Rules of engagement
>> Monday, January 14, 2013
EDITORIAL
Looking at the way the
police, military, intelligence and other armed services of this country are
conducting “operations” against so-called criminals or “enemies of the state,”
one wonders if we are in Mexico or any other Banana Republic where not only
criminals or combatants but also civilians are killed with impunity.
Last week,
cause-oriented groups in north Luzon condemned the arrest of an alleged member
of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army who was charged in
court for the bloody April 2012 ambush in Tinoc, Ifugao where 13 government
forces were killed, saying he is a
member of the left-leaning partylist group Piston.
Saying VirgilioCorpuz
is not a rebel, non-government and civil society groups urged the government to
stop “vilification campaigns” against so-called anti-government individuals and
groups. Corpuz is now being tried by the Regional Trial Court branch 14 in
Lagawe, Ifugao.
Corpuz, the Baguio-based
NGO Rural Development Council-Kaduami (RDC-Kaduami) said, was arrested in
Santiago City, Isabela on Jan. 4, then transferred to Ifugao the next day.
The RDC-Kaduami said
Corpuz was their member who helped them assist marginalized communities
threatened by land grabbing, food insecurity and disenfranchisement.
Good for Corpuz since
he was only arrested. Others before him like James Balao, also an NGO worker in
the Cordillera was abducted by alleged military or police personnel and has not
surfaced since – like others in the country who were suspected of having links
with the CPP-NPA.
From the days of the
Red Scorpion Group and Kuratong Baleleng, law enforcers have found themselves in
trouble for taking no prisoners in their operations. Such operations can be
defended in crowded areas such as shopping malls, where closed circuit TV can
show that the bad guys posed a serious public threat that necessitated
permanent neutralization. There was no public outcry when cops gunned down
armed men who robbed a luxury watch store in Makati.
Guns, however, can
kill both bad guys and innocents. For this reason, rules of engagement were
drawn up a long time ago, which lawmen must strictly observe. In crowded urban
centers, preserving innocent lives is paramount, even if it results in the
escape of criminals.
Several cops are still
facing charges for the fatal shooting of a father and his seven-year-old
daughter who were hit as they drove past the scene of a gun battle between cops
and suspected members of a robbery gang in Parañaque. All the robbery suspects
were killed.
Among the cops spared
from the charges in that case was Hansel Marantan, who later moved to Laguna.
Marantan, now a police superintendent, is one of over 20 cops under
investigation for the alleged shootout in Quezon province last Jan. 6 that left
13 people dead. Police and military sources have described one of the
fatalities as a top jueteng lord and his companions as his partners or security
escorts.
The police and
military officers manning the supposed checkpoint, including Marantan, are now
hard pressed to explain why they subjected the convoy to such blistering fire
that no one could have possibly survived, with one vehicle bearing 186 bullet
holes. The team at the checkpoint insisted that the men in the convoy opened
fire first.
In a democracy,
punishment is also supposed to be commensurate to the crime, and even bad guys
have a right to due process. Do jueteng lords and their friends or bodyguards
deserve death? Only the courts can decide, and even then capital punishment has
already been abolished in this country. Were all 13 fatalities involved in
jueteng? One was known as an environmental advocate.
Even if an ongoing
probe leads to the conclusion that the incident was a legitimate law
enforcement operation, it should give security forces lessons on the limits of
violent shortcuts to law enforcement.
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