Business has never been busier for undertaker Alejandro Ormeneta but, after five months on the frontlines of the Philippines’ brutal drug war, he just wants the killings to stop.
Ormeneta and his colleagues at one funeral parlor in Manila said they were retrieving an average of five corpses a night, mostly from slums, and his grisly new routine has left him questioning the forces unleashed by President Duterte’s crackdown on crime.
“This shouldn’t happen, they are people, not animals,” Ormeneta, 47, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) as he recalled taking out three nails hammered into the skull of an alleged drug trafficker.
“I think he was still alive when they hammered the nails. They tied him up first, put tape around his head, then hammered the nails in … that must have been so painful. I felt so sorry for him,” he said.
On a typical night recently, Ormeneta walked down a narrow slum alleyway into a shanty where masked assailants had shot a man dead, the victim’s body still smelling of alcohol that he must have been drinking shortly before being killed.
The victim’s sister wailed as police turned over his body on the concrete floor soaked in blood and revealed multiple gunshots to his head and body.
Police later said that Danilo Bolante, 47, had sold “shabu,” the cheap crystal methamphetamine that President Duterte said was ruining society and must be eradicated.
But his sister, Chona Balina, insisted he had stopped and had even reported himself to police as part of President Duterte’s campaign to pressure drug traffickers and users into surrendering, known as “Oplan Tokhang.” Tokhang is an abbreviated Filipino word for “knock and plead.”
“Why launch Tokhang if that’s what they are going to do with people who are already changing?” Balina said.
Supply bodies
Mr. Duterte won the May presidential election this year after promising an unprecedented war on drugs in which he vowed to kill tens of thousands of people.
Part of his stump speech on the campaign trail was jocular business advice for people to set up funeral homes in preparation for the killings.
“The funeral parlors will be packed … I’ll supply the dead bodies,” he had said.
The President has been true to his word with police reporting killing more than 2,000 people they accused of being drug suspects and another 3,000 people murdered by unknown vigilantes.
The deaths looked certain to continue with Mr. Duterte saying in September he would be “happy to slaughter” three million addicts and repeatedly vowing no letup until the illegal drug trade has been eliminated.
While there are vocal critics of the drug war at home and abroad, surveys show an overwhelming majority of Filipinos support President Duterte’s crusade.
Still, funeral parlors, while busy, are not necessarily making a profit, with relatives of many victims often too poor to be able to pay for a funeral.
“I don’t know how we can afford this because I have no job,” Balina said after agreeing to a funeral package worth P62,000 with Veronica Memorial Chapels for services that include embalming, a casket and the wake.
Funeral director Rico Teodocio said prices ranged from P18,000 to P400,000.
However, Teodocio said he often gave discounts, especially for families of alleged drug users, some of whom paid in coins or raised money from gambling at wakes. He said some also begged cemeteries for free caskets.
“I don’t know if pathetic is the right term to use but you really pity them. We suffer too because we give our lowest price,” he said.
Veronica and other funeral parlors have also reported that bodies were frequently left unclaimed because relatives of the victims did not know about the death, were afraid of being linked to drugs or were simply too poor.
In these situations, the bodies are kept for two to three months then buried in public cemeteries, at the expense of funeral homes.
“It’s sad. They die without anyone coming for them,” Ormeneta said, pointing to black corpses at the back of the morgue.
Commissions
Another barrier to funeral parlor success is corruption, with some policemen taking commissions for informing funeral parlors of people who have been killed.
Mr. Duterte openly joked about the graft during the campaign.
“These policemen are naughty. It’s true they have a contract. They call the funeral home: ’There’s a body. Claim it here … I’ll just drop by for the commission tomorrow,’” he said recently.
Two funeral parlor owners said on condition of anonymity that it was the victims’ families who shouldered the burden of this long-running practice.
“How do you recoup that cost? You have to add it on to the price,” said an executive who has been in the funeral industry for decades.
But while some undertakers treat the profession as just a business, Ormeneta, a father of four and a Catholic who has been in the industry for 18 years, has been emotionally impacted by the drug war.
He said he often thought about the person with nails in his skull, and had a firm conviction that small-time traffickers did not deserve to die.
“They are victims of drugs. They needed to stave off hunger, perhaps for their children. They should have been given a chance to change,” he said. “Isn’t that written in the Bible? Thou shalt not kill.” —AFP