PERRYSCOPE
By
Perry Diaz
The events leading to
the appointment of Vice President Leni Robredo as Drug Czar were like a
high-stakes poker game. When President Rodrigo Duterte, apparently
annoyed at Leni’s criticism of Duterte’s handling of the bloody anti-illegal
drugs campaign – she said the “War on Drugs” wasn’t working -- Duterte dared
her to run the campaign herself. “Let’s see if you can handle it,”
Duterte told Leni on October 28, 2019.
VP Leni
hesitated and did not accept Duterte’s challenge. But Duterte,
probably sensing that Leni wouldn’t dare take it, appointed Leni as co-chair of
the Interagency Committee on Anti-Illegal Drugs (ICAD), which reports directly
to Duterte.
It was a
gambit by Duterte, who might have thought that Leni would turn down the offer
and stop criticizing Duterte. Indeed, Duterte thinks that Leni was
weak. Wrong. Leni accepted the offer.
Although it
might have crossed her mind that it was a trap. Yes, she was enticed
to enter the lion king’s den, without any armor or weapons. There
were no rules of engagement. All she knows was that Duterte calls
the shots. Poor Leni. Now the lion king can devour her.
She knows
from the get-go that there was no job description. She also knows
that her co-chair is the Director General of the Philippine Drug Enforcement
Agency (PDEA), Aaron Aquino, a well-entrenched bureaucrat and retired
general. Aquino has a cabinet rank of undersecretary. He
sees himself above Leni.
Senseless
killings
Leni’s first
act as drug czar is the stoppage of the “senseless killings,” which has so far
eliminated 5,500 drug pushers and users. However, it is estimated
that at least 30,000 extrajudicial killings were done by vigilantes and police
officers without due process. Although Duterte didn’t want to stop
the “senseless killings” of mostly poor suspected drug users and pushers under
“Oplan Tokhang,” he didn’t have much of a leverage to stop it.
But Leni has
difficulty working with Aquino. When Leni wanted to see the
“narcolist” of high-value drug lords, Aquino objected saying that Leni had no
authority since she is just a member of a committee. Whereas, Aquino
as Director General of PDEA has the real authority over the war on
drugs.
Leni was
reminded that she is only involved in policy matters and has no operational
authority. Which makes one wonder: Is Leni being used as a window
dressing for the bloody war on drugs? Is she just the pretty poster
girl on the anti-drug campaign? It would seem so.
Abusive
policies
Duterte
stepped in and threatened to remove Leni from her “drug czar” appointment if
she “shared state secrets with foreign individuals and entities.” Prior
to Leni’s appointment as drug czar, Leni told Reuters that international help,
including from United Nations and International Criminal Court (ICC), “should
be sought if the government refused to change tack and stop abusive policies.”
Leni met with
officials from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC),
community-based advocacy groups and U.S. Embassy last week to discuss the drug
problem.
The meeting
must have miffed Duterte who said that he would fire Leni as co-chair of ICAD
if she shares classified information because certain matters should be kept
with the government. It is apparent that Duterte wants the
anti-illegal drugs campaign to remain local and avoid international
intervention.
However, Leni
said her work as ICAD o-chair could be “limited” without the
narcolist. She said that other agencies could not stop her from
fulfilling her task as one of the leaders of the anti-illegal drugs
campaign. Indeed, as a co-equal of Aquino, Leni should have access
to all information available to Aquino.
Fire the drug
czar
Leni seems to
be saying that Duterte can fire her if she continues to pursue getting the
narcolist. She just called Duterte’s bluff. Now, what’s
Duterte’s next move?
If Duterte
decides to go ahead and fire her, it would make him look guilty of setting Leni
to fail, which would draw international criticism; now that Leni had invited
international groups into the fray.
But what if
Duterte decides to keep her and give her the narcolist? What has he
got to lose? For one thing he’d lose face. But he can get
himself off the hook easily. His problem is what does Leni going to
do with the narcolist?
Many believe
that the narcolist contains names of influential politicians and powerful,
mostly Chinese, drug lords. If they’re exposed in public, it would
put tremendous pressure on Duterte and PDEA chief Aquino to go after
them. But that’s what czar Leni wanted precisely – to root them out
and prosecute them.
The future of
the government’s anti-illegal drugs program now hangs in the
balance. But Leni has to relentlessly pursue her plan to go after
the drug lords. The question is: Is Duterte willing to go
along with her plan?
But what if
he doesn’t want Leni to get a copy of the narcolist? Is Leni going
to resign her post as drug czar or is Duterte going to fire
her? Either way, Leni appears to be on her way out… unless she
accedes to Duterte’s wish to stay away from the Narcolist. But to do
so would make her a toothless paper tiger. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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