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Workers zip the body bag containing the remains of 17-year-old 2017 drug war victim Kian Delos Santos after his exhumation at a public cemetery in the Philippines on Monday. Photo: Reuters

Philippine teen Kian Delos Santos’ body exhumed in fresh push for drug war justice

  • The 17-year-old was shot dead by police in 2017 during the nation’s war on drugs under President Duterte; police said they acted in self-defence
  • Uncle says ‘bones still speak. Let’s see if we can discover more truth’; thousands were killed in crackdown, other families also seeking justice

The body of a teenager killed in a high-profile shooting during the Philippines’ war on drugs five years ago was exhumed for autopsy on Monday as his family seek to learn more about his death and hold others accountable.

But video footage contradicted the official police report, sparking huge public outrage against the bloody anti-narcotics campaign of former President Rodrigo Duterte, and the rare conviction of police officers who rights groups say have otherwise enjoyed impunity.

Randy Delos Santos, the victim’s uncle, told reporters at the exhumation at a cemetery in Manila on Monday that the body would be autopsied by a forensic pathologist who was challenging the official narrative of how people such Delos Santos were killed during the drugs war.

Randy Delos Santos (centre) and other relatives of Kian Loyd Delos Santos watch over the exhumation of his remains. Photo: Reuters

“The bones still speak. After five years, let us see if we can still discover more truth,” he said, adding that the family was pushing for more people to be punished for the death of his nephew, without naming them.

Philippine police did not respond to requests for comment.

Official records show police killed 6,252 people during the crackdown that followed Duterte’s election in 2016, all in self-defence. Rights groups say police executed drug suspects on a massive scale, which the police deny, and that thousands of mysterious street killings were not included in the tally.

Mourners at the funeral of Kian Loyd Delos Santos in 2017. Photo: Reuters

The families of many drug war victims are still seeking justice in long, drawn-out cases.

“If the justice system was really working, there should be more [convictions],” Randy Delos Santos said, adding there were many other cases that contradicted government claims the victims had fought back.

Delos Santos’ case was featured in a report by a former International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor who opened a preliminary probe into the drugs war in 2018.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr, Duterte’s successor, said he has no plans of rejoining the ICC after the country withdrew from the treaty in 2019.

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