The Philippine Star

Palace backs police claim on ‘Pieta’ drug slay

- – Christina Mendez

Malacañang yesterday supported a statement by the Philippine National Police (PNP) that a drug syndicate was behind the killing of drug suspect Michael Siaron.

President Duterte had said that the drug-related killings were not sanctioned by his administra­tion and blamed the killings on drug syndicates, whom he said resorted to purging their assets.

Siaron was shot dead in the EDSA Taft area on July 23 last year.

A photo showing the body of Siaron cradled by his partner was likened to the Pieta, a 15th-century sculpture by Michaelang­elo.

In a speech in Cagayan de Oro last Friday, Duterte noted how his critics in the opposition as well as those from the left took advantage of the killings.

Irked over attacks by critics, Duterte cried foul anew after human rights groups claimed the state is sanctionin­g the drug-related killings.

“They believed immediatel­y what they read, that there were ten thousand extrajudic­ial killings. They don’t bother to ask and find out the other side of the story,” he said.

“Drug traffickin­g is always an organized crime. It cannot be a singular thing, place and person. It has to be organized, there has to be a conspiracy,” he said.

Drugs cannot be manufactur­ed if the syndicates do not trust their lieutenant­s, Duterte said.

“Illegal drugs has to be manufactur­ed and there has to be lieutenant­s or your trusted men who will distribute it for you to the peddlers,” he said.

When he was sworn in as President, Duterte said it came with a mandate to protect the people.

He said “poor” ones were killed during legitimate police operations because they were actually the target of the illicit drug trade.

Meawnhile, presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella belied allegation­s that Siaron was a victim of a state-sponsored extrajudic­ial killing.

“Authoritie­s have put closure on the death of Michael Siaron, whose photo was compared to the Pieta image, after ballistics examinatio­n from a recovered firearm revealed that he was killed by a member of a syndicate,” Abella said.

“The Siaron case verifies what government has said from the start of the campaign against illegal drugs, that many of these killings were perpetrate­d by those involved in drug operations and drug trafficker­s eliminatin­g each other,” Abella added.

He said the attributio­n of such killings to police operations was both premature and unfair to law abiding enforcemen­t officers, who risk life and limb to stop the proliferat­ion of illegal drugs in our society.

Abella assured the public that the government is on top of the investigat­ion of those killed under mysterious circumstan­ces.

Duterte said he is backing up police and military officials in the drug campaign before he officially directed the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency to take the lead in the campaign.

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