BAD GOVERNANCE UNDER THE DUTERTE ADMINISTRATION
A
HORRIFYING POLICE QUOTA SYSTEM
By:
Joel Ruiz Butuyan - @inquirerdotnet
Philippine
Daily Inquirer / 04:07 AM March 09, 2020
Instead
of cleansing the police force of scalawags, the government’s campaign against crime has been forcing decent and honorable policemen to become rogue cops.
This is happening because of a quota
system that requires
policemen to make a minimum number of
arrests every week. If they fail to make the quota, they’re belittled as
“mahina” (wimp), relieved from their positions, and reassigned to inferior
posts.
Former
Philippine national police chief Gen. Oscar Albayalde denied the existence of a
“quota,” but he admitted that cops are constantly “pressured” to make
“accomplishments” in the government’s antidrug campaign. Because of this pressure, plus the consequences to their careers, cops are practically driven to meet a quota. Philippine Drug Enforcement
Agency chief Aaron Aquino was more forthright when he admitted in 2017 that he
pressures his regional directors to meet a monthly quota of “30 to 40” antidrug
operations.
Because of the terror generated by
President Duterte’s bloody antidrug
campaign, however, criminals have
scampered away, have gone on hibernation, or have made their continuing
criminal operations more difficult to detect. As a result, it has become
tougher for policemen to make valid arrests. Add to this the fact that many
cops do not have the patience to meticulously build up valid evidence against
suspects. The catastrophic result is a wholesale massacre of the Bill of Rights of mere suspects, and worse, the arrest of innocent civilians on fabricated
criminal charges, because policemen need to show “accomplishments.”
Word on the ground is that many ordinary policemen are unhappy, even
angry, that they’re misused by their superiors to obtain the required
statistics of “accomplishments,” which the latter need to retain their posts or
to get promoted.
The
situation has even gotten worse now because the need to fulfill a quota of
accomplishments has been expanded beyond drug cases, but also to illegal
gambling, illegal possession of firearms, possession of undocumented forest
products, among others. When policemen find nothing illegal, they still arrest the suspects by planting
evidence.
…Because
of this warped system, rogue cops are
promoted while honest ones are relieved
and punished. No wonder we have someone like Albayalde who climbed all the
way to the top, only to be exposed as a rogue cop.
…Heartbreakingly,
the lives of many innocent individuals are ruined. What a hideous mess we are
in when the lives of ordinary Filipinos are reduced to being mere fodder for
the “accomplishment” needs of policemen.
Retired
military Gen. Jovito Palparan looked invincible while he was in power, even
though he was called “The Butcher” because of brutal atrocities attributed to
him. He was even commended by then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo during a
State of the Nation Address, was elected as congressman, and even ran for
senator. He now languishes in jail after his conviction for the crimes of
kidnapping and illegal detention that he committed during his reign of terror.
Palparan’s
story forewarns all policemen that there will be a day of reckoning.
Comments
to fleamarketofideas@gmail.com
Implementing a quota
system for arresting citizens destroys the rule of law—the rule of law is substituted by the rule of quota. Weak
or absent rule of law, means bad governance.
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