Mamasapano backlash / Barangay, SK elections
>> Monday, August 22, 2016
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
In their quest
to find justice, another batch of
relatives of the elite policemen who were killed in the bloody Mamasapano
incident in January 2015 joined the criminal complaint against former president
Benigno Aquino III, former Philippine National Police chief Alan Purisima, and
former police Special Action Force director Getulio Napeñas.
This brings to eight the number of complainants in the 44
counts of reckless imprudence resulting in multiple homicide charges lodged
against the respondents.
The latest complainants are Telly Sumbilla, mother of
Police Officer 3 John Lloyd Sumbilla; Helen Ramacula, mother of PO2
Rodel Ramacula; and Lorna Sagonoy, mother of PO1 Joseph Sagonoy.
They appeared before the Office of the Ombudsman Monday
with the group Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) to submit their
affidavits.
Erlinda Allaga,
mother of PO3 Robert Allaga and Warlito Mejia, father of PO2 Ephraim Mejia,
filed the charges early last month shortly after Aquino stepped down from
office. The Allagas are from Ifugao.
Two weeks later,
three more relatives – Julie Faustino Danao, mother of PO2 Walner Faustino
Danao; CelestinoKiangan, father of PO2 Noble Sungay Kiangan; and
Felecitas Nacino, mother of PO2 Nicky de Castro Nacino – joined the complaint.
The criminal charges accuse Aquino of implementing Oplan
Exodus in January 2015 to neutralize terrorists Zulkifli Bin Hir alias “Marwan”
and Ahmad AkmadBatabol alias “BasitUsman.”
Purisima,
although suspended at the time because of a different case, allegedly played a
role in the operation and thus committed usurpation of authority.
Napeñas is charged for allegedly taking “unlawful” orders
from Purisima, knowing fully that he was under suspension.Napenas ran for the
Senate last elections but lost.
More than 60
people, including 44 SAF policemen, were killed in the firefight with Muslim
rebels in Mamasapano, Maguindanao.
The slain policemen were part of a SAF operation to
capture Marwan and other terrorists hiding in a remote village in Mamasapano.
The police operation went awry after the SAF commandos figured
in a firefight with Muslim rebels on their way out of the area. News reports
earlier said the accused dilly dallied in taking action to stop the bloodbath
resulting to the massacre of the SAF members.
When the dead soldiers were brought to Manila for burial
in their provinces, Aquino didn’t meet the bodies of the slain and their
relatives and instead attended the opening of a vehicle company.
Call it payback,
but now that Pnoy is no longer president, his actions when he was in office
will hound him.
***
Here
is an update on barangay and Sangguniang kabataan (SK) elections. Mankayan,
Benguetlocal official AgostoPasian earlier texted us inquiring if elections
will push through. So here goes also for our readers:
Senator
Alan Peter Cayetano is pushing for the postponement of barangay and SK polls
originally scheduled for October 2016, saying resetting the elections would be
more prudent in sustaining government efforts to create real change and restore
order in the country.
Cayetano on
Wednesday filed Senate Bill No. 1037, which seeks to reset the upcoming
synchronized barangay and SK polls from October 31, 2016 to the
last Monday of October 2018. It also seeks to extend the term of barangay
and SK officials from three years to five years.
The senator
cited five key reasons for the need to reset the elections: 1) to
sustain the momentum of their programs aligned with the administration's
anti-drug campaign; 2) to enable barangay officials to fully support the
war vs. crime and drugs; 3) to give the legislature ample time
to improve the Local Government Code’s provisions on effective barangay
governance; 4) to save government money, especially if a plebiscite for
Federalism will also be held soon; and 5) to give the Comelec sufficient time
to prepare.
Cayetano
said moving the elections to a later date would allow barangay officials to
focus on their role in helping sustain the momentum of the war against crime
and illegal drugs that started during President Rodrigo Duterte's term.
He
said rushing the polls could undermine the government’s crackdown on illegal
drugs, especially if barangay officials will claim political motivations
whenever accused of illicit drug-related activities. He added standard
prohibited activities during elections and election bans could hamper reforms
being undertaken by the new administration.
Cayetano
said Duterte’s strong policy against illegal drugs has done so much to pull
down the country’s crime rate that it is more prudent to allow incumbent
barangay officials to continue implementing projects or re-align them in
accordance to the thrust of the new government.
Duterte
had cited to start the anti-drug campaign in the barangays.Recent news reports
also cited observations that the President's aggressive fight against illegal
drugs resulted to a positive impact among local officials, with more officials
now taking the initiative to inform law enforcers about drug activities in
their barangays.
Cayetanoalso
explained postponement of the elections will give Congress sufficient time to
study reforms that will strengthen governance in the 42,036 barangays around
the country.
"Postponing
elections to take a closer look at how the Local Government Code can be amended
in order to strengthen provisions concerning barangays with regard to term
limits, benefits, training and funding, among others, would certainly be a wise
move," he stressed, citing the similar case of the SK elections'
postponement, which paved a way for the passage of an important legislation on
SK reform.
Additionally,
resetting the date of the elections would save the country billions of pesos
that can instead be used for social services, Cayetanosaid. To save time and
resources, the senator proposed barangay and SK polls could be held
simultaneously with a possible plebiscite in preparation for the government's
shift to Federalism in 2018 or 2019.
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