The Star Malaysia

Angry Philippine police chief suspends dozens of officers

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MANILA: The Philippine­s’ national police chief suspended dozens of officers involved in violent clashes with anti-US protesters, as he voiced anger at one of his men ramming activists with a van.

At the rally outside the US embassy in Manila on Wednesday, the van reversed quickly into dozens of people then forward again, running over at least two protesters.

The driver said shortly afterwards he panicked as he feared being mobbed.

Thirty demonstrat­ors and 32 police were injured in the clashes, which also saw the authoritie­s fire tear gas and the protesters strike out with batons.

“I am saddened and angered,” national police chief Ronald Dela Rosa said in a statement.

“Police forces are under strict instructio­ns as a matter of policy, to exercise maximum tolerance in such public assemblies.”

Nine senior officers and 40 lower-ranking policemen were suspended pending an investigat­ion into the incident, chief superinten­dent Oscar Albayalde, head of police in the national capital region, said.

The policemen will still receive their salaries as the probe is under way, he said.

Four protesters remained in hospital yesterday, according to rights group Karapatan, but none of them had life-threatenin­g injuries.

Hundreds of protesters had gathered outside the embassy to express support for President Rodrigo Duterte’s foreign policy shift away from the United States, the Philippine­s’ longstandi­ng ally and mutual defence partner.

Police insisted the protesters had instigated the violence, saying the group did not have a permit, breached security lines, and threw paint and debris at the embassy gates.

But the protesters accused the police of being at fault.

“What the police did was unjustifia­ble and totally unnecessar­y.

“Are these the same people who should be in uniform? They should be ashamed,” Edre Olalia, lawyer for the protesters said. — AFP

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