Pope backs Filipino bishop
fighting deadly ‘drug war'
Filipino Bishop Pablo Virgilio David is on the front-lines
of a campaign to stop extra-judicial killings as part of government crackdown
on illegal drugs. He told Vatican News that Pope Francis said he is praying for
him, and that the Pope has encouraged him to be a prophetic voice for human
rights and dignity.
By Linda Bordoni and Mario Galgano
Pope Francis has told a Filipino bishop who has received
death threats for criticizing his government’s so-called “drug war”, that he
knows what he is going through and that he is praying for him.
Rights groups claim over 20,000 people have been killed in
extrajudicial killings, mostly carried out by the country’s police since the
President took power in 2016 promising to crackdown on illegal drugs.
Bishop Pablo Virgilio David of Kalookan
told Vatican News he was moved and encouraged by the Pope’s
words, which came during a meeting last week in the Vatican. He said the Pope
said to him “I want you to know that I know your situation. I know what you are
going through. I am praying for you.”
The bishop was in Rome with a first group of Filipino
bishops who are travelling to the Vatican for their ad limina visit.
Bishop David is waging a campaign to stop the extrajudicial
killings, provide rehabilitation to drug addicts, and raise awareness regarding
a culture of violence that, he says, is prevailing in the Philippines.
In the interview, Bishop David explained how he told the
Pope about the violence and the injustice being perpetrated, in particular, in
his diocese:
“When I asked Pope Francis whether or not he was aware of
what is going on in the diocese of Kalookan”, where much of the drug war is
being waged, “he told me he is keeping well informed”, Bishop David said.
He explained that he has taken upon himself the task of
documenting the continuing abuse and violence. To do this, the Bishop has set
up a Commission and appointed a team to do proper documentation, partnering
with photojournalists who record the killings and provide information about the
victims.
“It has been heartbreaking meeting with the widows, orphans,
families of the victims of the war against drugs” he said, expressing his pain
for having been “vilified by the government”. “Our lives have been threatened
but I know in my conscience that what I am doing is right, taking a spiritual
stance as a pastor,” he said.
Bishop David said he believes that those who become addicted
to drugs are human beings; that they are victims; and that they should be
rehabilitated, not killed. He said that if the government has declared a war
against illegal drugs they should go after the source.
He said that he lives in sorrow for the killings that, he
claims, take place on a daily basis. He reveled that since he has been
documenting the situation there have been “more than 1000 victims within my
immediate environment”.
Church-run rehabilitation programmes
Bishop David said he has introduced programmes for
rehabilitation. “So there is no reason for the government to be angry with us –
because we are in fact helping the government”.
He explained that, in partnership with the local Kalookan
authorities, he has set up a community-based drug rehabilitation programme that
involves family, community, and individuals.
“I have opened my parishes for drug rehabilitation and I
believe it is a way of saving lives,” he said.
Bishop Pablo Virgilio
David with Vatican News' Mario Galgano
The Bishop explained that currently there are about 300
people undergoing rehab in 5 different parishes. Some, he said, “have
voluntarily sought our help; others are in jail and through a plea-bargaining
agreement with the Court, have been entrusted to us for rehab; others are
children who are already using illegal drugs at a very young age”.
With due respect for the government, which has to deal with
law and order, Bishop David said, “The big problem is that the use of drugs is
criminalized”. In reality, he explained, it is a mental health issue, and it is
the victims that are being targeted.
While the Pope’s words of encouragement to continue to give
voice to the Church’s prophetic role have been incredibly consoling for him,
Bishop David said he is not optimistic, as it appears the majority of Filipinos
seem to approve of this method of addressing criminality.
“Mea culpa”
“It pains me, as it seems we have also failed – as pastors
–in educating the minds and consciences of our people”, he said.
Although he has received support from many people, including
Cardinal Tagle of Manila — who has provided him with some security following
the death threats — Bishop David said people find it “difficult to accept our
stand”.
“They say you should be happy the government is controlling
criminality and getting rid of drug addicts. That shocks me because we are
supposed to be a predominantly Catholic country. So when I deal with this kind
of mentality, which is so contrary to the values of being a Christian, I say we
are also to blame for not having communicated Christian values, the Christian
faith very well”.
The jails are full
Bishop David explained that there are many implications to
be dealt with, including the fact that the jails in his country are full. He
noted that, “the district jail of Kalookan has a maximum capacity of 200. It
has 2400 prisoners… in a little space. More than 85% of them do not need jail,
they need rehabilitation”.
In an attempt to tackle this unsustainable situation, he
said he is negotiating with the Courts to allow him to introduce his Diocese’s
rehabilitation programme inside the jail. He said he has received a positive
response, but the lack of space is a problem.
Support and help from Catholic leaders
The bishop said he has received visits from various Catholic
leaders including the Jesuit General “who came all the way from Rome to visit
one of the mission stations in the Diocese, as a response to the Pope’s call to
go out to the peripheries”.
Catholic nuns pray
during a mass at a campaign against human rights abuses in Quezon City
The Bishop pointed out that in his diocese of 2 million
people, there are only 27 parishes; and so he has invited missionaries to
collaborate with him. He said they are working mostly in the slum areas with
the urban poor.
Father Michel Perry, Minister General of the Franciscan
Friars, has also visited Kalookan, and has opened a mission station, which has
blossomed and become the Santa Clara parish.
The victims are people, not statistics
It was there, Bishop David said, “that I first came into
contact with the brutal extrajudicial killing of a young boy, who had been
apprehended by police: it was heart-breaking”.
“It is different when you meet the families of victims up
close, when you see the faces, when you get to know the names. On television,
they are just statistics. Numbers don’t move people. It is faces and real
identities that move us,” he said.
The Bishop said he personally was moved by his encounter
with these people, “especially knowing that this boy was most likely innocent
of the accusation against him … that he was involved in drugs at all. And even
if he was involved in drugs, why should he deserve to die?”
He said the one victory that has been achieved pertains to
the case of an innocent 17-year-old boy, Kian Dos Santos, who was picked up by
police and brutally slain. The killing was captured on CCTV, and, for the first
time, a case was filed and won, with the police officers involved being
sentenced to life-imprisonment.
But witnesses are afraid, Bishop David said. “It’s not every
day you accuse the police”, members of the very institution that is supposed to
protect lives, not destroy them.
“I know there are a lot of decent policemen who do not want
to be part of this”, he said. But in the Philippines the police force “has
become a killing machine”.
A rally in Manila to
protest extra-judicial killings
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