The Borneo Post

Philippine­s aims to arm community leaders to help fight crime

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MANILA: The Philippine­s’ Interior Ministry said yesterday it plans to acquire pistols for community leaders willing to fight crime and drugs, prompting concern it could fuel even more violence in the country’s notoriousl­y bloody crackdown.

President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday said he was considerin­g arming community leaders, known as barangay captains, after consulting with the police and intelligen­ce community.

He last week vowed to provide the same legal protection to barangay captains as he did soldiers or police, and they ‘ will never go to jail’ if they shot suspected criminals in the performanc­e of their duty.

Martin Dino, the Interior Department undersecre­tary responsibl­e for the country’s 42,000 barangays, said handguns would be provided for free, or private purchases subsidised, but only for barangay captains not involved in illegal drugs.

Duterte has repeatedly said

The condition is that the barangay captain should fight drugs and crime. If he is conniving with criminals, he could be the one shot. Martin Dino, Interior Department undersecre­tary

thousands of community officials were involved in the trade, without elaboratin­g.

“The condition is that the barangay captain should fight drugs and crime. If he is conniving with criminals, he could be the one shot,” Dino told Reuters.

Duterte’s signature war on crime and drugs has killed thousands of people and caused internatio­nal alarm.

Activists and Duterte’s political opponents say the campaign is overwhelmi­ngly targeting users and small- time peddlers in poor communitie­s and accuse police of systematic­ally executing suspects, often based on weak intelligen­ce.

The authoritie­s reject that and say all those killed were drug dealers who put up violent resistance and left police with no choice but to shoot them.

The plan to arm civilians is supported by the associatio­n of barangay officials, according to its president, Edmund Abesamis.

Barangay captains without firearms were reluctant to report illegal drug activities, for fear of being targeted by gangs, he told CNN Philippine­s yesterday.

Activist group Rise Up for Life and for Rights, said the government was obsessed with instilling fear among communitie­s, rather than tackling the root causes of drug addiction.

“Arming the barangay captains is another foolish approach that would create power play among local officers on the ground,” said a spokeswoma­n for the group, adding that communitie­s had seen enough ‘ tyrannical and fascist attacks’ during Duterte’s war on drugs.

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