
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Mangahas says the anti-tambay drive may be "the evil twin of Tokhang." CONTEXT:
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Mangahas: The anti-drug campaign is not just a crime beat story, but justice, about holding people accountable.
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Mangahas: What about DSWD? What about DepEd?
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Mangahas calls on media practitioners to collaborate in covering the big beat that is the anti-drug campaign.
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Ateneo Development Studies Director Jayeel Cornelio: "The patterns say something."
Replying to
Cornelio: The church always surfaces in the anti-drug campaign...There is a theological underpinning for the war on drugs.
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Why do many Filipino Christians support a deadly anti-drug campaign?
While they value life, Cornelio says they also believe #PresidentDuterte has been chosen by God to bring judgment.
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David says, single-source stories aside, the media is an important institution in keeping track of the anti-drug campaign.
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Mangahas: The cases filed in the anti-drug and anti-tambay drives are "very little."
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Mangahas: We can do better stories in the war on drugs.
We need to be more careful in parroting terms used by police. READ:
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Mangahas advises journalists: A common thread in drug campaign stories is due process.
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UP Diliman Chancellor Michael Tan opens the second session for today's forum, which will tackle rehabilitation in the anti-drug campaign.
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Speaking to students in the forum, Tan notes that the drug-related killings do not happen in certain places, particularly affluent areas.
He encourages everyone to look beyond their own backyard. READ: rappler.com/newsbreak/inve
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"Please do not refer to all drug users as addicts," says Ateneo Psychology Professor Regina Hechanova.
She says at most, 15% of users are addicted to drugs.
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LOOK: Ateneo Professor Hechanova lists crucial characteristics of a drug rehabilitation program, citing the and the PH's DDB.
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The family, Hechanova says, is a crucial support group for drug rehabilitation. But at the same time, she adds, many users got into drugs because of problems with their kin.
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Hechanova: "People can recover from drug use."
For speedy recovery, Hechanova says community-based drug rehabilitation programs must work.
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"Before you sleep at night, someone might be killed again."
DLSU President Armin Luistro gives the closing message here.
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UP, Ateneo, La Salle launch The Drug Archive, a website which compiles documents and explainers on the unrelenting Philippine anti-drug campaign.
Visit and explore the site here: drugarchive.ph
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[NOW] The Philippine Government's Anti-Drug Campaign: Emerging Evidence and Data forum speakers hold a press briefing.
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Ateneo president Fr Jett Villarin on solving the PH drug problem: "This will take beyond government"
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Just as the government's anti-drug campaign is unrelenting, so should media coverage, says UP Professor Clarissa David
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