Splitting IAS from PNP/ ‘Militarizing’ school campuses
>> Thursday, October 31, 2019
BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY--- The resolution
of the Regional Advisory Council (RAC) of the Internal Affairs Service in the
Cordillera Administrative Region (IAS-CAR) seeking separation of the unit from
the Philippine National Police (PNP) is a step in the right direction.
In a press
conference on Wednesday afternoon, lawyer Alan Antonio Mazo, chairman of the
IAS-CAR RAC, said the call for the separation of the IAS from the PNP is timely
considering the recent developments involving police officers, particularly the
so-called "ninja cops."
A PNA report
said the resolution “expressing support to the independence of the Internal
Affairs Service and House Bill 3056.” Was signed by all 10 members on Oct. 23.
According to
Mazo, “This should be nationwide reform on the disciplinary aspect of the
policemen.”
He said the
separation of the IAS is also gaining support from the Commission on Human
Rights (CHR), the Senate, among other sectors.
House Bill
3056 was filed by PBA Party-list Rep. Jericho Nograles which seeks the transfer
of the IAS under the Dept. of the Interior and Local Government.
IAS is
currently under the Philippine National Police (PNP). The RAC resolution noted
that the current setup defeats the purpose for which the IAS was created.
Republic Act
8551 amended the Republic Act 6975 for purposes of reforms and reorganizations
of the PNP, including the creation of the IAS.
Mazo said
once separated, the IAS will no longer depend on the PNP for its financial
requirement to exist.
He said the
IAS will fully serve as the monitoring body of the character and behavior of
police officers and to fully operate as the investigating and adjudicatory body
on all administrative offenses committed by PNP personnel, becoming a more
effective part of its disciplinary mechanism.
RAC members
said this system is the same in other countries like the United States where
the IAS is able to perform its function without the “threat” and “management”
of the police organization that it monitors and investigates.
***
The
government wants a review of an old memorandum of agreement between the Dept.
of National Defense and state universities and colleges that bars the presence
of Armed Forces of the Philippines and Philippine National Police personnel
inside school campuses.
Dept. of the
Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año said that in line with the
government’s “whole-of-nation-approach” in eliminating local armed conflict as
stated in Executive Order 70, which created the National Task Force to End the
Local Communist Armed Conflict, police presence in schools and universities can
be increased to deter the recruitment program of leftist groups.
Last week,
Sen. Ronald “Bato” de la Rosa said he will push a law that will remove the
constraints against the conduct of education and information drive inside
campuses using police and soldiers amid the aggressive recruitment of members
of the communist movement.
According to
Ano, “this fight is not only in red areas or in the provinces, but also in
white areas — in cities, in our schools, factories. These are their target.”
He said the department will also conduct dialogues and increase its engagements with school authorities and the students “to raise awareness on the modus operandi of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF).”
He said the department will also conduct dialogues and increase its engagements with school authorities and the students “to raise awareness on the modus operandi of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF).”
“We’re not saying that student organizations
are bad, but many of them have been infiltrated by communist groups,” he added.
According to
Año, there are 500 to 1000 youths indoctrinated by the CPP-NPA every year and
they either become members of the NPA or return to their respective schools as
militant student leaders.
“They are
using their alleged nationalism to teach children to kill and take up arms
against the government,” he said.
“What happens
now is that so many schools are deeply infiltrated by the CPP-NPA through their
front organizations. Now, the rebels have corresponding member organizations in
schools that we should be vigilant in guarding against,” he said.
He added it
is unfortunate that Republic Act 1700 or the Anti-Subversion Act was repealed.
In the meantime, he said, the PNP has already initiated the filing of cases against front organizations identified through a recent Senate hearing and in the government’s own intelligence and investigations.
In the meantime, he said, the PNP has already initiated the filing of cases against front organizations identified through a recent Senate hearing and in the government’s own intelligence and investigations.
The DILG
chief considers youth recruitment by leftist groups part of the communist
groups’ elaborate campaign to overthrow the democratic government of the Philippines
through armed struggle.
According to
Ano, such activities are prevalent in urban centers where they actively recruit
new members and extort revolutionary taxes from legitimate businessmen to fund
their armed rebellion in the “red areas,” where they kill police officers and
soldiers, government representatives, and anyone who opposes them.
“It’s part of
their DNA to do these recruitments and unfortunately, they are able to
brainwash our youth. That’s why let us work together so that no Filipino will
again be persuaded to abandon their families,” Año said.
Local
government units should exercise good governance to regain the people’s trust
in government, according to Año.
But despite
the pronouncements of Ano, some sectors are opposing the presence of police or
military forces in school campuses. They are saying this is an intrusion on
academic freedom wherein education should make the student think and evaluate
situations like the armed conflict between the government and forces opposed to
it like the CPP-NPA without undue interference from police or military forces
right inside school campuses.
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