June 10, 2015
There is no justice in the Philippines. If it weren’t enough that
the massacre of 44 police officers of the police’s elite Special Action
Force was such an unnecessary tragedy, the reappointment of disgraced
police chief Alan Purisima to his position as Philippine National Police
(PNP) Director adds insult to national injury.
Purisima figured significantly in the bungling of the January 2015
PNP Special Action Force (SAF) anti-terrorist operation in Mamasapano
that led to the bloodbath. At the time he was effectively on suspension
on charges of corruption, yet had somehow inserted himself into the
operational command chain. Worse, Philippine President Benigno Simeon
‘BS’ Aquino III actively covered up Purisima’s culpability in the
tragedy and, even as evidence mounted highlighting Purisima’s
accountability, baldly refused to apologise to the Filipino public.
Even before the Mamasapano Massacre, Purisima had already been under
the spotlight for grossly mismanaging the PNP. Under Purisima’s watch,
the Philippines’ police had degenerated into a bandit force largely seen
as profoundly complicit in the very crimes its members pretend to
prevent and solve.
In late 2014, a road hijacking incident
perpetrated in broad daylight on Metro Manila’s busiest highway was
caught on camera. The ensuing investigation into the incident revealed
the appalling extent to which members of the Philippine police were
involved in the crime. The speed with which the case was subsequently
“solved” is one of the remarkable features of this incident. It raises
the question of how this story would have ended if no such photo had
gone viral and attracted the attention of no less than Senator JV
Ejercito among others.
Such clear evidence of mismanagement of an agency critical to the
overall wellbeing of ordinary Filipinos should have, by itself, prompted
its leadership to at the very least reflect and commit to atonement or,
at best, resign as an act of personal honour. But in the case of
Purisima, even a gross exhibit of incompetence and dereliction of duty
does not seem to be taken as a cue to make a graceful bowing out.
The more disturbing aspect of Purisima’s continued role as leader of
the PNP is how it reflects on Philippine society as a whole. One wonders
why an entire citizenry long subject to police incompetence can
continue to tolerate insults to their intelligence such as this.
Ultimately, it comes down to how Filipinos have been so effectively
reduced to no more than a flock of dumb sheep utterly beaten and resigned
to being merely herded from one pasteur to another to lazily graze.
People like Alan Purisima exist because the people who are subject to
them allow them to exist. A “democracy”, after all, is a rule by
the “majority”, see — which means the character of the rulers merely
reflect the characters of the people they rule over.
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