(NPR) MANILA, Philippines — On a bright stage in a rented-out high school auditorium, Amelia Santos grieves openly before the audience.
Clutching a wireless microphone, the 55-year-old from Caloocan City, an area in Metro Manila’s north, recalls the day she returned home from work in September 2016 and was told her husband, Edward Narvarte, had been killed.
“Somebody went to my house and told me, ‘Go to your husband because he was killed, he was shot a lot of times by the police,'” she says. “When I arrived, there were police… and I saw the dead bodies of the victims, my husband was one of them.”.. Read More