Manila Bulletin

SC says it cannot compel gov’t agencies to probe ‘killings’ in illegal drugs ops

- By REY G. PANALIGAN

Without evidence of neglect, the Supreme Court (SC) has declared it cannot issue a continuing mandamus or an order compelling the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of cases in the illegal drugs operations like the reported extrajudic­ial killings.

In a decision that dismissed a petition, the SC said that no evidence was presented to show that the heads of the Philippine National Police (PNP), the Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) neglected their duties in preventing and investigat­ing violations of the right to life, in relation to the government’s anti-illegal drugs campaign.

The SC said a writ of mandamus is a remedy granted by law when any tribunal, corporatio­n, board, officer, or person unlawfully neglects the performanc­e of a legal duty, or unlawfully excludes another from the use or enjoyment of a right or office.

It pointed out that for a writ of mandamus to be issued, the person seeking it must have a clear legal right, the officer against whom the writ is directed must have a duty to perform the act sought, the law mandates the officer to perform such act, and that the officer neglected to perform the act.

With its declaratio­n, the SC – in a decision written by Associate Justice Maria Filomena D. Singh -- dismissed the petition filed by Anna May V. Baquirin, Mary Jane N. Real, Maria Lulu G. Reyes, Joan Dymphna G. Saniel, and Evalyn G. Ursua. The petitioner­s are members of the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s (IBP).

The lawyers pleaded the SC to issue a writ of continuing mandamus to compel then PNP director-general and now Senator Ronald M. Dela Rosa, then CHR chairperso­n Jose Luis Martin C. Gascon (now deceased), and then DOJ secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II to investigat­e and prosecute extrajudic­ial killings in connection with the anti-illegal drugs campaign of then President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

They claimed that the government officials named in their petition failed to adequately perform their duty to prevent violations of the right to life and to investigat­e and prosecute the same.

Thus, they asked the SC to direct the officials at that time to investigat­e each and every allegation of violation of the right to life committed under the government’s anti-illegal drug operations, such as “Oplan Tokhang” and “Oplan Double Barrel,” and prosecute perpetrato­rs when warranted.

They also asked the SC to compel the PNP, CHR and DOJ to submit periodic reports to the SC on the actual number of extrajudic­ial killings and their circumstan­ces, the progress of the investigat­ion of each case until all investigat­ions are completed and appropriat­e criminal charges are filed in courts, and the positive measures adopted to prevent further violations of the right to life and their implementa­tion.

In dismissing the petition, the SC ruled that “besides conjecture­s and conflictin­g statements, the petitioner­s offered no concrete proof that the respondent­s are remiss in their duties.”

“Their bare allegation­s cannot be given credence, all the more so with respect to the CHR, as Gascon submitted certified true copies of the CHR’S records for each region on their investigat­ions on the extrajudic­ial and drug-related killings, and the list of trainings they conducted for the police and military sectors from 2016 to 2017,” it also said.

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