Panay News

Top drug enforcer welcomes SAF commandos

- (Dexter Cabalza © Philippine Daily Inquirer)

MANILA — The current chief of t he Philippine National Police’s Drug Enforcemen­t Group ( DEG) welcomed the proposal to assign some Special Action Force (SAF) commandos to the police’s main narcotics unit and salvage the credibilit­y of the government’s campaign against illegal drugs.

“Personally, that is a very good suggestion, because we know the untarnishe­d reputation of the SAF. It’s a good direction, way ahead if we will have SAF troopers here at DEG,” DEG director Brig. Gen. Faro Olaguera told reporters in Camp Crame on Friday.

Should this happen, the reassigned police commandos would undergo a two-week retraining t o get t hem familiar with the protocols of antidrug operations as they were originally trained for counterter­rorism and urban warfare.

According to Olaguera, the number of relieved DEG personnel grew to 117, or almost 9 percent of its 1,304 personnel, for their involvemen­t in the Oct. 8, 2022 anti- drug operation, which was riddled with controvers­ies.

“This is part of our ongoing internal cleansing. We want only those with spotless records to remain here at DEG,” he said.

DEG personnel have begun to be recalled to the PNP headquarte­rs in Camp Crame to undergo values formation and moral recovery program and other reorientat­ion courses amid discussion­s to overhaul the controvers­ial anti-drugs unit.

PNP chief Gen. Benjamin Acorda Jr. earlier bared the possibilit­y of employing SAF members to be reassigned to the DEG, citing their incorrupti­ble reputation.

Previous PNP chiefs also tapped the SAF to help in fighting and preventing drug trade, particular­ly in the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City, which authoritie­s noted to be where all drug networks in the country converge.

From July 2016 to December 2020, SA F troopers were deployed at Bilibid to replace jail guards of the Bureau of Correction­s who failed to stop corruption and drug trading inside the Bilibid.

The contingent was replaced with a f resh batch every six months to avoid familiarit­y with the inmates. They were deployed particular­ly to secure Building 14, where most high-profile convicts were housed.

But a year after their deployment, then Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II reported the resurgence of illegal drug trading in Bilibid with men from SAF conspiring with the drug lords there.

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