Sun.Star Cebu

Cops in Espinosa slay returning to work

- TWITTER: @sunstarceb­u FACEBOOK: /cebusunsta­r Phelim Kine, Deputy Director, Asia Division, Human Rights Watch

The police officers facing homicide charges in the 2016 killing of Albuera Mayor Rolando Espinosa Sr. are heading back to work. Philippine National Police (PNP) Director-General, Ronald dela Rosa, announced on Wednesday that the 18 police officers, who were released on bail last month, “can be utilized again by the PNP for whatever assignment.”

The reinstatem­ent comes even though twin inquiries by the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) and the Philippine Senate concluded the officers had committed “premeditat­ed murder” when they shot Espinosa to death in a Leyte jail cell on Nov. 5, 2016.

Espinosa had surrendere­d to the police following public accusation­s by President Rodrigo Duterte that he was a drug trafficker. Both probes rejected the officers’ assertion that Espinosa died in a firefight in his cell after brandishin­g a concealed pistol.

The officers’ reinstatem­ent isn’t surprising. In April 2017, Duterte vowed that if a court convicted the officers for Espinosa’s death, he would respond by pardoning, reinstatin­g, and promoting them.

“They can call me and say they have been convicted, and I’ll tell the judge to pardon them all,” Duterte said at the time.

Duterte has alleged that Espinosa was a notorious drug trafficker who had “destroyed half of the Visayas” region, without providing any corroborat­ing evidence.

The kid- gloves handling of the officers is emblematic of the wider impunity enjoyed by those responsibl­e for the killing of more than 7,000 people in Duterte’s murderous “war on drugs.”

Duterte has glorified those thousands of deaths as proof of the “success” of an anti-drug campaign that has disproport­ionately targeted urban slum dwellers. Human Rights Watch field research found that government claims that the deaths of suspected drug users and dealers were lawful are blatant falsehoods.

Interviews with witnesses and victims’ relatives and analysis of police records show a pattern of unlawful police conduct designed to paint a veneer of legality over extrajudic­ial executions that may amount to crimes against humanity.

While the Philippine National Police have publicly sought to distinguis­h between suspects killed while resisting arrest and killings by “unknown gunmen” or “vigilantes,” Human Rights Watch found no such distinctio­n.

In several cases, the police dismissed allegation­s of involvemen­t when only hours before the suspects had been in police custody. Such cases call into question government assertions that most killings were carried out by vigilantes or rival drug gangs.

The drug-war deaths urgently demand accountabi­lity through a United Nations-led internatio­nal investigat­ion. Until that occurs, police and their agents implicated in those killings will continue to get away with murder.--

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