PNP: Stop patronizing pols with private armies
>> Monday, June 18, 2012
By Dexter
A. See
CAMP DANGWA, La Trinidad, Benguet – The top police officer of
the Cordillera has urged Abra constituents to stop patronizing politicians who
engage services of private armed groups (PAGs).
Regional police director Banjamin B. Magalong said politicians who
were not able to deliver their promises during elections and who harass people
during polls have no place in a decent society.
But despite these, he added peace initiatives being implemented in
conflict-stricken Abra province is gaining support from local politicians and
residents with significant reduction of politically-motivated crimes that had
caused the untimely death of local officials and supporters over the past
several years.
Magalong, said from average 16 shooting incidents per month
last year, only five shooting incidents were recorded in the province for same
period with no politically-motivated incident for the first five months of this
year.
He added the crime solution efficiency of the Abra provincial
police office on the five shooting incidents a month is around 80 percent
considering that probers are able to solve four
shooting incidents through the arrest and charging of the suspects.
“Abrenians are now waking up to the reality that violence
will not do them good, thus, they are now vocal against those instigating
violence in their places,” Magalong said.
He added from the 87 identified private armies comprising five
private armed groups (PAGs) being maintained by politicians in the province,
active armed men already decreased to 51 as of the end of May.
However, the police official declined to provide additional
information on the identity of those maintaining the PAGs since they were given
directives by the national headquarters to refrain from linking the PAGs to
their benefactors.
From the 27 firearms confiscated by law enforcers in the province
during the first five months last year, Magalong disclosed law enforcers seized
64 firearms from lawless elements province wide for the first five months of
this year.
“We need to accord our incumbent and former local officials
respect through our constant communications with them because they also want
lasting peace to reign in the whole province and allow development to
flourish,” he stressed, citing that “respect begets respect.”
Police authorities are still assessing the situation in Abra
whether or not to downgrade the existing number of PAGs but there are other
suspected private armies who are now surfacing which is affecting their
standing decision to reduce the number of PAGs operating in the province.
“People are now becoming aware of the real situation in the
province since they now actively participate in activities that denounce
violence being done by some quarters, thus, the upcoming 2013 elections will
picture Abra differently because of the participation of people in the
democratic process,” Magalong added.
“We continue to communicate with those maintaining PAGs and
we are getting the right signals towards the attainment of lasting peace in the
province,” Magalong said.
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