The Borneo Post

Philippine policemen extort South Korean golfers — Superior

-

MANILA: Philippine policemen robbed and extorted money from three South Korean golfers as part of a suspected larger racket targeting tourists from the neighbouri­ng nation, a senior officer said yesterday.

The announceme­nt fuelled fears of police abuse under the cover of President Rodrigo Duterte’s deadly war on crime, after authoritie­s announced last week policemen murdered a South Korean businessma­n then extorted money from his wife.

“They came to the Philippine­s just to play golf but they went through a traumatic experience,” Chief Superinten­dent Aaron Aquino, the regional police head, told AFP.

He said the three South Koreans were staying in an upscale gated community in Angeles City, about two hours’ drive north of Manila, when policemen barged into their house under the pretext of carrying out an illegal gambling raid on Dec 30.

They robbed the Koreans of their computers, jewellery, golf clubs, golf shoes and 10,000 pesos ( US$ 200), according to Aquino.

He said the three South Koreans were then held at a police station for about eight hours until a friend paid 300,000 pesos for their freedom.

The three reported the incident to the South Korean embassy, which informed the national police, Aquino said.

This led to an investigat­ion that found seven policemen were involved, according to Aquino, who said they all faced the sack.

However he said the offending officers would not face criminal charges because that would require the South Koreans, who had fled, to return to the Philippine­s.

“They don’t want to come back. They are terrified,” he said.

The incident took place in the same gated subdivisio­n where policemen abducted a South Korean businessma­n in October, Aquino said.

The businessma­n, abducted in a fake anti- drug operation, was strangled inside the national police headquarte­rs in Manila but his wife, thinking he was alive, later paid about US$100,000 in ransom, authoritie­s said last week.

Aquino said the two incidents were not related but he suspected rogue policemen had targeted many South Koreans in the Angeles area.

“I suspect there are many (such incidents) but most of the crimes committed against the South Koreans are not being reported. They are all afraid,” he said.

The murder of the businessme­n has shocked and angered the South Korean government, with Foreign Minister Yun Byung-Se demanding those behind the crime be brought to justice.

The police have come under intense scrutiny as the frontline troops in Duterte’s efforts to eradicate illegal drugs in society, with human rights groups accusing them of mass extrajudic­ial killings. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia