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Filipino youth stage musical against Duterte's deadly drugs war

By Ronn Bautista and Neil Jerome Morales MANILA (Reuters) - A Philippine youth theater club staged a musical at a Manila park on Sunday, challenging President Rodrigo Duterte's bloody war on drugs. The 20-minute show features a casket salesman whose funeral parlor is doing brisk business as corpses pile up. But the salesman and his friends end up as statistics, falling to vigilante-style killings that have gripped the Southeast Asian nation and alarmed the international community. "The play talks about the problem in the community with the war on drugs and the irony of it, that a few earn money amid this war and all the killings," artistic director Jessie Villabrille told Reuters. More than 8,000 suspected drug addicts and dealers have been killed since Duterte took office on June 30, some in police operations but many others in mysterious circumstances. The authorities vehemently deny wrongdoing and blame vigilantes and drug gangs for the killings. Criticism of the war on drugs does not sit with Duterte or his supporters. The brash leader chastised the United Nations and former U.S. president Barack Obama numerous times or criticizing his anti-drugs program. Duterte won the presidency by a wide margin on the promise of wiping out drugs and criminality. The theater group plans to take the musical to schools and stage a longer version next month. (Reporting by Ronn Bautista; Writing by Neil Jerome Morales; Editing by Kim Coghill)