LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
March
Fianza
BAGUIO CITY -- For the
nth time, President Duterte came under fire for his latest remarks about
policemen receiving gifts from generous and thankful benefactors. According to
him, “It is not bribery if the gifts are given out of gratefulness.”
But Senator
Ping Lacson said otherwise. Instead, in a tweet on social media, he said, “Mr.
President, insatiable greed starts with simple, petty graft. It could be more
addicting than drugs. There is no detox, nor is there rehab facility available
for addiction to money.”
Bribe or gift
or whatever, it is quite hard to check this especially when gift-giving is part
of Filipino culture, except that the recipient must have the ability to submit
himself to his senses of determining right from wrong, and seeing to it that
there are no strings attached to the gift.
Similarly,
the senator who claimed corruption takes many forms said, it all depends on the
individual’s interpretation of which one is a corrupt act and which one is not,
although there are laws and jurisprudence related to receiving gifts.
Sen. Lacson
recalled that he made it a point not to accept reward money from families of
kidnap-for-ransom victims when he was PNP chief saying, he did not want cops to
discriminate against poor complainants presumed as incapable of giving rewards
if assisted.
True, as the
senator said, it all depends on the individual police directors and local chief
executives if they will accept monthly payoffs from jueteng operators so their
operations would not be raided.
On the other
hand, neophyte Senator Bato dela Rosa who commented in support of President
Duterte said, receiving gifts is “no big deal as long as it is given out of
goodwill,” even admitting that he received so many gifts on Christmas time.
He said, he
could not stop people from bringing gifts to his office during Christmas, but
“it’s a different thing if you will accept gifts from a drug lord or a gambling
lord. That’s not good.”
Sen. Bato
emphasized that accepting gifts from people with questionable characters and
motives was however prohibited. “The spirit of the law is to avoid bribery from
taking place,” he said.
With their
sides presented, obviously the two former PNP chiefs contradict each other.
While Sen. Ping Lacson said he does not want his men to accept gifts from the
families of kidnap-for-ransom victims, Sen. Bato cited an incident where a
family of a rescued kidnap victim sent lechon to the police station to thank
the cops.
Again, the
unwritten rule is to determine which is right from wrong, although the law
says, “public officials and employees shall not solicit or accept, directly or
indirectly, any gift, gratuity, favor, entertainment, loan or anything of
monetary value from any person in the course of their official duties.”
Sharing life
stories years ago with lowland farmers, our conversations always reached the
point when they relate to me how they want one of their sons to become a
policeman, or anything that will wean them away from farm life.
Relative to
the stories about policemen and how they go about their work, I recall the
topic “how to police the police.”
The matter of
cleaning police ranks baffled sociologists in the past. It means, police work
is neither a walk in the park nor an easy public service task. But in a
Filipino family where survival is a priority, seeing their children become employed
as policemen is important.
Many
traditional families view the police organization as an easy venue for
employment evenwhile they know that police work is stressful as it deals with
everyday people. It also needs a little of everything as in sociology, a bit of
psychology, rationality, and good judgment.
And so, we
see that a majority of the more than 150,000-strong Philippine National Police,
most of them raised in families of the working-class bracket, are in pursuit of
better life. The rest have various goals such as to become police generals,
become rich and become politicians after retirement.
For some,
their choice is a road to glory that becomes necessarily wayward, depending on
the goal and interest. And when uncorrected, the poor guy is trapped very deep
into the underworld and participates in crimes – then he is caught.
The list of
crimes involving policemen has no end. The cases filed against cops are illegal
drugs, rape, and illegal discharge of firearms, abuse of power, illegal
detention, kidnaping, homicide, extortion, carnaping, robbery and “hulidap”.
Based on
police records, around 700 officers are facing summary dismissal. In 2013, over
2,000 administrative cases were filed against police officers for various
complaints, and by looking at the situation now, maybe the number has
increased.
By the way,
how come jueteng and protection of gambling operations are not being mentioned
in the reports?
The list does
not end. There was the rape of a woman by a desk duty officer inside the Manila
Police District headquarters. Then there was the report of a Manila police
commander who was caught on video torturing a naked crime suspect who had a
rope tied to his genitals.
In 2010, the
Office of the Ombudsman filed graft charges against the “Euro Generals”
involving 12 ranking PNP officials for carrying a large sum of undeclared money
into Russia.
And as many
as 62 cops were accused of complicity in the Maguindanao massacre where 57
people, including 30 journalists, were summarily executed and their bodies
dumped in open pits in November 2009; and many more.
But how
should the police – police the police? The Commission on Human Rights
recommended that the PNP should ensure immediate arrest, prosecution and
conviction of erring police officers.
Every time
the PNP changes its chief, they make announcements to review recruitment
processes to ensure psychological and moral fitness; and strengthen the human
rights education and training program of all police personnel. But even with
trainings, still the number of police criminals (excuse me for the phrase) is
up.
In the first
two years of President Duterte’s term, he increased the take home pay of
policemen. Still, we read about ordinary cops committing big and little crimes.
For the late DILG Secretary Jessie Robredo, he said, erring policemen should
immediately be terminated from the service. That is, if one has committed a
crime.
But what
about the gifts or the bribe? Only the recipient can answer that because it is
only he who can distinguish a gift from a bribe.
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