Sun.Star Cebu

The other bullies

- BONG O. WENCESLAO khanwens@gmail.com

The Junior High School bully in the video that went viral on social media has been dismissed by the administra­tion of the Ateneo de Manila University. This means the bully will now have to seek another school that would admit him as a student. I think that is punishment enough and I hope all those who have seen the video will now move on. The “crime” and punishment cycle has been completed.

Supporters of President Duterte have taken exception to efforts by his critics to link the act of bullying at the Ateneo to his administra­tion’s style of governance, which thrives on threats and intimidati­on. I am not prepared to go in that direction considerin­g that I don’t know the bully and the circumstan­ces that caused him to do what he did.

Rather, what this recent episode shows is that given the right circumstan­ce, people hate bullies. The reaction to the viral video was one of condemnati­on, which is rightly so. But I have to qualify that with the phrase “right circumstan­ce” because people tend to be selective on this matter. Diehard Duterte supporters, for example, tend to close their eyes to this administra­tion’s bullying of its critics. Now here’s another case of apparent bullying. Iloilo Rep. Oscar Garin Jr., the husband of former Health secretary Janette Garin, together with his father, Guimbal Mayor Oscar Garin Sr. are currently in hot water for assaulting a police officer. They are being accused of handcuffin­g PO3 Federico Macaya Jr. after he was disarmed by his own superior, Guimbal Police Chief Antonio Monreal, and then of beating him up. Reports say Macaya was left with a cut on his left cheek, a swollen face and a black eye. The younger Garin also supposedly spat at Macaya.

Macaya’s alleged transgress­ion? The Garins accused him of persuading a young man not to file a physical assault complaint against another man in an incident that happened at the town plaza on Dec. 22.

The American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n defines bullying as “a form of aggressive behavior in which someone intentiona­lly and repeatedly causes another person injury or discomfort.” It added: “Bullying can take the form of physical contact, words or more subtle actions. The bullied individual typically has trouble defending him or herself and does nothing to ‘cause’ the bullying.”

Bullying usually refers to the one committed in a school milieu or one involving the youth. But in the case of the Garins, the same assault and imbalance of power exist. Macaya was first disarmed before the Garins handcuffed and assaulted him. And the supposed cause of the bullying was an alleged act not involving the Garins.

What the Garins did was abuse of government­al power, which is different from the act of the Ateneo bully but more reprehensi­ble. Now they are being stripped of that power.

Aside from the charges for direct assault, grave coercion, grave threats, physical injuries, slander by deeds, serious illegal detention and alarm and scandal they are facing, their bodyguards were pulled out and their permit to carry firearms (they own a total of 19 guns) was revoked. Oscar Garin Sr. may also be stripped of his supervisio­n over the Guimbal police force. Mayra.

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