Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lawmakers debate police coordinati­on at BBL hearing

- By DJ Yap

THE SPECTER of Mamasapano hung heavily over the congressio­nal deliberati­ons on the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) yesterday as lawmakers grappled with one question: Would policemen hunting down fugitives need to coordinate with the Bangsamoro government to enter its territory?

The question called to mind the events of Jan. 25 when 44 elite police commandos, under orders of superiors who had not coordinate­d with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), died under enemy fire during an operation to arrest two internatio­nal terrorists.

There were, however, no clear answers at the public hearing conducted by the 75member ad hoc committee on the BBL in the House of Representa­tives.

The discussion stemmed from Section 1, Article XI on public order and safety of the draft law, which states that “there shall be cooperatio­n and coordinati­on between the central government and the Bangsamoro government through the intergover­nmental relations mechanism.”

Magdalo Rep. Gary Alejano said this provision might impede law enforcers from pursuing criminal elements in a Bangsamoro substate and lead to conditions similar to what the 44 Special Action Force commandos suffered in Mamasapano.

Following up on this point, Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, the committee chair, said the coordinati­on mechanism wouldmean the Philippine National Police (PNP) “cannot just immediatel­y send troops” to pursue criminal elements in the Bangsamoro territory.

“It is a stumbling block to the PNP’s immediate action on peace and order due to this intergover­nmental relations mechanism,” he said.

Rodriguez noted that there was no such mechanism in Republic Act No. 9054, the law creating the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which the BBL will repeal.

PNP officer in charge Deputy Director General Leonardo Espina was asked by Antipolo Rep. Romeo Acop: “How would Napolcom resolve the concept of hot pursuit, if there is such a mechanism?”

Espina said the PNP would always need to coordinate with local units before entering a certain region in pursuit of its targets.

He said the coordinati­on mechanism in the BBL was already “being practiced as we speak.”

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