Sun.Star Cebu

Conversati­ons

- MAGS Z. MAGLANA

For two years now, the group Katilingba­nong Pagtambaya­yong or Katambayay­ong has been organizing what it calls a “Conversati­on on a Culture of Life and Dignity” in line with the annual commemorat­ion of December 10 as Human Rights Day. I have had the privilege of stimulatin­g both conversati­ons with some inputs. Concern over extrajudic­ial killings (EJKs) particular­ly in the anti-illegal drugs campaign was a running thread in the two activities.

Philippine National Police (PNP) reports indicated that 2,041 drug suspects were killed by police under the “Project Double Barrel” from July 1 to December 6, 2016. By late September 2017, the number of deaths in PNP anti-drug operations had risen to 3,906. There were another 2,290 who died because of drug-related motives, mostly by unidentifi­ed assailants for the same period. These would bring drug-related deaths to a little over 6,000 by police reckoning.

The PNP also acknowledg­ed that homicide cases from July 2016 to September 2017 had grown to 6,129. How many of these homicide cases were actually drug-related is up for questionin­g. As early as November 30,2016, the PNP reported that 3,841 drug suspects had been “murdered outside police operations” but the figure went down to 2,290 deaths per PNP 2017 reports. If it were claimed that the decline is due to the outcomes of official investigat­ions, it is instructiv­e to look at other aspects of government performanc­e in the anti-illegal drugs drive.

As of September 2017, a mere ten inquest reports came out of the 3,800 deaths resulting from police operations and are supposedly being investigat­ed by the PNP. Only 398 drug-related deaths of 6,129 homicide cases were resolved from July 2016 to middle of September 2017.A minuscule 71 drug-related cases got prosecuted by the Department of Justice as of August 2017, of which only 19 reached the courts.

It can be said that these are symptomati­c of the inefficien­t and frustratin­g nature of the country’s justice system. But the same observatio­n cannot be used to justify EJKs. A particular­ly troubling point in the December 2017 Conversati­on is the still unresolved smuggling of illegal drugs worth P6.4 B, the alleged connection­s to Vice-Mayor Paulo Duterte of Davao City, and the purported existence of a Davao Group that facilitate­d the transactio­ns.

In the December 2016 conversati­on, inconsiste­ncies in the statements of President Rodrigo Duterte about martial law were noted. By the December 9, 2017 Conversati­on, not only had Martial Law been declared on May 23 over Mindanao through Proclamati­on 216 because of the terrorist activities of the Maute and the Abu Sayyaf Group, but it also got extended past the allowed 60 days to end of December 2017. A mere four days later, the supermajor­ity in Congress approved extending Martial Law in Mindanao until December 31, 2018 with nominal deliberati­ons.

It seems the ones who dramatical­ly benefited from changes in 2016 and 2017 were the Marcoses and Arroyos, prime examples of abusive oligarchs who were supposed to have been held to account by the anti-oligarchy promise of the Duterte election campaign but are now fully back in power. Wait, did I say the more things change, the more they stay the same?--

from SunStar Davao

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines