The Philippine Star

PNP to return to drug war if problem worsens

- With Edu Punay

DAVAO CITY – It may not be long before the Philippine National Police (PNP) takes back the lead role in the war against illegal drugs, President Duterte has said.

“The drug problem, if it becomes worse again, the police have to enter the picture,” Duterte said during the launching of the farmer’s market of the Department of Agricultur­e in Davao City last Saturday.

Duterte said he is set to review the anti-illegal drugs operation a month after tasking the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) to lead the war against drugs.

Facing stiff opposition and outcry over the thousands killed in the drug war, Duterte pulled out the PNP and assigned the PDEA to take over the campaign.

Duterte was forced to appoint the PDEA to take the lead in the drug war following street protests triggered by the murder of two teenagers allegedly

by Caloocan City police.

Duterte in January made a similar move apparently sidelining the PNP, describing the police force then as “corrupt to the core” and giving PDEA the lead role in the drug war.

This was in response to revelation­s officers kidnapped a South Korean businessma­n under the guise of a drug raid, then murdered him inside the PNP headquarte­rs in Camp Crame.

However Duterte quickly reinstated the PNP without making any major reforms. Police then announced they were back fighting the drug war with a campaign named: “Double Barrel Reloaded.”

The President said even if he keeps his hands off PDEA operations against those involved in the illegal drug industry, he said will have to review the entire setup one of these days.

Duterte said he doesn’t care about human rights issues, stressing the fight against illegal drugs is a campaign against organized crime.

“I’m sorry. I want it eradicated if possible. I don’t care because we are fighting an organized crime,” he said.

Duterte said the act of one is the act of all in illegal drugs.

“The liability of one is the same liability for all. That is the problem… a lot of us never really understood the problem about drugs. Drug is a merchandis­e for the poor. They would ask ‘why is it Duterte is targeting the poor?’ Because the rich do not use shabu because they know it is made up of chemical component which will drive them to insanity,” Duterte said.

“Unlike cannabis, heroin, cocaine – it’s a poppy. It’s organic. It will not really destroy the brain just like that overnight. But this shabu is a chemical mixed very deadly. It shrinks the brain,” he said.

Duterte warned those hooked on shabu should bid their lives goodbye.

“So you create insane people and new slaves. You turn citizens into slavery to ache for a chemical everyday. If you do not have the money, you have to steal. If you do not have the money, you have to kill,” he said.

Duterte lamented how the human rights advocates continued to ignore the victims of rape and abuse by drug addicts.

Duterte has said he would be “happy to slaughter” three million drug addicts, and repeatedly vowed that police would not go to jail for killing in his drug war.

Rights groups have warned Duterte may be orchestrat­ing a crime against humanity.

Relatives of people killed by police filed a case in the Supreme Court calling for the drug war to be declared illegal, likening events in the Philippine­s to the holocaust in Nazi Germany.

The drug campaign has also led to wider violence in which thousands of people have been murdered in unexplaine­d circumstan­ces.

Justified

The PNP has defended before the Supreme Court its controvers­ial war on drugs highlighte­d by the thousands of drug suspects killed.

Through Solicitor General Jose Calida, PNP chief Director General Ronald de la Rosa and other police officials sought the dismissal of two petitions filed last month by human rights groups Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG) and Center for Internatio­nal Law (CenterLaw) assailing the PNP’s “Oplan Double Barrel.”

In a 63-page comment filed last Friday, Calida argued the assailed policy does not violate the constituti­onal rights to life, to due process of law, to be presumed innocent and to a fair trial – contrary to the allegation of petitioner­s.

Calida denied Oplan Double Barrel mandates the killings of drug suspects. He said the petitions against it were merely based on “speculatio­ns, unfounded informatio­n, and unsubstant­iated arguments.”

Calida urged the Court not to give due course to what he called “patently baseless petitions,” that he said “would only serve to countenanc­e harassment suits and ‘fishing expedition­s’ that distract law enforcemen­t agencies from their principal duties or, worse, dampen their zeal in the pursuit of criminal elements.”

“Ultimately, the ones who will benefit from the grant (of) these petitions will be those who are engaged in the illegal drug trade. This should not be countenanc­ed by this honorable court,” Calida warned.

Calida lamented the “unfortunat­e” loss of lives from police operations, but stressed that such killings “do not automatica­lly render the antidrug operation conducted by the respondent­s unlawful.”

He argued the petitions against war on drugs were filed “under the guise of human rights protection.”

Calida also argued the petitioner­s are not entitled to writ of amparo, which provides protection to any person whose rights to life, liberty or security is violated or threatened.

He said the petitioner­s failed to establish substantia­l evidence of an actual violation of or threat to petitioner­s’ rights to life, liberty and security that would entitle them to the grant of the interim reliefs prayed for.

The government counsel also stressed that Oplan Double Barrel under Memorandum Circular No. 16-2016 should be presumed legal as it was issued within the authority of the PNP.–

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