Pubdate: Wed, 13 Jul 2016
Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer (Philippines)
Copyright: 2016 Philippine Daily Inquirer
Contact:  http://www.inquirer.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1073
Authors: Nikko Dizon, Leila B. Salaverria and Julie M. Aurelio

LENI SLAMS GROWING CULTURE OF VIGILANTISM

A DAY after attending her first Cabinet meeting and getting an 
insider's view of the Duterte administration's war against illegal 
drugs and criminality, Vice President Leni Robredo blasted a "growing 
culture of vigilantism and violence," noting more than 100 cases of 
drug-related deaths in less than a month.

In a statement yesterday, Robredo joined calls in the Senate and the 
House of Representatives for an investigation of what lawmakers said 
appeared to be extrajudicial executions in police operations 
implementing President Duterte's directive to crack down hard on the 
illegal drug trade. "While we are one with the fight against drugs, 
we are concerned with the growing culture of vigilantism and 
violence. We hope that the war is not done at the expense of the 
innocent and defenseless," she said. She said she supported Mr. 
Duterte's declaration "that the fight against drugs and crime must be 
done with an uncompromising exercise of the rule of law." "We 
encourage authorities concerned to look into these cases. If there is 
really culpability, then justice requires that appropriate cases be 
filed and that those proven to be accountable be punished," said 
Robredo, a former counsel at the Public Attorney's Office in her Naga 
City hometown. "Since the President is a lawyer and former 
prosecutor, we trust that he will do what is appropriate," she said. 
Malacanang has not released details of Monday's Cabinet meeting, but 
presidential spokesperson Ernesto Abella said Robredo was briefed on 
the administration's campaign against illegal drugs.

"It was a very warm situation. She was warmly welcomed and she seemed 
to appreciate the fact that she was part of the Cabinet now," Abella 
said in a press briefing. "She was made privy to the process and the 
thinking behind the war on drugs."

Asked if Robredo had any concern about it during the meeting, Abella 
replied: "If she had, she didn't express any."

Palace officials have dismissed calls for the congressional inquiries 
as baseless and premature.

Mr. Duterte presided over the meeting. He had a change of heart and 
decided last week to designate Robredo head of the Housing and Urban 
Development Coordinating Council-a task bestowed on her two vice 
presidential predecessors, Jejomar Binay and Noli de Castro.

The President had initially expressed reluctance in giving Robredo a 
job in the Cabinet, fearing it would not sit well with Sen. Ferdinand 
Marcos Jr., who has filed a case in the Presidential Electoral 
Tribunal, protesting massive fraud in the May 9 elections by the 
Liberal Party under whose banner Robredo ran.

Robredo won a slim 260,000-vote margin over the namesake son of the 
late dictator Ferdinand Marcos. The Supreme Court yesterday announced 
it would issue a ruling "in due course" on whether it would consider 
the Marcos petition.

Unlikely drug lords

Mr. Duterte was elected on a platform that included a promise that he 
would eliminate the drug menace in three to six months.

Alleged extrajudicial killings of supposed drug lords and pushers in 
stepped-up police operations started even before the President's 
inaugural. The victims did not appear to be drug lords in the mold of 
Latin narcotics kingpins, but slum dwellers gunned down mainly in the 
capital's squatter colonies.

The INQUIRER has placed the body count at 136 since June 30, when Mr. 
Duterte took his oath as the 16th President, and at 183 since May 10, 
the day after he was elected.

Sen. Leila de Lima has been vocal in pressing for an investigation of 
the killings that showed "telltale signs of summary executions."

Palace officials directed the Philippine National Police to proceed 
with the anticrime campaign and threatened to investigate De Lima as 
well, saying that the drug menace flourished during her watch as 
justice secretary in the Aquino administration to a point that 
convicted drug lords were calling the shots from the New Bilibid 
Prison and were manufacturing narcotics there.

Police told: Just do it

Abella defended Solicitor General Jose Calida from senators' 
criticism that his remarks on Monday questioning the basis for a 
congressional probe-mainly by Aquino allies-on the killings of drug 
suspects reeked of arrogance.

He said Calida was just doing his duty as the lawyer for the 
government to see to it that all things were processed properly for the police.

"Basically, he is simply making sure that everything goes with due 
process. Basically, just due process," he said.

Asked if Mr. Duterte would ask the police not to attend the 
congressional inquiries on the issue, Abella said what the President 
was saying was that the police should pursue their task fully. He 
said the President was "just encouraging them to just pursue their 
task as fully as they can."

The presidential spokesperson said that if there was any "irregular 
situation" found in the police operations, proper cases should be filed.

No moral outcry

Fr. Amado Picardal of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the 
Philippines (CBCP) said he was worried about the absence of a public 
outcry against the killings.

"There is madness happening in our country," said Picardal, executive 
secretary of the CBCP's episcopal committee on basic ecclesiastical 
communities. "Not just the killings but the citizens' reactions, 
mostly Catholics and Christians, who are suspending their sense of 
what is right and wrong," he said over Church-run Radio Veritas.

Filipinos may just keep quiet or approve of the killings until a 
member of their family becomes a victim, Picardal said.

"That is my worry, that this will not stop because there is no 
outcry, there is no moral outcry from the citizens," he said.

Other bishops in interviews with the radio joined the outcry.

Bishop Broderick Pabillo denounced "a great injustice." He added, "No 
one has the prerogative to take away another's life."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom