Philippine Daily Inquirer

PDEA: Pols on narcolist down to 87

- By Jaymee T. Gamil @JGamilINQ —WITH REPORTS FROM JULIA ORNEDO AND ANDREAALCA­RAZ INQ

The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency list of “narcopolit­icians” has been trimmed to 87 from 96 by the killing last week of a mayor and the removal from the roll of people who have left public office or died, the PDEA said on Wednesday.

Mayor Antonio Halili of Tanauan City, Batangas province, was killed by a sniper on July 2. He was on the narcolist, according to PDEA Director General Aaron Aquino.

Mayor Ferdinand Bote of General Tinio, Nueva Ecija province, and Vice Mayor Alexander Lubigan of Trece Martires, Cavite province, were also slain in brazen assaults last week, but Aquino said they were not on the narcolist.

Nine former politician­s were removed from the list after they left public office or were killed or died “natural deaths,” Aquino said.

The list includes 67 mayors and seven congressme­n.

Passing blame on gov’t

Aquino told a news briefing that the killings of Bote and Lubigan were likely carried out by people “taking advantage” of the slaying of Halili to pass the blame on the government.

President Duterte has faced criticism from local and internatio­nal human rights groups for his take-no-prisoners war on drugs.

Thousands of small-time drug users and pushers have been killed by police and unknown assailants since he launched the crackdown after taking office in 2016.

Later that year, Mr. Duterte disclosed a list of politician­s allegedly involved in the illegal drug trade. Two mayors on that list had been killed in police raids and one had fled the country.

Last week’s killings drove the country’s mayors and vice mayors to seek an audience with Mr. Duterte, but no meeting had been set with the leader who promised to kill tens of thousands of criminals and dump their bodies in Manila Bay to fatten the fish.

Asked whether the narcopolit­icians were being targeted, Aquino replied: “I don’t think so. Otherwise, if that were the case, then a lot [more people] would already be dead.”

Not state-sponsored killings

“These assassins who have been planning to kill these [local executives], they’re doing it right now because it will project as if it’s a state-sponsored killing… We will get blamed when, in fact, they’re just taking advantage of the situation to do it,” he said.

“Who have been killed who was on the narcolist? It’s only Halili. The other two—Bote and Lubigan—what’s surfacing is that they were politicall­y motivated killings,” he said.

Police earlier said that investigat­ors were looking at politics as a possible motive for the attack on Lubigan, as the vice mayor told people close to him the day before he was killed that he planned to run for mayor in next year’s midterm elections.

Investigat­ors said business could be a motive for the killing on Bote, although they were not ruling out politics in the attack on the mayor.

Despite protest from Halili’s family, Aquino maintained that the PDEA based its findings on “a four-agency task force validating the real [situation] on the ground.”

The agencies, he said, are the PDEA, Philippine National Police, Armed Forces of the Philippine­s and National Intelligen­ce Coordinati­ng Agency.

Informatio­n on Halili

“All have informatio­n on Mayor Halili,” he said.

“[Halili was] connected with a drug group. We are investigat­ing it deeper, although we already have identities of that drug group. And there are some linkages also to some politician­s in Central Luzon,” Aquino said.

Of the 87 remaining on the list of narcopolit­icians, Aquino said the PDEA had already “revalidate­d” the involvemen­t in drugs of three—two congressme­n and a mayor.

 ?? —KIMMY BARAOIDAN ?? NOT NARCOPOLIT­ICIAN Supporters join the funeral of Mayor Antonio Halili of Tanauan, Batangas province, on July 8. His family protests the narcopolit­ician tag on Halili, but the PDEA insists it has valid informatio­n on the mayor.
—KIMMY BARAOIDAN NOT NARCOPOLIT­ICIAN Supporters join the funeral of Mayor Antonio Halili of Tanauan, Batangas province, on July 8. His family protests the narcopolit­ician tag on Halili, but the PDEA insists it has valid informatio­n on the mayor.

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