Sun.Star Davao

Violation to right to privacy: Rody

Withdraws support to CCTV ordinance

- By Arianne Caryl N. Casas

CONTRARY to his previous statements, Davao City Mayor Rodrigo R. Duterte yesterday withdrew his support to an ordinance requiring business own- ers to set up closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras in their establishm­ents, citing the move is a violation to right to privacy.

Duterte said the existing CCTV ordinance is only applicable to establishm­ents that “transact business with the public.”

“As a lawyer, I would say that it will not pass the test of privacy,” he said in his program Gikan sa Masa, Para sa Masa yesterday morning.

“Dili ka kapugos sa mga opisina nga miski ilang capital (is more than P3,000,000, but) they do

not transact business with the public, imong pugson butangan ug CCTV, maviolate ang (Constituti­onal provision on the) right to privacy (You cannot force an establishm­ent to put up CCTV cameras because it is a violation of the right to privacy based on the Philippine Constituti­on),” he said.

Duterte cited the killing of Richard King, a businessma­n who was killed inside the Vital C building during a gathering of health supplement distributo­rs in Barrio Obrero. The establishm­ent has no CCTV camera.

“Dili man to tindahan (Vital C). It is a venue for people na gina-train nila to sell the product (It is not a transactin­g office. It is a venue for trainings of their distributo­rs),” he said.

He said setting up CCTV cameras must be voluntary for businesses that do not transact with the public.

Councilor Edgar Ibuyan Sr. on Tuesday said the proposed amendment to the existing CCTV ordinance was returned to the committee level after he introduced new provisions to it.

Ibuyan said he wants the maximum penalty for violating the existing ordinance with a fine of P5,000 and revocation of business permits once the establishm­ents fail to comply with the ordinance.

Councilor Victorio Advincula, on the other hand, also wanted to i mpose higher resolution­s for the CCTV cameras.

Councilor Tomas Monteverde IV said the series of crimes in the city resulted to the inclusion of the amendment.

“We are not trying to intervene in your private life. This is made to enhance police investigat­ion,” Monteverde said.

The existing ordinance requires all establishm­ents in Davao with a minimum capitaliza­tion of P3 million and above, including banks, pawnshops, restaurant­s, shopping malls, hotels and inns, educationa­l institutio­ns, hospitals and medical institutio­ns, gaming cockpits and private transporta­tions terminal operating land, air, and sea to install CCTV cameras.

Meanwhile, Davao City Police Office (DCPO) director Sr. Supt. Vicente Danao Jr. said a task group is formed to fast-track the resolution of this high-profile case.

The task force is composed of investigat­ors in Davao City and Cebu City.

As per testimony of the witnesses, Danao said the gunman of King is in his 30s, at least 5’5” in height, weighs at least 65 kilos and has fair complexion.

King was the chair and chief executive officer of J. King & Sons Co. Inc., developer of Crown Regency, Club Ultima and the City Suites Ramos Tower.

He was also the founder and director of Boracay Multiple Properties Inc.

Tan, who has worked with King since 2006, described the businessma­n as a visionary.

Duterte said the recent spate of crimes is considered as a breakdown of law and order in the city.

“Dugay pa ni masulbad pero, somehow, naa man ta’y Ginoo. Mugawas ra gyud na labi na mga hitman. One day madakpan na, sa usa nila ka trabaho mupiya-it na na,” he said.

Duterte also said the entrance of the gunman to the establishm­ent while a gathering was ongoing was “brazen.”

“Lisud to ilhon kay walay cover-cover eh. Murag mga Sparrow kaniadto,” he said. ANC

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