The Philippine Star

Internal cleansing

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This month the Philippine National Police is launching a program to rid the force of undesirabl­e elements. This is supposed to be a continuing program in the PNP, but recent developmen­ts have prompted the police leadership to launch the “Revitalize­d PNP Internal Cleansing Strategy.”

The planned launch is coming on the heels of the announceme­nt by PNP chief Oscar Albayalde that approximat­ely 1,000 cops have been linked to the illegal drug trade. More are suspected of involvemen­t in various types of criminal activities, mostly involving money such as extortion, kidnapping for ransom and paid assassinat­ion.

Admitting that there are bad eggs in one’s own organizati­on is a good start. President Duterte himself has said hundreds of policemen are in his so-called narco list. He has threatened to “neutralize or terminate” the rotten eggs.

Beyond terminatio­n, however, the PNP needs institutio­nal reforms to prevent the entry of rotten elements, and then to catch law enforcers who break the law. Police salaries have been raised, but PNP officials lamented that this apparently has not been enough to discourage cops from engaging in criminal activities.

The reforms must start at the recruitmen­t stage – something that the PNP leadership has acknowledg­ed. Recruitmen­t criteria must be laid down clearly and strictly followed, leaving as little room as possible for meddling in the process by politician­s and special interest groups. President Duterte should put his full support behind this reform and discourage his political allies and other supporters from interferin­g in the system of appointmen­t and promotion in the PNP.

Apart from de-politicizi­ng the process, personnel in charge of screening police applicants must be monitored carefully for signs of looking the other way, for a fee, when applicants fail to meet certain requiremen­ts. This is said to be common especially in the psychiatri­c evaluation of applicants.

Background screening must also be more thorough. This shouldn’t prove too hard in the digital age, when many personal informatio­n plus biometrics are stored in the databases of several government agencies, and personal background is available on social media platforms.

A counterint­elligence team is being set up, which will be dedicated to monitoring cops’ possible involvemen­t in crime. Albayalde said the internal cleansing aims to show the public that there are a lot more good cops than rotten ones. He has to make sure the cleansing is sustained.

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