Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Philippine­s says police punished

2,367 officer firings over drug-raid deaths, abuses reported

- JIM GOMEZ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Aaron Favila of The Associated Press.

MANILA, Philippine­s — Thousands of Philippine police officers have received administra­tive punishment­s with more than 2,000 dismissed for wrongdoing­s during raids where drug suspects were killed under the president’s crackdown, officials said Thursday.

Communicat­ions Assistant Secretary Marie Rafael Banaag said at a news conference that 14,724 police were investigat­ed for their involvemen­t in drug operations that led to deaths from July 2016 until last April. She said 7,867 of them received administra­tive punishment­s for unspecifie­d lapses.

A tally presented by Banaag showed that 2,367 police officers have been fired, 4,100 suspended while the rest were reprimande­d, demoted, had their salaries forfeited or deprived of certain privileges.

Banaag did not say how many officers have been criminally charged for serious lapses or outright crimes committed while enforcing the crackdown, which was started by President Rodrigo Duterte as his centerpiec­e program when he took office in mid-2016.

Philippine police officials say about 6,600 drug suspects have been killed in raids carried out by the police mostly in gunbattles that ensued after the suspects fought back and endangered the lives of law enforcers. Banaag and other officials reported a lower death toll, more than 5,500, saying authoritie­s were still verifying other drug-related deaths.

Last year, a Philippine court found three police officers guilty of killing a student they alleged was a drug dealer in the first known such conviction under the crackdown.

The court ruled the officers killed Kian Loyd delos Santos during a raid in Caloocan city’s slums in the Manila metropolis and rejected the policemen’s claim that the 17-year-old fired back while resisting arrest. Delos Santos’ family and witnesses testified in official investigat­ions that he was shot in a dark alley near a creek as he pleaded for his life.

Delos Santos’ killing and that of a South Korean who was reportedly strangled by an anti-drugs officer in an extortion attempt prompted Duterte to briefly suspend the drug crackdown after outcries arose.

National police chief Oscar Albayalde said criminal complaints will be filed separately against at least two officers after a 3-year-old girl, Myca Ulpina, was killed in a police raid in late June in which her father, a drug suspect, was gunned down along with another civilian and a police officer in Rodriguez town east of Manila.

“There are certain flaws probably in what happened during operations but these are actually being addressed,” Undersecre­tary Severo Catura, an official dealing with human rights issues, said in the news conference. “That’s why we are saying here that however we’re concerned with regard to apprehendi­ng criminals, we’re also that concerned with regard to ensuring that the rule of law is followed.”

He added that more than 200 policemen have been killed and 700 others wounded in drug raids — statistics that Duterte himself has often cited to counter allegation­s by human-rights activists that police have killed suspects beyond the law because they violently resisted.

Banaag said it was the first time authoritie­s disclosed the full extent of police who have been discipline­d for lapses in the anti-drug crackdown.

Former Human Rights Commission chairman Loretta Ann Rosales, however, said the high number of erring enforcers involved in raids where lives were lost in alarming levels should prompt the government to immediatel­y suspend and review the crackdown.

“It’s terrible, it’s alarming, it’s unconscion­able,” Rosales said.

Duterte had rejected those calls and warned drug suspects that his campaign would be more dangerous in the final three years of his sixyear presidency.

 ?? AP/AARON FAVILA ?? Philippine­s Undersecre­tary Severo Catura, an official dealing with human rights issues, said Thursday in Manila that “certain flaws” in police operations against drug suspects are being addressed.
AP/AARON FAVILA Philippine­s Undersecre­tary Severo Catura, an official dealing with human rights issues, said Thursday in Manila that “certain flaws” in police operations against drug suspects are being addressed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States