No images? Click here THE SAFEST THEY DESERVE Members of All UP Workers Union protesting on Friday against the use of the China-made Sinovac vaccine say Filipino health workers in the front lines of the fight against COVID-19 deserve the safest and most efficacious shots. —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ NewsFinally, body cams issued to copsAfter a long delay, the Philippine National Police will finally use the body-worn cameras that it purchased in 2019 to help ensure transparency and accountability in its operations. The training on the use of “body cams” began on Friday, as the PNP grapples with the controversy arising from Wednesday’s “misencounter” between police officers and agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency. —STORY BY DEXTER CABALZA Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net NewsPinoys’ safety sought amid racist attacksThe Philippine Embassy in the United States has appealed to American authorities to ensure the safety of Filipinos and other people of Asian descent amid a recent spike in racist attacks. Filipinos, who are estimated to be more than 4 million in the United States, are the fourth most targeted ethnic group next to Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese, following the COVID-19 pandemic being blamed on Asian Americans. —STORY BY MARLON RAMOS Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19. Banner StoryDuterte: NBI sole agency to probe PNP-PDEA clashBy Leila B. Salaverria President Duterte has designated the National Bureau of Investigation as the sole agency that would look into the gunfight between members of the Philippine National Police and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), shutting down their joint probe to “ensure impartiality.” Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque on Friday said it was the NBI’s mandate to investigate incidents that involve the uniformed services so that the probe would be nonpartisan. The President ordered the joint board of inquiry created by the PNP and PDEA to “discontinue” its investigation, Roque said. “This is to ensure impartiality on the Quezon City shootout incident,” he said. PNP spokesperson Brig. Gen. Ildebrandi Usana said the PNP “readily submits to the instructions of the President.” PDEA spokesperson Derrick Carreon said there was nothing more to say about the President’s order. “That is the directive of PRRD (President Rodrigo Roa Duterte),” he said. Carreon added that the House of Representatives and the Senate were “well within their powers” to also conduct their own probes. Priority case NBI spokesperson Ferdinand Lavin said the bureau was ready to comply with the President’s order to lead the investigation. “We are up to the challenge,” he told reporters. “This is not the first time that the NBI has been assigned to handle cases involving issues with different law enforcement agencies,” he said. Lavin said NBI Director Eric Distor had assigned the National Capital Region office to lead the inquiry. “The director has considered this a priority case,” he said. The Wednesday evening shootout has raised many questions about the antidrug operation near Ever Gotesco Mall on busy Commonwealth Avenue in Quezon City. Endangering civilians Lawmakers criticized PDEA and the PNP for endangering the lives of civilians who could have been caught in the crossfire when antinarcotics agents turned parts of Commonwealth Avenue into a “war zone” during the early evening rush hour. Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto called on the Senate to investigate the gunfight and to piece together what had happened. Recto said that with two former PNP chiefs in the chamber, Senators Ronald dela Rosa and Panfilo Lacson, it would be able to get to the truth. “People are demanding answers on why a supposedly coordinated operation ended up as a circular firing squad,” Recto said in a statement. “And it seems that the one institution trusted by the people who can shed a powerful light on the incident, in a manner that is fast, fearless and fair, is the Senate,” he added. Dela Rosa on Thursday said his committee on public order and dangerous drugs would open its own investigation of the firefight. At the House, Deputy Speaker and 1-Pacman Rep. Michael Romero said the PNP and PDEA had put people’s lives in danger “while [they were] making the superbusy middle of Commonwealth Avenue as their own war zone.” House summons Romero said the two law enforcement agencies’ statements “raised more questions than answers,” particularly on who was the buyer and who was the seller in what both PDEA and PNP had billed a “buy-bust” operation. “In a buy-bust operation, there’s supposed to be a buyer and a seller. There cannot be two buyers and no seller,” Romero said. He said Republic Act No. 9165, or the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act, classified the sale of illegal drugs as a capital offense punishable by life imprisonment. “Even in a buy-bust operation, it’s still illegal for uniformed personnel to play the role of a seller … We hope there will be no cover-up in the investigation so the public will know the true and full story,” Romero said. PDEA Director General Wilkins Villanueva on Thursday said neither his agency nor the PNP was engaged in a “sell-bust” operation because it was illegal. Rep. Robert Ace Barbers, the House dangerous drugs committee chair, said he will open an inquiry into the shootout next week. Barbers told the Inquirer that his panel would be summoning key officials of PDEA and the PNP to a hearing. Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte on Friday met with local police officials, barangay leaders and officers of the Department of Public Order and Safety and other agencies to raise her concerns about the drug operation. QC concerns “First of all I want to know why an operation was conducted in a very public place. Should there be a misstep in the operation as what happened, innocent lives could be at stake,” Belmonte told reporters. Lack of coordination She also questioned the lack of coordination with local officials. While she understood that such operations were confidential, she said that she should be given a heads up so she would know what to expect. “I think it’s not fair that the city government should be left out,” Belmonte said. “It seems that there are a lot of protocols that have to be mapped out or guidelines that have to be institutionalized so that when a situation such as this happens again, we will be able to protect civilians, businesses and that emergency situations are not affected,” she said. —WITH REPORTS FROM JULIE M. AURELIO, DEXTER CABALZA, MARLON RAMOS AND NIKKA G. VALENZUELA Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialBuying protection with moxie and moneyWhile the Department of Health (DOH) and the FDA have launched an inquiry into the premature and illegal use of an unauthorized vaccine, that probe may go nowhere, as President Duterte himself has ordered the PSG to ignore the DOH’s invitation to its hearings. Thus, the issues surrounding the vaccination program, such as they are, go far beyond Ramon Tulfo’s actions, although it can be said that his decisions and justifications are emblematic of the sense of entitlement exercised by the rich and well-connected in this country even in the face of a public health emergency. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Friday, February 26, 2021
Duterte: NBI sole agency to probe PNP-PDEA clash. Inquirer Newsletter. February 27, 2021.
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