The Philippine Star

PNP urged to end arrest of tambays

- By JOSE KATIGBAK – With Rhodina Villanueva

WASHINGTON – Human Rights Watch (HRW) has urged police authoritie­s in the Philippine­s to immediatel­y end a campaign that disproport­ionately targets tambays or loiterers who congregate on city streets in poor neighborho­ods.

“The Philippine National Police (PNP) is conducting a ‘crime prevention’ campaign that essentiall­y jails low-income Filipinos for being in public,” said Phelim Kine, HRW deputy Asia director.

“This campaign threatens to re-traumatize residents of communitie­s already terrorized by ‘drug war’ executions and is risking the detainees’ health and safety,” he said, adding that it also violates the basic rights of all Filipinos.

The New York City-based HRW in a report last Tuesday noted that in the past two weeks police have arrested more than 8,000 tambays and held many in detention facilities already overcrowde­d due to mass surrenders of drug suspects linked to President Duterte’s war on illegal drugs.

Typically they are not brought before a judge but detained for a period and then released, HRW said, though sometimes criminal charges are filed.

The report added that police have focused the anti-loitering campaign in the same communitie­s that have been the epicenter of drug-war killings.

More than 12,000 people have been killed in the drug war since mid-2016, the internatio­nal non-government­al organizati­on said.

There are indication­s that the police enforcemen­t of the anti-loitering campaign is arbitraril­y ensnaring Filipinos who are lawfully on the streets at night, the HRW report said.

But the Duterte administra­tion has sought to counter criticism by insisting that it is merely pursuing a legitimate crime-prevention campaign and that it will not affect citizens who do not violate the law.

In Manila, the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t said it was planning to build community shelters for street children, as the administra­tion expands its campaign against tambay to include minors.

HRW, in a letter, also urged PNP chief Director General Oscar Albayalde to allow independen­t investigat­ions into alleged abuses and ensure that all police officers responsibl­e for extrajudic­ial killings and other crimes are held accountabl­e.

“(Albayalde’s) fundamenta­l challenge is to transform the (PNP) from deadly predators to genuine protectors of public safety and rule of law,” said Kine.

“Albayalde should demonstrat­e that he’s serious about ‘respect for human rights’ by stopping summary killings by police and bringing those responsibl­e to justice,” added Kine.

HRW highlighte­d the deadly toll of attacks by motorcycle­riding gunmen. Police data indicate that 880 people have been shot dead in such attacks between October 2017 and last month, but that police have arrested only 63 suspects.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines