POSD men’s manhandling of vendor drags mayor into tiff
>> Sunday, February 17, 2019
By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – The viral
social media post showing Public Order and Safety Division operatives dragging
a vendor and confiscating his wares has started a controversy here on whether
the POSD should be abolished.
Mayor
Mauricio Domogan said he will not side with POSD personnel who commit
wrongdoings but appealed to the public to first know the whole story before
passing judgment against the employees.
He said the
incident involving the government men and a taho vendor last week which drew
public outcry against the office needed a closer look thus he ordered an
investigation by the City Legal Office.
“I’m not one
to defend the POSD if they are truly in the wrong but please do not be hasty in
highlighting the negative and instead see the whole picture first before
reacting,” the mayor said.
He added many
concluded right away that the POSD was at fault on the basis of the video
posted and without knowing circumstances that led to the arrest.
He also
dismissed calls to abolish the office on account of the incident saying people
should not discount the value of POSD’s role as supplemental force in
maintaining order at the city market, sidewalks, parks and barangays.
“We would not
want to go back to our old chaotic state where illegal vendors lorded over our
sidewalks and nooks and crannies,” the mayor said.
“With them
there in full force, many vendors still manage to ply their illegal
trade. Just imagine what happens if POSD will be completely out of the
picture,” he said.
POSD
Enforcement Section Head Bromeo Lumiib said the mayor had been particular about
the conduct of the personnel and whoever had been found to have violated the
rules of conduct had been relieved after due process.
He said at
least 20 men had been terminated for various causes like dishonesty and
laziness but only after these were subjected to investigations and proven true.
For abusive
behavior like alleged physical harm committed against vendors, Lumiib said a
number of cases had been filed but none had so far been duly substantiated.
He said most
of the incidents where violators sustain injuries occur only when they resist
arrest or engage the personnel in a struggle.
He said the
same thing happened in the Feb. 2 incident with taho vendor Benedict Seno who
he said resisted and fought the operatives instead of calmly surrendering his
merchandise aware as he was of his violation.
“My men were
just doing their job and to think that Mr. Seno was not a first- time offender
but a habitual one. It was as if they were being dared to make an action
and when they finally did, they came out as the villains,” he said. Prior to
his latest violation, Seno who possessed a s special permit to sell as a roving
vendor at St. Joseph Village had been apprehended on three occasions for
illegal vending at the same spot at the Botanical Garden where vending is
strictly prohibited on Dec. 9, 2017, Aug. 4, 2018, Jan. 6, 2019.
These were on
top of the instances where he was just issued warnings, let go or simply
ignored by the operatives.
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