Philippine Daily Inquirer

PNP ADOPTS NPA TACTIC TO FORM ‘FORCE MULTIPLIER­S’

- By Jeannette I. Andrade @jiandradeI­NQ INQ

Police Col. Manuel Lukban Jr., head of the Philippine National Police directorat­e for police community relations (DPCR) plans and programs, came up with the idea of turning a strategy of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) against it.

Lukban told the Inquirer in a phone interview that the concept of building a global coalition of advocacy groups and force multiplier­s was from a tactic used by the CPP-NPA.

“It was supposed to be, at the start, just aimed at countering the strategy of the CPP-NPA. We analyzed how this group has been operating all these years and saw that they had this AOM strategy,” Lukban said.

He explained that AOM stood for: Arouse, Organize and Mobilize, which targeted different sectors and enabled the CPP-NPA to recruit members.

‘Brainwashi­ng’

According to Lukban, Arouse entailed drumming up antigovern­ment sentiments among members of different sectors. “The CPP-NPA then exploits these negative sentiments to organize these sectors into groups,” he pointed out.

Mobilize, he said, was the part where the indoctrina­tion and “brainwashi­ng” begins and the sectors are encouraged to take part in street protests up to the extent that they would be willing to take part in the communist rebel’s armed struggle.

“We observed that this has been very effective. So three years ago we helped organize a youth group in response to this CPP-NPA tactic which we noticed mostly targeted young Filipinos,” Lukban pointed out.

“Helping organize this youth group, giving its members the right informatio­n and encouragin­g them to help the government in any way they can, we put them out of the CPP-NPA’s reach,” he added.

After observing that this can be done, the DPCR official said the PNP saw the potential of tapping the youth and other sectors in the overall campaign against criminalit­y as volunteers.

In the Kabataan Kontra Droga At Terorismo (KKDAT), he pointed out, the PNP emphasized that for its members to merely avoid Illegal drugs, crime and violent extremism is already a big help to improving peace and order.

“We reached out to other sectors by supporting their various advocacies. In turn, they volunteere­d to help the PNP in its anticrimin­ality campaign and support police programs as they are able,” Lukban said.

“Of course, they cannot undertake law enforcemen­t duties, those are the PNP’s responsibi­lity,” he added.

Broad coalition

With the exponentia­l growth in membership of the advocacy groups, Lukban said that the PNP decided to gather them in one broad coalition of volunteers: the Global Coalition of Lingkod Bayan Advocacy Support Groups and Force Multiplier­s.

He said that to date the coalition, made up of the KKDAT; the National Coalition of Informatio­n Technology Advocates for Change; the Joint Industrial Peace Concerns Office/Alliance for Industrial Peace Program; the Kaligkasan; the Internatio­nal and Local Help Desk; Global Peace Community Relations; Anti-Crime Community and Emergency Response Team; the Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police of the Philippine­s Inc; the Affiliated NGOs; the Foreign National Keepers Network; the Project Juana (Magdalena Mission); barangay-based organizati­ons; faith-based organizati­ons; and Force Multiplier­s, has 17 million members here and abroad.

2.6M members

Out of the 17 million coalition members, force multiplier­s number 2.6 million nationwide.

Force multiplier­s, he explained, are basically more “warm bodies” to augment the 220,000-strong PNP although they are not allowed to conduct actual law enforcemen­t.

“Our force multiplier­s are volunteers who provide the PNP with informatio­n or beef up the number of policemen out on patrol,” Lukban said, adding that it helps a lot in anticrime operations that the policemen on the field have extra sets of eyes and ears.

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