The Philippine Star

500 suspects have died in jail since 2016 — IAS

- – Emmanuel Tupas, Cecille Suerte Felipe

At least 891 police officers are under investigat­ion for the deaths of nearly 500 crime suspects in police custody since President Duterte assumed office in 2016, the Internal Affairs Service (IAS) of the Philippine National Police (PNP) said yes It’s terday.

IAS inspector general Alfegar Triambulo said 119 commission­ed officers and 772 noncommiss­ioned officers, ranging from patrolmen to lieutenant colonels, are under probe for the

prisoners’ deaths.

“Some of these officials are police chiefs of towns and cities,” he said in a phone interview.

If proven the victims died under questionab­le circumstan­ces, the police officers could be kicked out of the service for committing a grave offense.

“Prisoners are presumed innocent until proven guilty. It’s the responsibi­lity of the government to secure these inmates while in their custody,” Triambulo said.

The IAS has conducted a probe on the police officers after an audit revealed that 891 suspects died while in police custody in the past three years. Of the number, 47 were facing drug charges.

What is alarming, according to Triambulo, is the number of deaths from January to September 2019 had nearly doubled compared to the figure for the entire 2018.

For this year, there were 236 deaths, higher by 71.10 percent compared to 138 in 2018.

At the start of the Duterte administra­tion in 2016, 32 deaths were recorded, followed by 81 in 2017.

PNP spokesman Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac said they will look into the cases to determine if there were irregulari­ties.

Suicide, illness

Triambulo said 343 or 70.43 percent of the cases died of various illnesses.

Meanwhile, 38 or 7.8 percent committed suicide in jail.

“Some of them allegedly killed themselves using the firearms which they took from police officers,” he said.

Ten or about 2.05 percent of the inmates were killed by policemen after they allegedly put up a fight. The remaining 96 prisoners died from other causes.

Triambulo warned Cavite police director Col. William Segun to shape up or face administra­tive charges after they found out 15 inmates died at the Dasmariñas City police station in a span of two months.

He said Segun should take steps to correct this or he will be charged with serious neglect of duty.

De Lima: End drug war

Sen. Leila de Lima said the Duterte administra­tion should now admit its failure in stopping the scourge of illegal drugs in the country following the resignatio­n of general Oscar Albayalde as PNP chief.

“The Duterte administra­tion should now admit that it has miserably failed in stopping the scourge of illegal drugs in the country and therefore, should make amends by holding these police drug protectors accountabl­e for their crimes. They should re-assess their approach and strategies in combatting the scourge of illegal drugs,” she said.

De Lima has supported the recent call by Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) to put an end to the government’s bloody war on drugs that has claimed thousands of lives and promoted the culture of violence and impunity.

She also expressed support to demand government accountabi­lity for the thousands of summary executions and extrajudic­ial killings of suspected drug offenders in the country often perpetrate­d by state authoritie­s under the directive of Duterte.

“I join the incessant calls by local and internatio­nal groups to stop the killings that have not just taken the lives of our countrymen but allowed the continued proliferat­ion of illegal drugs under the protection of police authoritie­s,” she said.

After Albayalde stepped down as chief PNP last Oct. 14, internatio­nal rights group AI issued an official statement calling for an end to the Duterte administra­tion’s war on drugs.

Calling Albayalde’s resignatio­n as “the last blow to the credibilit­y of the so-called ‘war on drugs’,” AI questioned how Duterte easily promised to accord Albayalde due process but has continued to refuse to give justice to the victims who were unlawfully killed by the police force.

Albayalde relinquish­ed his post after he was accused of having intervened in the dismissal of 13 policemen over the irregular anti-drug operation in Pampanga in 2013 as then Pampanga police chief.

De Lima, a critic of the administra­tion’s war on drugs, pointed out that the immediate passage into law of her proposed Anti-EJK Bill will help prosecute, at the proper time, Duterte and other personalit­ies involved in the government’s drug war.

“I hope that my Senate colleagues could join me and other human rights defenders across the world in defending human rights and demanding accountabi­lity for all the state-led killings in our country,” she said.

De Lima was referring to her Senate Bill No. 371 seeking to define and provide for acts that constitute EJKs and strengthen the interventi­on and investigat­ive functions of government agencies, including the Commission on Human Rights.

First introduced in the 17th Congress, De Lima’s measure also proposes to make local chief executives and chiefs of police administra­tively liable if their communitie­s experience a surge in EJK cases, except in communitie­s beset by armed conflict.

Last July, De Lima reiterated her call to the United Nations Human Rights Council to stop the “Duterte killing machine” by initiating an independen­t probe on the rampant killings in the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines