World

Filipino girl, 3, laid to rest after being shot dead in drug raid

About 60 people crammed into a home in the Philippines, including activists, family and friends wearing T-shirts that said "Justice for Myca," and "stop the attacks against the poor" for the funeral of a three-year-old recently shot dead by police.

Some politicians have shrugged off Myca Ulpina's death as 'collateral damage' in necessary drug war

A picture of the three-year-old, known familiarly as Myca Ulpina, is seen in a banner during her funeral on Tuesday in Rodriguez, Rizal province, Philippines. Ulpina was shot dead on June 29 by police officers conducting a drug raid targeting her father. (Ezra Acayan/Getty Images)

One by one, a mother and her children splash holy water over a white coffin barely a meter long. On the dirt floor beneath it lies a pair of tiny pink slippers.

This is a pauper's funeral mass in the Philippines for three-year-old Myca Ulpina, one of the most recent — and the youngest known — victims of a war on drugs that has become so deadly and murky it is almost impossible to track how many have been killed.

Ulpina was what police called "collateral damage," an unintended death among some 6,600 people whom police say they have killed in shootouts during President Rodrigo Duterte three-year crackdown.

Filipino activists say tens of thousands are being killed as police terrorize poor communities, using cursory drug "watch lists" to identify suspected users or dealers, and executing many of them under the guise of sting operations.

Police and the government reject that as lies and say those killed were armed and resisted arrest, including the toddler's father, Renato, whom they said used his daughter as a human shield in a June 29 incident in Rizal province, near Manila.

"I can't count how many masses I've held for victims of the war on drugs, but one thing I've discovered is none of them fought back," priest Noel Gatchailan said at the mass on Tuesday, his eyes welling with tears.

"Sorry Myca, for I wasn't able to protect you .... Sorry that you were born at a time when the poor are targeted and killings are rampant. Sorry if they're saying you're collateral damage."

Relatives and friends gather around the casket on Tuesday. Ulpina is believed to be the youngest victim of President Rodrigo Duterte's controversial and bloody 'war on drugs,' which human rights groups estimate have left more than 27,000 dead. (Ezra Acayan/Getty Images)

The service was held outside a relative's home under a small tarpaulin roof propped up by bamboo poles, with just three rows of five plastic chairs separated by an aisle of trodden earth.

About 60 people crammed into the space, mostly standing, among them activists, family and friends wearing T-shirts that said "Justice for Myca," and "stop the attacks against the poor."

In a yard outside strewn with trash, old clothes and broken furniture, a group of police carrying assault rifles stood guard.

UN to soon vote on drug war resolution

Ulpina's killing comes as the 47-member United Nations Human Rights Council prepares to vote this week on a resolution that calls for a UN investigation into the drug war, heeding pleas from activists and lawyers for the international community to intervene to stop the bloodshed.

The Philippines has dismissed the resolution as interference and cited Duterte's approval rating, which hit a record high last month, as evidence of resounding public backing for his anti-drugs campaign.

Foreign governments are being "misled by false news and untruthful narratives," according to Duterte's spokesman, while the Dangerous Drugs Board, the country's narcotics control body, on Tuesday said facts were being distorted "to present a morbid picture of the anti-drug campaign."

The child's death had generated little media attention until Friday, when Ronald dela Rosa, a senator and former top commander of Duterte's drug war, described the child's death as collateral damage, and said "shit happens." He has since has apologized.

Accounts of what happened vary. Police said operatives had tried to buy drugs from Ulpina's father, who pulled a gun on them and killed one of their officers while using the child as shield.

Ulpina's mother, who has asked not to be identified by name, said police burst into her home without a warrant as her family slept. Her daughter was killed by a stray bullet and wasn't used as a shield, she said.

On Tuesday, scores of people joined a three-kilometre funeral procession behind a white hearse, the back of which had a picture of the child wearing a shirt with the word "Pulis" (police).

A relative holds framed pictures of three-year-old Myca Ulpina on Wednesday. (Ezra Acayan/Getty Images)

A priest and funeral workers carried the small casket up some steps and pushed it into a prepared space atop a concrete structure of hundreds of graves built in columns five-high.

Wearing dark sunglasses, Ulpina's mother fought to contain her anger as a woman police officer approached, shook her hand and offered condolences.

"My daughter is not collateral damage," she said, as she left the cemetery.

Flavie Villanueva, a former drug user-turned-priest who delivered the mass, said he welcomed calls for a UN investigation, because Duterte and the police were acting "like Gods."

"It's a new normal. That's why 'shit happens'" he said, referring to Dela Rosa's remarks. "My question is, when is enough, enough?"