PNP’s Rule of Engagement: Point and Shoot!

May 31, 2008 at 10:41 AM (Family, People, Personal, Politics, TV) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , )

Yes folks. The Philippine National Police (PNP) has only one (1) rule of engagement… POINT and SHOOT! With subsection… ‘UNTIL YOUR MAGAZINE CLIPS ARE EMPTY!’ *sic*

This has been religiously justified by our law enforcers since time immemorial. From the pre-Spanish to PGMA era, our trigger-happy-blood-thirsty cops are on the prowl for would be victims to satisfy their itchy fingers. And the worse part is that our government is not doing anything about it. The cries of the family of their victims falls on deaf ears.

What happened to these erring law enforcers after the complaint? Has anyone been put into justice? Has there been measures to prevent such barbaric operations to happen again?

I’ve googled the internet to look for clear rules of engagement in the Philippines. To my dismay, there’s none. What i’d been given are archives of several operations of the PNP / NBI / Army turned bad. From the innocent family on their way to picnic, to a mistaken van in Cebu, to the child of a driver who just happened to borrow his boss’ car to an event (his boss is an alleged kingpin), to a demented guy in Pasay city who held hostage a boy, to a fil-chinese girl riddled by the defunct PACC with bullets alongside with her kidnappers, to a group of yuppies just having fun in Ortigas that has been mistaken for carnappers and planted evidences against them, and more! (http://dg.up.edu.ph/viewtopic.php?t=2003&)

These recent witch hunt of the PNP on the RCBC robbers, who cold-bloodedly killed several bank employees and customers, escalated this issue once more of not having a clear rules of engagement. PGMA should chastened her law enforcers as they continue to defy her order last 2004:

“The end can never justify the means and lapses on police operations must never be tolerated,” the President said in a statement.

The President said the directive was “to avoid a repetition of this unfortunate event.” – http://www.gov.ph/news/default.asp?i=4762

The question that comes to our mind now is that, are these law enforcers know what are the Rules of Engagement? Or are they also in the dark as they don’t know what to do… as there is really no one?

Do they know the Miranda Rights? Are they not watching hollywood movies, where a cop reads the suspect’s rights no matter how they execute their arrests? They’re not doing this. If you watch those sensationalized tv programs in channels 2 ( XXX ), 7 (imbestigador) and 13 (bitag), you won’t see any law enforcers reading the suspect’s rights… and these are seen on national tv!

Our lack of clear rules of engagement sends negative signals to our people and foreign neighbors and investors. The wheel of justice is not rolling, or if it is… it’s rolling on the wrong direction… or rolling in the dark… crashing anyone, anything in its path.

We have our rights to have a peace of mind… that we are safe in our homes… that any members of our family is safe out there because there are law enforcers who know what their doing… that even if they were mistaken to be law-breakers, we know their rights will be upheld…

because there are clear rules of engagement!

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Las Piñas is Drinking Their Own Garbage

May 29, 2008 at 4:00 AM (People, Personal, Politics) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , )

I’ve been passing by the coastal road from Las Piñas almost everyday. I’ve been kuligliging there for years now. I just noticed that after you passed by Zapote, you’ll see the landfill there (yep, another “smokey mountain” but without the smoke… yet!). You’ll know when you’re there if you start smelling rotten/foul odors that would make you puke.

If you’re not familiar with and what Coastal road is, it is a reclaimed highway that connects Manila/Pasay to  Cavite province and Las Piñas City. Reclaimed — so it means it is used to be part of Manila Bay. And if you go there right now, its west-side is the filthy Manila Bay and the east-side are our poor people squatting the area.

Now back to the landfill, a few meters away from it is the now-closed incinerator facility (it’s closed because of the Clean-Air Act). The landfill sits on top of another reclaimed area and at its side is a river going to the Manila Bay. I don’t know if it is still active as i have not seen any garbage trucks there at the time i am passing by. If the landfill is there for quite a while, it must be decomposing now and its stinking chemicals are now sipping down the land and to the river going to Manila Bay.

As you know, Las Piñas don’t rely on MWSS for its water supply. It gets its water from deep wells. Yes, deep wells… those area underground that contains vast supply of water. Which for all we know gets its source from Manila Bay by means of series of natural filtration by soil minerals underneath… yes, from the Manila Bay that this landfill has been polluting and sipping its deadly chemicals… yes, it passes through them first… must have been mixing their chemicals with Las Piñas’ water supply underground. For all we know…

Las Piñas has been drinking its own garbage!!!

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