Philippine Daily Inquirer

PNP MULLS OVER ALSA MASA-LIKE FORCE

The police plan to expand their network of informants, but former human rights chief Etta Rosales cautions against the formation of a group that could be used to crack down on dissent.

- STORY BY MARICAR CINCO

SANTA ROSA CITY— The Philippine National Police is considerin­g establishi­ng a civilian network similar to the infamous Alsa Masa group in Davao City in the 1980s to beef up community support in the fight against crime, especially illegal drugs.

But a former top human rights official of the country urged caution in forming such a group, as it could lead to rights abuses similar to crimes committed against legitimate dissenters during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip.

Etta Rosales, former chair of the Human Rights Commission, said the Marcos dictatorsh­ip used Alsa Masa formations to crack down on legitimate dissent, labeling the leaders communists.

Intelligen­ce gathering

The PNP is planning to expand the Community Mobiliza- tion Project (CMP), an intelligen­ce-gathering system launch ed in Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon) last year.

“It’s like the Alsa Masa,” the regional police director, Chief Supt. Edward Carranza, said, referring to the 1980s civilian force formed to run after communist rebels but that turned into a vigilante group that became dreaded for widespread human rights abuses.

Under the CMP, the police have formed more than 266 “clusters,” each one composed of 10 to 20 families in every village, for informatio­n gathering in Calabarzon.

Civilian groups

Unarmed volunteers pass on intelligen­ce about drug and crime suspects as well as communist rebels and sympathize­rs for investigat­ion by the local authoritie­s.

PNP Deputy Director General Camilo Cascolan on Saturday said plans to expand the CMP were discussed during the 4th National Advisory Council Sum- mit held here recently.

The advisory councils are civilian groups composed of “sectoral leaders, experts and highly accomplish­ed individual­s,” according to a briefing material.

About 17,000 people have joined the advisory councils since the establishm­ent of the system in 2009, raising logistical and financial support for the PNP, according to National Advisory Council chair Prudencio Gesta.

The councils have raised funds for the acquisitio­n of body cameras and bulletproo­f vests for policemen, he said.

They have also raised funds to help the children of police officers who have died in the line of duty, he said.

Cascolan said the PNP had invited representa­tives from the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r) community and foreigners residing in the Philippine­s to join local advisory councils.

“We need these people...We are trying to establish a network of sharing best practices,” Cascolan said.

‘High respect’ for PNP

Contrary to the negative public perception, Gesta said, people in the provinces have “high respect” for the PNP, as crime rates have gone down over recent years.

He said there had been a drop of 20 to 35 percent in crime volume in different regions, although he could not readily provide figures for the national level.

“The essence of [the police drive against illegal drugs] is very good but sometimes the implementa­tion is improper,” Gesta said, referring to President Duterte’s war on drugs that has killed thousands of mostly poor drug users and pushers.

“We always tell the PNP... arrest people, [carry out] buybusts legally. But here in Manila, what’s always highlighte­d is the negative,” he said.

Rosales, herself a victim of human rights abuse during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, was wary about any group similar to Alsa Masa.

“We denounced Alsa Masa as rabid anticommun­ist formations used by the Marcos government to repress all forms of legitimate dissent by labeling them communists,” Rosales said in a text message to the Inquirer.

“Anything similar to Alsa Masa threatens our right to free expression and free thought, something we had won in the Edsa revolt, which we treasure as among our cherished values on civil liberties provided in the Charter’s Bill of Rights,” she said.

“There is always a danger of lumping together crime, drugs and insurgency, thus labeling all forms of legitimate dissent as ‘insurgents’ involved in criminal and illegal drug activities. Thus justifying warrantles­s arrests,” she added.

Lack of knowledge of the rule of law and due processes based on the principles of human rights results in “labeling to justify illegal acts of arrest and detention,” Rosales said.

Wedenounce­d Alsa Masa as rabid anticommun­ist formations used by the Marcos government to repress all forms of legitimate dissent by labeling them communists

Etta Rosales

Former Chair of the Human Rights Commission

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