The Philippine Star

AWOL soldiers among threat concerns – AFP

- By MICHAEL PUNONGBAYA­N

The Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) is now considerin­g dishonorab­ly discharged soldiers as threat concerns, citing the involvemen­t of three former military men in the killing of Negros Oriental governor Roel Degamo.

Acknowledg­ing that former soldiers with training and skills may be used for criminal activities, the military assured concerned officials and the public that steps are being taken to address the issue.

AFP spokesman Col. Medel Aguilar said in an interview yesterday over dzBB that Army chief Lt. Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. has ordered his command to strengthen counter-intelligen­ce and closely monitor discharged soldiers so they can be prevented from using their skills and training for criminal activities.

Aguilar stressed, however, that there are only a few dishonorab­ly discharged soldiers or those who have gone AWOL who got involved in criminal activities.

He said the involvemen­t of former soldiers in the Degamo assassinat­ion was a unique case.

“This one is so heinous,” he said, referring to the killing of Degamo and several others in broad daylight on March 4.

“I think these people have already forgotten their training and education – that the soldier’s duty is to protect the people,” he said in Filipino.

“So this is the culture that we have to nurture – and of course the camaraderi­e – that we have a common mission to accomplish and that is the constituti­onal mandate to protect our people,” he added.

Aguilar said the recruitmen­t process in the AFP is very strict, as it includes a neuro-psychiatri­c test.

“If you don’t pass this test, you can’t be a soldier because it’s very hard to entrust a firearm to someone not mentally stable and with violent tendency,” he pointed out.

He stressed that the training is not just about overpoweri­ng an enemy and that the main objective is to protect the people.

“It should be the priority, the primordial task of the military, fighting threats is just consequent­ial,” Aguilar said.

“The Army is bolstering its values formation and character developmen­t programs. A soldier with strong core values stays ethical, discipline­d, and profession­al even off the battlefiel­d and beyond military service,” Army spokesman Col. Xerxes Trinidad said.

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