Abra Cops Accused
of Ransacking Houses
Village officials accused the police
of unlawfully searching and ransacking 21 houses. The police officers’
decision to set up checkpoints and conduct interrogations is said to
have dire consequences on the image of Abra province which plans to
promote its bamboo industry to foreign investors.
BY ACE ALEGRE
Northern Dispatch
Reposted by Bulatlat
LA TRINIDAD, Benguet – Police
officers under Task Force Abra were criticized by community leaders of
Baranggay (village) Cagayanan, Tineg town in Abra, northern Philippines
for unlawfully searching and ransacking 21 houses there last Jan. 14.
Task Force Abra Commander Sr.
Supt. Eugene Martin denied the incident and said that there were no
complaints that reached him. However, baranggay kagawad (village
councilor) Anita Ci-o and Nestor Martinez, baranggay secretary Amarilyn
Batoon and Baranggay Lupon (village council) members Dulawen Limag and
Cesario Viste chided police officers from the Regional Mobile Group for
the entry of some houses without warrants when interviewed by the Abra-based
Catholic Media Network radio DZPA.
The village officials said
that the police officers were irked when they found no one in most of
the houses. According to them, most of the people were out working on
their rice fields and checking their wild animal snares in the forests.
Martin said that they served
a search warrant Jan. 14 on a known warlord allegedly maintaining armed
goons in Tineg town but found only a shotgun in his house. "May
nag-timbre yata kaya ganun." (Someone may have tipped the owner of
the house.)
The village officials also
resented the police officers’ failure to coordinate with them on the
raid.
Earlier, complaints of abuses
by Task Force Abra police officers were also reported by local
residents. Visitors have also complained about the setting up of
checkpoints and the manner in which they are questioned by the police.
Beijing, China
based-International Network on Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR) Philippine
representative Carmelita Bersalona complained that her right to travel
and privacy was violated “because of the insistent and unreasonable
interrogations done by the officers and men of the Task Force.” She said
that she was asked questions asked like where she came from and what she
did there, as well as where she is going and what she will do.
Bersalona said that there are
possible negative consequences of this manner of conducting the
checkpoints which she described as “even more than the martial law
years.”
She also claimed that this is
not healthy for the province particularly in the conduct of business,
especially now that Abra is anticipating the coming of visitors to look
into how they could possibly help the bamboo industry. Bamboo has been
chosen as the province’s One Town, One Product (OTOP) and the local
government is currently taking advantage of the technical and financial
support from the Philippines and abroad. Bulatlat
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