Trigger-Happy Police—Result of Duterte’s Murderous “Drug War,” So-Called

TRIGGER-HAPPY POLICE—RESULT OF DUTERTE’S MURDEROUS “DRUG WAR,”
SO-CALLED

SOLDIERS AS ‘NANLABAN’ VICTIMS
By: Joel Ruiz Butuyan - @inquirerdotnet
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 04:02 AM July 06, 2020

It’s the most horrible kind of death that can happen to a soldier — to die in the hands of the government you have sworn to protect with your life. Whether the death happens intentionally, through negligence, or by mistake, it is a most painful act of betrayal.

On June 29, four military intelligence officers in civilian clothes were on board a Mitsubishi Montero in Jolo, Sulu. They were Maj. Marvin Indammog, 39, of Class 2006 of the Philippine Military Academy (PMA), Capt. Irwin Managuelod, 33, of PMA Class 2009, Sgt. Jaime Velasco, 38, and Cpl. Abdal Asula, 33.

The four soldiers were tracking Abu Sayyaf members in the area, the military would later reveal. The soldiers were flagged down at a police checkpoint, so they identified themselves as military men. The policemen instructed the four to drive to the nearby police station to verify their identities. As to what happened next, the police and military have completely different versions.

The policemen claim that after the four passed the checkpoint, they sped off, triggering a car chase, and when the soldiers were cornered, they pointed their weapons at the police, forcing the latter to shoot the soldiers in self-defense. The Philippine National Police immediately classified the incident as a “misencounter,” intimating that there was shooting from both sides.

The military’s version is that after the checkpoint, the four soldiers drove their vehicle to the nearby police station to comply with the identification directive. They parked 50 meters from the police station. The most senior among them, Major Indammog, got off the vehicle to speak to the cops, holding his empty hands up in a gesture of peace, but the police shot him. Upon hearing the gunshots, Sergeant Velasco and Corporal Asula alighted from the car, but they too were shot. Even Captain Managuelod was shot while he was inside the car working on his laptop. The Armed Forces of the Philippines branded the incident as a brazen act of murder.

The National Bureau of Investigation has been tasked to investigate, but even before it completes its probe and renders its report, it has become clear this early that there was an attempt by policemen to justify the death of the soldiers as a case of “nanlaban.” In other words, the deaths of the soldiers were no different from the deaths of thousands of civilians in the hands of policemen in the drug war: All of them attempted to fight the police, so the policemen were forced to kill them.

But then, police authorities changed their story. It was not a “misencounter” after all, but a “shooting” incident. The soldiers did not fire a single shot at the police. The firing came only from the policemen, obviously because only the soldiers suffered bullet wounds.

The attempt of the policemen to revise their story—after an independent investigation was called—points to a very disturbing revelation. We have here an incident proving that the “nanlaban” excuse has become deeply ingrained in police culture, and that it’s being used outside of the drug war. Policemen hastily justify every death that occurs in their hands as a case of “nanlaban.” They’ve become quick on the trigger because they’re self-assured that by merely chanting the “nanlaban” mantra, a magic shield of immunity emerges to protect them from liability. The excuse has been swallowed hook, line, and sinker in the more than 5,000 deaths resulting from police drug war operations.

As a result, something has gone awfully wrong in the psyche of many policemen. The PNP top brass must acknowledge and correct this deeply disturbing development, if they have the interest of the police force at heart. The country and the Filipino people face the horrifying menace of a police force with a damaged culture that turns cops into outright criminals. To make matters worse, the President has signed the anti-terrorism law at a time when the very people who will enforce it, policemen, are themselves accused of acts of terrorism.

The deaths of our four soldiers serve as a dire warning to the military and the government that the chickens have come home to roost.



‘IT WAS MURDER’
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:08 AM July 03, 2020


The murder of the 4 Army men by the PNP yesterday is the latest price we have to pay for tolerating the EJKs the past 4 years. Make no mistake, duterte’s “nanlaban” doctrine is the poison that destroyed the PNP as an institution.

Sonny Trillanes IV, @TrillanesSonny
Philippine Daily Inquirer (July 1, 2020)

The point is so obvious that it is painful to make it plain—one of the fundamental objectives of the protections put in place by civil rights and the rule of law is to check the abuse of deadly police power. Duterte’s murderous “Drug War,” so-called, has further loosened the screws on the lid, longtime askew and rattling.

Comments

  1. Photo of the coffins of the four Army victims of the PNP is posted according to principles of fair use. The blog post deals directly with the ‘nanlaban’ incident that took place on June 29, 2020.

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete
  2. Pope’s Monthly Prayer Intentions
    Apostleship of Prayer
    April 2021

    Fundamental rights

    We pray for those who risk their lives while fighting for fundamental rights under dictatorships, authoritarian regimes and even in democracies in crisis.

    Link: http://popesprayerusa.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/INTENZIONI-DEL-PAPA-2021-ENG-DEF.pdf

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete
  3. COURT ORDERS ARREST OF EX-JOLO COPS WHO KILLED ARMY OPERATIVES
    By Rambo Talabong
    Rappler.com
    January 15, 2021
    Manila, Philippines

    The Jolo Regional Trial Court (RTC) has ordered the arrest of 9 former policemen involved in the killing of 4 Army intel operatives in Sulu, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced on Friday, January 15.

