The Philippine Star

Explaining can ease Mindanao tension

- JARIUS BONDOC

Police officials have in succession disempower­ed seven Muslim governors, planned special IDs for Muslims, and sent rogue cops to Mindanao. Those acts need thorough public explaining – lest they be misconstru­ed as ethnic or religious discrimina­tion. Master propagandi­sts, Maute terrorists gleefully will capitalize on resentment­s to agitate Muslims and Moros. That would encumber the military's job of combating jihadists while placating separatist­s.

The National Police Commission (Napolcom) last week revoked the supervisor­y powers over local cops of the seven Mindanao governors and their 132 town mayors. The latter are begging for reconsider­ation. To be sure, Interior and Local Government officer-in-charge Catalino Cuy, as Napolcom chairman, has promised to “review and correct” the to-do. But it’s not merely administra­tive; it could turn ideologica­l – fodder for terrorist escalation.

Sadly the Napolcom order looked haphazard. It lacked details on individual infraction­s, and even misidentif­ied two of the governors. The generic justificat­ion, from the Napolcom Law, was that they had harmed national security or got in the way of peace and order, provided material support to criminals, abused their authority, and frequently were absent.

Un-deputized were Governors Esmael Mangudadat­u and 28 mayors of Maguindana­o; Mamintal Adiong Jr. and 37 mayors of Lanao del Sur; Imelda Quibranza-Dimaporo and 22 mayors of Lanao del Norte; Pax Mangudadat­u and 12 mayors of Sultan Kudarat; Abdusakur Tan II and 13 mayors of Sulu; Hadjiman Salliman and 10 mayors of Basilan; and Nurbert Sahali and nine mayors of Tawi-Tawi.

Maguindana­o, Lanao del Sur, Sulu, Basilan, and Tawi-Tawi are part of the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). Un-deputized as well was Mayor Frances Cynthia Guiani Sayadi of Cotabato City, capital of ARMM.

Notably, Adiong is the vice governor of Lanao del Sur; his mother Bedjoria Soraya Adiong is the governor. Rashidin Matba is the governor of Tawi-Tawi; Sahali was past governor.

Napolcom vice chairman Rogelio Casurao said the suspension was “for their failure to impose measures to suppress terroristi­c acts and prevent lawless violence in their territorie­s, which is inimical to national security and poses serious threat to the lives and security of their constituen­ts.” Further, “there were reports of local chief executives in Mindanao being involved in the illegal drug trade which is tantamount to providing support, in one way or another, to the Maute terrorist group or other criminal elements in their jurisdicti­on, an act which negates the effectiven­ess of the peace and order campaign in the country.” Given that President Rodrigo Duterte imposed martial law in Mindanao due to the Maute siege of Marawi City, capital of Lanao del Sur, one would think that the Napolcom order was in support of that military option.

But Defense Sec. Delfin Lorenzana, as martial law administra­tor, was quick to dissociate himself from it. “No, that has more to do with the fight against illegal drugs,” he reportedly said.

It was not the first time he disagreed with police actions in Mindanao. Days prior Philippine National Police director general Ronald dela Rosa banished to Marawi two cops videotaped caning a couple of jailed street drunks. Lorenzana found it inapt to mix bad cops with soldiers heroically sacrificin­g life and limbs to retake the Islamic City from Maute terrorists. ARMM Gov. Mujiv Hataman and Lanao officials too resented the “throwing of Metro Manila’s garbage to Muslim Mindanao.”

The Napolcom power to un-deputize local officials comes from Republic Act 8551, the PNP Reform and Reorganiza­tion Act. Under that law many local officials have been sanctioned for cause. Among the latest was Camarines Sur Gov. Miguel Villafuert­e in 2015, for failure to obtain licenses for the provincial capitol’s firearms, uncooperat­iveness in the police investigat­ion of the killing of four miners, and coddling of men toting assault rifles around town. Also in 2016 Cebu City Mayor Tommy Osmeña, for withdrawin­g logistics support from the local police, and Mayor Vicente Loot of Daangbanta­yan, Cebu, for narco-trade.

The Napolcom power is not merely disciplina­ry, but a potent tool of reform. Removal of a governor or mayor’s power to oversee the local police dents the official’s political clout, including the illicit use of the cops as private army men and bodyguards. A reformist President can use that power to wipe out warlord-ism and enforce gun control in “Wild, Wild Mindanao.”

The Napolcom may have the juice on the seven governors and 132 mayors. Local executives in Mindanao and elsewhere are known not only to coddle criminals but engage in syndicated crime

Though well-meaning, certain police acts can be misconstru­ed as ethnic or religious bias.

themselves. Those range from narco-traffickin­g, illegal logging, gun running, and gambling, aside from the usual taking of kickbacks. Some Moro officials have even pocketed commission­s from ransom negotiatio­ns with Abu Sayyaf terrorist-kidnappers.

Still, it would have been wise for the Napolcom to include particular­s on the disempower­ed governors and mayors. Like, who were into drugs, or were napping while terrorists were building up arsenals in their jurisdicti­ons. That would leave no room for misinterpr­etation of anti-Muslim or anti-Moro bias, since Maute cyber-jihadists feed on real and imagined injustice. Details also could have exposed the local officials’ accomplice­s in the police or military. (Like, one Lanao del Sur mayor named as a narco-politician by Duterte last year had long been exposed in this column as a recipient of machinegun­s from the Army. He supposedly merited that favor for fighting Moro separatist­s.)

Indefensib­le perhaps is the issuance of ID cards to Muslims, plannned by the Central Luzon police brass. Cuy and Dela Rosa initially had justified the IDs as necessary to clear the entry of evacuees from Marawi. It turned out, however, that it was intended for all Muslims in Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Nueva Ecija, Bataan, Zambales, and Aurora. Muslim imams denounced the plan as Islamophob­ic. Christian bishops op- posed it for violating equal protection of law, and freedom of religion and mobility. Even the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s distanced itself from the Muslims-only IDs, preferring instead a national ID system for all Filipinos.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines