The Philippine Star

Rody tags 2 police generals in drug trade

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ

SOCHI – Two police generals are “still playing” with illegal drugs, President Duterte revealed here Wednesday, without naming names.

“Right now, even as I fly here and go back, there are again about two generals who are still playing with drugs,” Duterte said during a forum attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin at the mountain resort of Krasnaya Polyana.

Duterte explained his administra­tion’s stance against Western nations with negative perception­s of his war on drugs.

He reiterated his mantra: “I told you, do not destroy my country because it is being flooded with drugs.”

Duterte seemed comfortabl­e speaking his mind while he shared center stage with Putin, who invited him to the Valdai Forum.

Also present were King Abdullah II of Jordan, President Heydar Oglu Aliyev of Azerbaijan and President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev of Kazakhstan.

Duterte made the revelation as the Senate’s investigat­ion into anomalies

in the Bureau of Correction­s was diverted to the alleged involvemen­t of police officers protecting the drug trade in Manila.

Before he left Manila last Tuesday, Duterte was careful in his statements, saying he would wait for the results and recommenda­tion of the Senate before the Department of the Interior and Local Government starts investigat­ing the issue of “ninja cops.”

The Philippine National Police yesterday said it is ready to investigat­e the President’s claims that two PNP generals are “still playing” with illegal drugs. PNP spokesman Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac, however, said they have received no reports regarding the involvemen­t of high-ranking police officials in illegal drugs, apart from the ongoing investigat­ion in the Senate.

The issue has eroded public confidence in PNP chief Gen. Oscar Albayalde, as well as the administra­tion’s drug campaign.

“This I would pose to the entire community of the world. Is it wrong for a President to see – to say, rather – that, Do not destroy my country, especially the children, because I will kill you? And that was my order to the Armed Forces and to the police,” Duterte stressed.

It was Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon who cast doubt on the integrity of the administra­tion’s drug campaign after revelation­s that insinuated top police officials – including Albayalde – provided protection to arrested drug suspects and received gifts and protection money from syndicates.

“Given the ‘Tokhang’ campaign, which has killed thousands of people and supposedly drug dealers, the drug campaign loses its credibilit­y when you hear of these allegation­s between high-ranking officials of the PNP,” Drilon said.

Duterte has overseen a narcotics crackdown under “Oplan Tokhang” in which police have killed more than 5,300 suspected drug dealers and users since he was elected three years ago.

Critics said the actual number of dead is at least three times higher.

Duterte’s drug war is his signature policy initiative and he defends it fiercely, especially from internatio­nal critics and institutio­ns, which he says do not care about the Philippine­s.

At the Valdai conference, Duterte continued his litany of saving families and the young generation against the effects of illegal drugs.

“With so many families created and become dysfunctio­nal, you only have to have one addict in the family and the entire family collapses, becomes a socially disorganiz­ed unit. And I had to act fast,” Duterte said.

“And we saw mayors, city mayors, and the chairman of the most basic unit of government, 50,000 into drugs. And when I took over, I found out about nine generals were involved in the traffickin­g of drugs,” he added.

Duterte maintained he was fighting corruption and the traffickin­g of drugs “even in my government.”

“And that is why I had to do something very fast,” Duterte said.

Duterte is facing an initial inquiry before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) over persons killed in his brutal campaign against drugs.

In March 2018, Duterte announced that he was annulling his country’s ratificati­on of the Rome Statute “with immediate effect” in response to “shameless attacks” on his person by the ICC.

The Rome Statute was the legal basis for the foundation of the ICC in 2002.

Duterte made the move after ICC’s chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, initiated preliminar­y investigat­ions against Duterte for suspected crimes against humanity in the Philippine­s’ so-called war on drugs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines