Sun.Star Cebu

‘We respect SolGen’s hold on death docs’

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Malacañang yesterday Saturday said it respects Solicitor General (SolGen) Jose Calida’s decision not to submit to Supreme Court a copy of pertinent documents on the deaths of some 3,806 individual­s in the legitimate police anti-drug operations.

Presidenti­al Spokespers­on Harry Roque Jr. said the executive department defers to Office of Solicitor General on the issue of not complying with the high court’s order to furnish it a report on the drug-related deaths.

“The Solicitor General is the statutory council of the republic. We respect decision of the SolGen in this regard, as in fact, we respect the SolGen’s position on legal matters that it is defending the republic, pending in any courts,” Roque told reporters in Cebu City.

“So we defer to the decision of the Solicitor General, our counsel,” he added.

The Supreme Court on Dec. 5, 2017 directed the government to release documents that contain relevant informatio­n concerning the Philippine National Police’s (PNP) crackdown on illegal drugs.

The high court asked the executive branch, through its legal counsel Calida, to provide details, specifical­ly about the identities of slain individual­s, conduct of anti-narcotics operations, and names of responding police officers, among others.

Calida, in a motion for reconsider­ation dated Dec. 18, has refused to comply with the Supreme Court’s order, saying that the Duterte administra­tion cannot disclose “sensitive informatio­n that have national security implicatio­ns.”

“It could spell the success or failure of follow-up operations of polie and other law enforcemen­t bodies, aside from endangerin­g the lives of those on the list as well as those already in custody,” he said in his motion submitted to Supreme Court on Thursday, Jan. 12.

“Moreover, their submission would not only compromise ongoing police anti-drug operations but likewise put at risk the lives of informants who provide such informatio­n,” he added.

President Rodrigo Duterte’s order to the PNP to intensify campaign against illegal drugs has earned public scrutiny following the deaths of thousands of suspected drug offenders in the country.

The PNP’s drug war has sparked outrage after Caloocan policemen gunned down two minors, 17-year-old Kian Lloyd delos Santos and 19-year-old Carl Angelo Arnaiz, in a separate drug raids conducted in August 2017.

This has prompted Duterte to strip the policemen of its role in the anti- drug operations and delegate the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency ( PDEA) as the lead agency to handle the drug menace.

But in December last year, the President once again allowed the PNP to have an “active participat­ion” in bloody war on illicit drugs trade.

On Friday, Jan. 13, PNP chief Director Ronald dela Rosa vowed to have a “bloodless” drug war as the policemen relaunch its controvers­ial anti-drug campaign this month. /

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