    Honey Delgado, spokesperson of the Office of the Prosecutor General, said the arrest warrants were issued on Thursday, January 14.

    The court is set to hear the prosecution’s motion requesting a hold departure order, which would prevent the cops from leaving the country.

    Why does this matter?

    Ideally, the arrest warrants would lead to the detention of the 9 former policemen who have been charged with murder, a non-bailable offense.

    Concerns about the former cops' whereabouts were floated after the Philippine National Police (PNP) released them from its custody, following their dismissal from the police service.

    Link: https://www.rappler.com/nation/court-orders-arrest-jolo-cops-who-killed-philippine-army-operatives

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete
  4. A BLOW FOR JUSTICE
    Philippine Daily Inquirer / 04:07 AM October 27, 2020

    It hardly made primetime news, but in a ringing blow for justice, a judge in Dumaguete City recently dismissed drug cases against five suspects after finding out that agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) had fabricated the charges.

    The fake drug buy-bust, which was busted thanks to the existence of CCTV cameras, stemmed from drug charges filed against one Richard Torres and four others, whom the PDEA claimed were arrested in Torres’ house while holding a pot session and selling a sachet of shabu to an undercover agent on June 28.

    But the suspects presented footage from CCTV cameras operated by the city government which showed that the suspects were actually picked up in five different locations around the city and brought to Torres’ house.

    The PDEA agents’ sense of impunity was such that they even used the agency’s official vehicle for their bogus operation.

    …Judge Amelia Lourdes Mendoza of Negros Oriental Regional Trial Court Branch 34 ruled that the five accused were illegally arrested, and that evidence against them was inadmissible.

    The judge also initiated contempt charges against PDEA agents Nelson Muchuelas, May Ann Carmelo, Jose Anthony Juanites, Cheryl Mae Villaver, and Realyn Pinpin “for misleading the court, for making untruthful statements in their affidavits, and for directly impeding and degrading the administration of justice.’’

    And to further underline the gravity of the PDEA agents’ offense, the judge sent a copy of her ruling to the Dumaguete prosecutor’s office and the Department of Justice, to prod them to look into the criminal liability of these officers of the law and to determine the administrative liability of PDEA headed by its director general Wilkins Villanueva.

    Judge Mendoza’s ruling is most laudable and timely, with police transgressions in the name of the Duterte administration’s war on drugs seemingly going on unabated. In February this year, a similar fake drug raid was carried out by Bulacan police, with more horrific results. The cops rounded up six people who were passing by near the house of a drug suspect. They were blindfolded, hog-tied, and detained in a secret room at the San Jose del Monte police office. Later, the six were brought to different places and summarily killed. The official story? “Nanlaban.”

    The National Bureau of Investigation itself filed cases of murder, kidnapping, and planting of guns and drugs against the 11 Bulacan cops involved in the heinous operation, including chief Police Maj. Leo Commendador dela Rosa.

    Such police impunity continues…when it comes to the police, the President is reflexively protective, poised at every turn to assure the chief executioners of his pet program that he has their back. No wonder many cops have ended up abusing their power and position in the most appalling ways.

    To be continued

    ReplyDelete
  5. A BLOW FOR JUSTICE
    Philippine Daily Inquirer / 04:07 AM October 27, 2020

    Continued

    …“Nothing short than constant vigilance on the part of the courts is required to prevent our slippery slope towards contempt for the law and anarchy. The courts must step in and take the cudgels for individual liberties, and in no other situation is this duty more critical and necessary than when the supposed protectors of law and order become the perpetrators themselves.’’

    Read more: https://opinion.inquirer.net/134790/a-blow-for-justice#ixzz72k51at1Y

    Planting evidence with impunity is another one of the corrupting influences of the president on the Philippine National Police:

    DUTERTE: ‘WE PLANTED EVIDENCE… (AND) THE INTRIGUES’
    By: John Nery - @jnery_newsstand
    INQUIRER.net / 09:01 AM August 21, 2016

    …“I’ve learned a lot during my prosecution days,” the President said. “We planted evidence. We arrested persons but we released them. But [the President then switches to an example] telling him that it was this person who squealed on him and then when he goes out but killing we would say it was this fellow who really did it, who did you in.”

    He explained the reason for the tactic: “We first planted the intrigues, so that we would know where they were or where they came from.”

    Read more: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/808126/duterte-we-planted-evidence-we-first-planted-the-intrigues#ixzz72k7G1CXA

    SPECIAL REPORT: POLICE DESCRIBE KILL REWARDS, STAGED CRIME SCENES IN DUTERTE’S DRUG WAR
    By Manuel Mogato, Clare Baldwin
    Reuters April 18, 2017 8:22

    MANILA (Reuters) - The Philippine police have received cash payments for executing drug suspects, planted evidence at crime scenes and carried out most of the killings they have long blamed on vigilantes, said two senior officers who are critical of President Rodrigo Duterte’s “war on drugs.”

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-philippines-duterte-police-specialrep-idUSKBN17K1F4

    DUTERTE TO COPS: KILL CRIMINALS IF YOU HAVE TO, I’LL PROTECT YOU
    Philippine Daily Inquirer / 07:36 AM January 18, 2018

    Read more: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/961396/duterte-to-cops-kill-criminals-if-you-have-to-ill-protect-you#ixzz72k7wBP00

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete

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