As Trump arrives in Manila, a young victim of Dutertes devastating drug war is mourned
Relatives and friends mourn during the funeral of 15-year-old Mark Salonga, who relatives said was killed by unidentified assailants in Manila. His mother says Mark started using drugs around 9, missed a few years of school, then cleaned up and went back to classes. (Ezra Acayan/EPA/EFE)
MANILA The funeral is packed with children. There are children praying. Children playing peekaboo. Children peering through the glass-topped casket at their friend.
There lies Mark Salonga, the wisecracking oldest of four children, one of 16 cousins living under one tin roof. Mark, 15, was fatally shot by men on motorbike on the night of Nov. 3, leaving behind his family, a baseball cap and his school ID.
In the year and a half since President Rodrigo Duterte took office on a promise to kill suspected drug users and dealers, thousands of Filipinos, including dozens of children and teenagers, have been killed, either shot in police raids with high-death tolls and few witnesses, or targeted by hit men, often after being named by police.
The scope of the violence is such that the roadside killing of a 15-year-old is not big news. On Sunday afternoon, as Mark's family and friends walked from church to cemetery, there were no television cameras. The press was focused, instead, on the arrival of President Trump.
Mark lived in a Manila that Trump wont see. The U.S. president landed at the airport, took a helicopter to the roof of a conference center and then drove through closed streets to a luxury hotel.
Over the next two days, he will attend closed-door meetings, including a talk with Duterte. They are expected to discuss North Koreas nuclear program, terrorism, the South China Sea and other issues. What remains to be seen is whether they will talk about the anti-drug campaign and the violent impunity it unleashed.
While President Barack Obama called out Dutertes rights record, Trump has steered clear of public comment. A leaked transcript of a phone call with Duterte, however, showed that he privately praised the effort, telling Duterte that he was doing an unbelievable job on the drug problem.
U.S. lawmakers are calling on Trump to express concern, and the White House hinted that he just might. Duterte, meanwhile, has said that he is sure the U.S. president will not. He's not the human rights commission, the Philippine leader said.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/11/12/as-trump-arrives-in-manila-a-young-victim-of-dutertes-devastating-drug-war-is-mourned/?utm_term=.25e0d0e8fb6a