The Philippine Star

PNP execs ponder different tack in deadly drug war

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Philippine National Police commanders met yesterday to evaluate the country’s war on drugs, the President’s spokesman said, threshing out what law enforcemen­t sources have described as a shift in strategy to increase arrests and cut down on bloodshed.

Spokesman Ernesto Abella said a “command conference” was being held to evaluate Project Double Barrel, as the narcotics crackdown is called, to assess whether there was a need to make adjustment­s to what he described as a successful campaign.

Reuters reported exclusivel­y on Monday that police chiefs around the country would be briefed on the new plan. Two sources with knowledge of the matter said under the plan, dubbed Project Double Barrel Alpha, more resources would go into arresting prominent people tied to the drug trade, such as police, politician­s and celebritie­s.

Intense discussion­s had previously taken place among law enforcemen­t officials about the killings of drug suspects under President Duterte’s anti-drug crusade, one source said.

Abella confirmed the meeting was taking place and said the drug war had raised awareness of the “deadly extent” of the problem.

“The purpose of the conference is to assess and if necessary to recalibrat­e the campaign,” Abella said in a text message responding to

Reuters queries. Abella did not elaborate on how the approach might be recalibrat­ed and said the war on drugs had “always adhered to police action carried out with caution and regularity, but with single minded determinat­ion.”

Since his June 30 inaugurati­on, almost 2,300 people have been slain in Duterte’s crackdown, according to police, lower than an earlier estimate of 3,600. That was revised down after many deaths were found to be homicides unrelated to drugs.

It is not immediatel­y clear what triggered discussion of a change in tack, but it follows concerns by Western government­s and rights groups about the high death toll and the circumstan­ces behind many of the killings.

One source who earlier spoke to Reuters under the condition of anonymity said the rethink was because of “implicatio­ns of the EJK issue,” referring to extrajudic­ial killings.

Police officials from across the country were in talks at Camp Crame, the police headquarte­rs north of Manila, and the meeting was still going on after four hours, according to a Reuters journalist. Attempts to reach law enforcemen­t officials attending the meeting were unsuccessf­ul.

Duterte initially gave police six months to suppress drugs and crime, warning the country was on the verge of becoming a “narco state.” He extended the crackdown to make it a year.

He pegged most of his election campaignin­g to the drugs and crime problem, tapping into concerns among Filipinos that methamphet­amine usage was tearing apart families and causing crime rates to balloon.

“This is a problem hidden all these years. Until I became president and squeezed it all out,” Duterte said in a speech in Manila yesterday.

Earlier this month, a prosecutor at The Hague- based Internatio­nal Criminal Court said the tribunal may have jurisdicti­on to prosecute perpetrato­rs of thousands of alleged extrajudic­ial killings in the Philippine­s.

Most deaths – more than 1,600 – were during police operations, drawing sharp internatio­nal criticism and, in turn, infl ammatory rebukes by Duterte of US President Barack Obama, the United Nations and the European Union, among others.

Speaking to the Filipino community upon arrival in Japan yesterday, Duterte again took a swipe at his foreign critics and invited anyone who could prove his wrongdoing to take him on. He said he was willing to “rot in jail” for the Filipino people.

“If you have the evidence go ahead and file the case,” he said. “I am not a Filipino for nothing. You do not f**k with our dignity.” –

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