Shake up of Cordillera police officers looming
>> Thursday, March 6, 2014
CAMP DANGWA, La Trinidad, Benguet -- A shake-up of all provincial police commanders is looming in the Cordillera.
On
March 1, a new Baguio City police director, will be assuming as an
officer-in-charge, replacing Sr. Supt. Jesus Cambay Jr., said Cordillera police
director Chief Supt. Isagani Nerez.
Nerez
in his letter on Feb. 18, received by Mayor Mauricio Domogan the next day informed
the latter of his intention to replace Cambay with Senior Supt. Rolando
Miranda, chief of the Police Regional Office Cordillera Regional Operations and
Plans Division, effective March 1, 2014."
But Cambay Jr. will
remain as director of the Baguio City police, Mayor Mauricio Domogan announced
Wednesday.
The mayor said Nerez
decided to retain Cambay during their dialogue last Tuesday where the chief
executive threw his vote of confidence for the beleaguered police director and
attested to his adequate performance.
He said concerns
raised by Nerez have been relayed to Cambay for action and they expect the
police chief to address them for the further improvement of peace and order
programs in the city.
Nerez last week
informed the mayor of Cambay’s impending replacement on March 1 or six months
before he completes his prescribed two-year tour of duty in the city in
September but the mayor and Rep. Nicasio Aliping Jr., in their reply, asked
Nerez to forgo with the plan saying they are satisfied with Cambay’s
performance.
Some councilors also
backed Cambay’s retention with Councilor Leandro Yangot Jr. proposing a
resolution “expressing the city government’s uncompromising and full support”
for him and noting the adverse effect of the “sudden and unilateral replacement
of the BCPO director” on the implementation of security and peace and order
programs amid the numerous and crowd-drawing events lined up in the city for
the summer vacation.
The body on Monday
decided to invite Nerez to its session on March 10 to shed light on his
position.
Domogan said he also
received resolutions of support for Cambay from the barangays and the Hotel and
Restaurants Association of Baguio (HRAB) which also attested to Cambay’s
satisfactory performance.
Earlier, police
directors in Kalinga and Apayao were replaced with officers-in-charge and the
local officials accepted it with open arms, Nerez said as he explained that the
Philippine National Police is only after the good performance of the police commanders.
A
continuing assessment of police directors show those performing and not
performing, the police official said. Those not performing will be given an
opportunity “to make up and shape up."
"Performers
should stay and those who are not will be reminded by the organization to help
them internalize the ideals and mission of the organization,” Nerez said.
The
shake up sits well with some officials like in Kalinga and Ifugao, Nerez said.
Officials there, after consulting them, opened up to the organization’s
direction, he said.
But
in Baguio City, Councilor Leandro Yangot, Jr. led city officials in supporting
Cambay, whose position is reportedly being eyed by a police officer close to
Nerez.
Citing
the city mayor’s authority to appoint the city’s police director, Yangot said
the existing “guidelines, rules and regulations, Chiefs of Police of Municipal
Police Stations and Directors of City Provincial and Regional Police Offices
have a tour of duty of at least two years in their respective assignments.”
A
police director on an officer-in-charge capacity is given six months minimum
and two years maximum stay, “but when performance is at stake, the PNP
organization cannot follow that in letter for obvious reasons,” Nerez said.
Cambay
was appointed as Baguio City Police Office Director in September 2012 and his
supposed prescribed tour of duty will end in September 2014 or more or less
seven months from now.
Cambay’s
“sudden and unilateral replacement” will distort and disrupt the
implementation and execution of the security and peace and order programs and
plans which were put in place in preparation for the Baguio Flower Festival
that ends in March 2, Yangot said.
What
we are after for, Nerez added, is the shaping up of the organization that
ultimately ends with how the welfare of the people are being served by our
policemen. – Aileen P. Refuerzo
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