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Palace: SWS ‘nanlaban’ poll contains ‘leading, pointed questions’

drug war fatality

This photo taken March 9, 2017 shows members of a village watch standing next to a body, who according to witnesses was thrown from a car and then shot several times by suspects, along a road in Quezon City in suburban Manila. While President Rodrigo Duterte's unprecedented crackdown has claimed the lives of 7,000 people, the impacts on their families are the largely untold stories in what rights groups have called a "war on the poor". Amnesty International said in a February report that the killings were overwhelmingly in poor urban areas, with the slain often male breadwinners. AFP PHOTO

Ernesto Abella 2

Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto Abella FILE PHOTO / MALACANANG

Malacañang on Wednesday questioned the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey, which revealed that the majority of Filipinos were not buying the argument of the police that suspects killed in drug operations resisted arrest.

“It seems the 2nd Quarter Social Weather Stations (SWS) Survey contains leading and pointed questions that may have unduly influenced the answers of respondents,” Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto Abella said in a statement.

In its Second Quarter 2017 survey, majority of Filipinos or 54 percent agreed that “Marami sa mga pinatay ng mga pulis sa kampanya laban sa ilegal na droga ay hindi totoong nanlaban sa pulis (Many of those killed by the police in the anti-drug campaign did not really fight against the police).”

READ: Majority of Filipinos do not believe police’s ‘nanlaban’ claim

The survey showed that those who disagreed to the survey statement were at 20 percent, while those undecided were at 25 percent.

Abella listed the “leading and pointed questions” he was referring to.

“We expect pollsters to exercise prudence and objectivity to arrive at a closer approximation of public sentiment,” Abella said. /je

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