Philippine Daily Inquirer

Robredo: ‘Tambay’ drive antipoor

Vice President calls on community leaders, lawyers to ensure that people’s rights are respected

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ —WITH A REPORT FROM TINA G. SANTOS

Vice President Leni Robredo on Sunday criticized the administra­tion’s anti-“tambay” campaign for being “antipoor,” adding that the President’s flipfloppi­ng statements were adding to the confusion.

“It’s like the law enforcemen­t officials have been given the license to abuse,” Robredo said in her Sunday radio show, BISErbisyo­ng LENI, on dzXL.

“We have already seen the danger [ posed by unchecked law enforcemen­t operations] at the height of the antidrug war. We are repeating that again,” she added.

On June 13, Mr. Duterte warned tambays or loiterers to stay home or he would have them thrown into Pasig River.

Original directive

“My directive is, if you’re just standing by [in the streets], tell them, ‘Go home. If you don’t go home, I’ll bring you to the office in Pasig,” he said. “I’ll take care of it. Tie their hands to- gether and I’ll throw them in [the river].”

The police took his words as a directive to arrest loiterers, with nearly 7,300 people rounded up since June 13. Last Friday, however, the President appeared to double down on his order, telling an audience in Davao City he never directed the police to catch tambays.

“I never said, ‘arrested.’ But if you are drinking in the alley, in the squatters’ area and making a living room out of the road there, you’ll really get nabbed,” he said.

“Maybe it became controvers­ial because no less than the President said it—that loiterers should be arrested,” Philippine National Police Director General Oscar Albayalde commented when sought for a reaction.

But Albayalde said the crackdown would continue, particular­ly against those caught violating local ordinances such as smoking or going around shirtless in public.

Drive hit by controvers­y

The anti-“tambay” campaign became controvers­ial after Genesis Argoncillo, who was arrested on June 15 while buying cell phone load from a store, died while in detention. As the Quezon City police issued conflictin­g statements on his cause of death, the Crime Laboratory autopsy showed he died due to blunt force trauma and his manner of death was homicide.

Robredo, a former public lawyer, said community leaders and lawyers should help ensure that human rights—especially those of the poor—were respected.

“We are calling on [everyone] to know what to do if there’s a danger that we will become victims,” she said. “We are asking [the lawyers] to group together and help each other combat these [dangers].”

Her political party echoed her sentiments. According to Erin Tañada, Liberal Party vice president for external affairs, “We are seeing shades of the antiillega­l [drug] war in this revived campaign against tambays who are mostly poor.”

“We question the motivation for this campaign. Is it to distract us from the real issues that the government has not addressed: hunger and poverty, lack of jobs and rising prices, [and] corruption in high places?” Tañada said.

For Manila Auxiliary Bishop Broderick Pabillo, the Philippine National Police’s anti“tambay” drive was antipoor and prone to police abuse.

Not a solution to criminalit­y

“It will not solve criminalit­y because it does not address the deep causes of criminalit­y which are poverty and joblessnes­s,” he said, adding: “It will just cause fear among the poorer communitie­s.”

Asked if he supported the call for its suspension, Pabillo said the government should instead account first for the more than 23,000 cases of “deaths under investigat­ion.”

“First things first,” he said.

 ?? —OVP PHOTO ?? Leni Robredo warns of the possibilit­y of police oversteppi­ng their authority.
—OVP PHOTO Leni Robredo warns of the possibilit­y of police oversteppi­ng their authority.

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