The Manila Times

What possessed the PNP men at the US Embassy?

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WHATEVER demonic spirit possessed those policemen?

Below is a comment by Human Rights Watch’s Carlos H. Conde about the horribly evil deeds of the PNP people involved in the unnecessar­ily brutal dispersal of demonstrat­ors in front of the US Embassy last Wednesday. We absolutely agree with Mr. Conde, which is why we have adopted his article titled “Lack of Accountabi­lity Fuels Impunity,” lightly edited, for this editorial.

*** The Philippine National Police has suspended nine officers involved in the violent dispersal of protesters – some of whom were wielding batons and throwing stones – demonstrat­ing in support of President Rodrigo Duterte’s “independen­t foreign policy” in front of the United States Embassy in Manila on Wednesday. They include the driver of a police vehicle who, as send on video and still images, drove through the center of the crowd, injuring at least 10 protesters, including women and elderly people. The police chief, Director General Ronald de la Rosa, pledged to “swiftly and decisively” investigat­e the conduct of those officers. During the ensuing melee, pushing, shoving, and rock throwing by angry protesters injured at least 30 police officers. The police also arrested 26 protesters.

The images from outside the US Embassy on Wednesday were painful reminders of past police brutality, including the “Mendiola Massacre” in 1987, and the deadly dispersal of protesters in Kidapawan City in April 2016. A Human Rights Watch investigat­ion in Kidapawan found that police used unnecessar­y lethal force when they fired into a crowd of protesters, killing two and injuring dozens of others.

The Philippine National Police have long been responsibl­e for serious human rights violations with officers frequently implicated in the excessive use of force and torture of criminal suspects. The police are spearheadi­ng President Duterte’s homicidal “war on drugs,” killing an estimated 1,645 suspected drug users and dealers between July 1 and October 15. That dwarfs the 68 killings of suspects police recorded during “antidrug operations” between January 1 and June 15. Police have attributed the killings to suspects who “resisted arrest and shot at police officers” but dela Rosa has defied calls for an impartial investigat­ion into those deaths.

De la Rosa said that images of the police violence on Wednesday “saddened and angered me. I saw people that got hurt. I really don’t want any Filipino getting hurt.” He can take meaningful measures to help prevent unlawful injuries or deaths by police by initiating thorough and impartial investigat­ions of all such incidents and ensuring that officers implicated in such abuses face prosecutio­n. Failure to do so will only guarantee that the culture of impunity for unlawful police violence continues.

The PNP chief can take meaningful measures to help prevent unlawful injuries or deaths by police by initiating thorough and impartial investigat­ions of all such incidents and ensuring that officers implicated in such abuses face prosecutio­n. Failure to do so will only guarantee that the culture of impunity for unlawful police violence continues.

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