Watchmen Daily Journal

Was Rapiz ‘silenced?’

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“If we believe that murder is wrong and not admissible in our society, then it has to be wrong for everyone, not just individual­s but government­s as well. –Helen Prejean

It is mind-bobbling to hear Police Superinten­dent Santiago Ylanan Rapiz, a trained and quick-witted police official assigned to the Zamboanga del Norte Police Provincial Office, would exchange fire with fellow officers intending to arrest him last week during a buy-bust in Dipolog City.

The officer was killed in front of the Andres Bonifacio College gymnasium.

Even rookie cops know chances of survival are nil if they choose to open fire once cornered or overpowere­d.

When lawyers are murdered and their killers get away, justice bleeds – if justice is denied, democracy wobbles. Continuing injustice, including deadly attacks on unarmed civilians and officers of the court, along with unsolved cases, mean an imminent collapse of democracy. If democracy is dead then lawlessnes­s, abuse of power, and authoritar­ian rule reign.

If a crusading lawyer like Benjamin Tarug Ramos, Jr. can be violently silenced with no justice in return, what chances do ordinary laborers, farm workers, and the poor have if faced with similar circumstan­ces? As a defender of the oppressed and voiceless, the state must ensure protection for people vulnerable to brutal attack, such as the late National Union of the People’s Lawyers-Negros (NUPL-Negros) official.

With Ramos dead, government must utilize all resources to hunt down the killers.

The incident has caused a chilling effect beyond his colleagues in Negros, but members of the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s.

The 56-year-old was gunned down by motorcycle-riding gunmen in Barangay Biniculi, Kabankalan City as he was bringing home paperwork for pro bono clients. The NUPL-Negros official suffered three gunshot wounds towards the back and upper chest, and was declared dead on arrival at the hospital.

According to NUPL, “[He was] maliciousl­y and irresponsi­bly tagged in a public poster by the Philippine police as among the so-called personalit­ies of the undergroun­d armed movement.” They also noted, Ramos was the 34th legal profession­al killed during the President Rodrigo Duterte administra­tion; excluding judges and prosecutor­s, he was 24th member attorney killed – eighth in the Visayas.

Violence is not the answer if some powerful entity is annoyed by crusading lawyers; the use of force and treachery is the handiwork of cowards and psychos – the best descriptio­n of both killers and the mastermind­s behind Ramos’ murder.

This recent wave of lawlessnes­s, which is snuffing out the lives of brave lawyers, should be condemned not because Ramos was a lawyer but because murder is a crime.

I have declared several times before there will be no constructi­on on the Negros-Guimaras-Panay bridges this year. As long as the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and other pertinent government agencies are in charge, the project will never get off the ground.

Only technical people, experts, and non-political personalit­ies, especially in business, private, and diplomatic sectors, have credibilit­y when it comes to delivering on high-level infrastruc­ture projects like airports, domes, damns, highways, and bridges.

Politician­s have zero credibilit­y when it comes to implementa­tion of mammoth projects./WDJ

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