Pat Nabong, Alone in the Aftermath: Families of Slain Drug Suspects Struggle with Little Support

Since July 2016, the death toll of drug-related killings in Philippine President Duterte’s drug war has reached at least 7,000, according to local media. Almost every week, bodies of suspected drug dealers and users, who are mostly from low-income communities, show up along highways and residential areas. In many cases, police raids or drive-by shootings by masked vigilantes wake the entire neighborhood as people are killed in their homes and in front of their families. This multimedia project explores the psychological toll of the drug war on witnesses and relatives of slain drug suspects. It also examines the numerous barriers to mental health services and what is being done to address this issue. Nabong’s film was screened at the Medill Social Justice Film Festival in August 2018, and will be screened at the Consortium of Universities for Global Health’s (CUGH) 10th annual conference.