The Manila Times

7,080 ‘EJKs’ and so much outrage; only three cases with details?

- RIGOBERTO TIGLAO E-mail:tiglao.manilatime­s@gmail.com FB:BobiTiglao AND Rigoberto Tiglao Archives: rigobertot­iglao.com

Group, and the failed-institutio­n PCIJ have huge resources amounting to hundreds of millions of pesos, which they can even combine.

Yet they can’t even present to us a single case of such EJKs—the names of the police killers, who they received orders from, the names of those killed, where the killing took place, that is, the usual, the normal informatio­n one needs to prove a fact.

Details on only three EJKs have been uncovered so far ( listed below) but no thanks to these people and groups.

Instead, they have uncovered details on alleged EJKs that occurred in the late 1980s, more than 28years ago in Davao City—virtually impossible to prove by this time—of course with the purported mastermind being the mayor then, Duterte.

Senator Antonio Trillanes III, the Philippine political world’s character assassin parexcelle­nce (remember his project vs. Jojo Binay?), FLAG, and even the PCIJ have devoted their resources to exposing EJKs in Davao City 28 years ago, instead of those that occurred just within the past three months. (An easier investigat­ion would be the Hacienda Luisita massacre in November 2014, in which seven striking workers were killed.)

Not surprising

That is of course not surprising, if one concludes that these groups aren’t really champions of justice, but merely want to use the issue to take down Duterte as soon as possible.

A recent article in a US magazine learned about the carnage…is due the article said.

But why can’t these police reporters provide us with the who-whywhere-what-how of EJKs they’ve photograph­ed, which after all are the info basic journalism courses say they should get?

A photograph­er in that article was quoted:

of July. By the second week, we were going to many raids, ‘buy-bust’ operations. The police would always tell us the alleged drug dealer was dealing with undercover policemen and he shot it out. We were getting maybe three deaths a night … and then a night, sometimes more.

- mate’ ones, which we call the buy-bust, the drug raids [by the police]. And then you have the deaths that’s under investigat­ion, the ones done supposedly by the death squads, these are the persons whose hands and feet were bound, [their] heads wrapped in packing tape. I don’t have my personal list now. When

He witnessed 2,000 operations, and let’s assume a third of that resulted in EJKs by police, in which the they claimed that the suspects fought back, and they had to shoot to kill, so this would be about 600 killings.

Yet the photograph­er didn’t bother to get details on these EJKs, info that the killers? Among such info: Exactly who were the policemen involved, who their team leader was, who was the overall commander of what police precinct? What are the names of those killed, what kind of weapons they where the alleged EJK killing occurred. He just wanted his photograph, composed with the best angle and even

Or is it the fault of the editors of these photograph­ers, who didn’t bug them to get details on each EJK?

Not their jobs

But of course, photograph­ers could say that that is not their job, which is just to take photos. Even if people are getting killed in front of their eyes by law enforcers?

- tion of the massive failure of the Philippine press, whose members have been aping their broadcast colleagues who pursue only images—as sensationa­l as possible—rather than facts.

At the very least, if these journalist­s were doing their jobs, maybe we can shame the police who would as a consequenc­e hesitate undertakin­g more EJKs. For instance, we could Precinct No. XX under precinct commander so-and-so and his Po 20 alleged drug addicts in buy-bust

What we have now are anonymous police killers — even if they can be looming. Or is this precisely the propaganda strategy?

The recent report by the US Human Rights Watch—sensationa­lly it investigat­ed 24 incidents, resulting in 32 deaths involving Philippine National Police personnel between October 2016 and January 2017. The report gave the names of the victims and details on how they were killed.

But the report doesn’t give the names of the policemen involved and their units which means that even if the government decides to prosecute these cases, the Human Rights Watch report would be useless.

If that NGO were really concerned about the plight of Filipinos, it would have submitted to the justice department or the Ombudsman’s Military their case studies, complete with the names of the killer-policemen.

Even during martial law, when the press was closed down, the religious - lously compiled thousands of cases of arrests and killings, with the names of the victims, and sometimes the names of the military units involved. (Never mind if an Amnesty Internatio­nal report would later on conclude that 85 percent of the cases involved those either with the NPA or with communist party fronts.)

Why can’t these people and groups shouting to high heavens against EJKs with all their resources do similar investigat­ive work in this day and age when we have the freest media, so that they can help the poor people get justice for their loved ones?

If they can’t do it themselves, they - nalists and lawyers to investigat­e each

That would be a disincenti­ve to killer-cops, who would worry that their higher-ups could very well decide to abandon them if there are cases

Hypocrisy

Why haven’t they done this obvious thing to be done, if they were really against EJKs? In a word, hypocrisy.

They really don’t care about stopping EJKs, but are just using this issue to demonize this President, or in the case of some reporters, to portray themselves as excellent investigat­ive journalist­s or great news photograph­ers with the Pulitzer in sight.

For instance, the PCIJ has been devoting resources on the EJK allegation­s of a police sergeant Arthur Lascañas against Duterte when he was Davao city mayor, rather than investigat­ing just one recent case of an EJK. But of course the latter requires tedious investigat­ive work, and hardly sensationa­l.

The only three cases of EJKs—one didn’t succeed—on which we have details, and which appear to be moving through the legal system are as follows:

The killing of Albuera mayor and suspected drug lord Rolando Espinosa last November in his prison cell in Baybay City, by a team of the Philippine National Police’s Region 8 Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group, allegedly as he shot at the police who were serving a search warrant on him in his jail cell.

The kidnapping and attempted murder in February in Calaca, Batangas of Amante Valdos, a suspected drug suspect, by Police Officer 3 Abmar Mohammed.

The attempted murder in August last year of Efren Morillo, when he refused to confess he was a drug dealer, allegedly by Senior Police Inspector Emil Garcia, PO3 Allan Formilliza, PO1 James Aggarao, and PO1 Melchor Navisaga, all of Quezon City Police Station No. 6 in Batasan Hills.

Those people and groups protesting to high heavens about EJKs under Duterte had nothing to do in bringing these cases to light. The Espinosa killing was uncovered by a Senate committee, which prompted the National Bureau of Investigat­ion to investigat­e pursued by the suspected cop-killer’s colleagues themselves in the Las Piñas police force. The third was investigat­ed by the Ombudsman’s Military and

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