Thursday, July 25, 2019

The Philippines' Culture of Fraud and Deceit

This week in stupid legislation: Senator Ralph Recto wants to pass a law giving lifetime validity to birth certificates.  The problem? They already have a lifetime validity!

https://www.rappler.com/nation/235851-recto-files-bill-birth-certificates-without-expiration
Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto has filed a bill seeking to give "lifetime validity" to birth certificates, his office said on Saturday, July 20. 
In filing the bill, Recto said he wanted to end the practice of government and private offices requiring applicants for documents, permits, services, or jobs, to provide recently issued birth certificates. 
Under the proposed bill, a "birth certificate certified and issued by the PSA [Philippine Statistics Authority] shall not expire and shall be considered valid at any time.”
He said to the credit of the PSA, “it has never been remiss in explaining that birth certificates it has issued have no expiry dates, but this assurance remains unheeded in many offices which continue to require that the submitted birth certificate was issued within the past 6 months." 
Recto said Filipinos shound not incur unnecessary expenses and go through the trouble of applying for a new birth certificate.  
(The birth certificate is not food or sardines that go bad. It's sad that so many offices require newly acquired birth certificates, which is another burden on applicants.) 
Only a law, said Recto, would stop “an unnecessary, expensive, and oppressive” requirement.
The senator also urged the government to persuade foreign embassies in the country to stop asking visa applicants for birth, marriage and other PSA-issued certificates issued only in the past 6 months.
Let's cut right to the heart of the matter. If procuring new birth certificates and marriage licenses and other documents every time one applies for a job or a passport or a visa or anything else where those documents are required is expensive and oppressive the only ones to blame are Filipinos themselves. In the Philippines there is a culture of fraud which permeates the entire nation. Ground Zero is Recto University in Manila.

http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/152690/recto-university-you-name-it-they-have-it/
From an ID card to a driver’s license, thesis paper, receipt, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) red ribbon, diploma or any other document, you can get it here. One can order these items for anywhere between P200 and P1,500 and collect it after two hours at most. But of course, it’s fake. 
Claro M. Recto Avenue, known as “Recto University,” is a one-stop shop not only for students in Metro Manila but also for those from the provinces who need documents for a job. 
A year-round bestseller is the Land Transportation Office (LTO) driver’s license, which costs P500. Joey explained that they already have blank IDs ready to be filled up, whether it be a university or government ID. 
Another popular item for sale in Joey’s stall is the fake diploma. A high-school diploma is worth P250, while a college diploma is worth P500 (larger diplomas from certain colleges cost more). 
When asked whether he has a copy of diplomas of every university in Metro Manila, he says confidently,  “Oo naman.” 
Moreover, Joey bragged, “Recto U” is not limited to the universities in Metro Manila. There also are copies of diplomas from schools as far as  Mindanao and Visayas, some of them not known to ManileƱos. 
While it seems like most items are overpriced, Joey confessed that the money is barely enough to support his family on a weekly basis. He simply acts as a runner, while the forgeries happen behind closed doors. He  gets his cut of the payment weekly (daily, if business is good). 
Moreover, the cops reportedly take a weekly cut from these payments, as well. 
“Minsan ang kinikita diyan nabibigay din sa mga police. Bawal maglagay diyan hangga’t hindi sila nabibigyan ng kotong,” he says. “Minsan zero pa isang araw, eh, walang nagpapagawa.” 
Their cut ranges from P40-P300 a week, depending on the weekly profit of the stall. 
Through the years, “Recto University” has existed and numerous raids have been conducted by the Manila Police District. Business is bad for about a week. Then people start “graduating” again from “Recto U.”
I have already written about Recto University and the culture of fraud it perpetuates so there is no need to do it again. No need to rehash what everyone knows. A quick Google search for "fake birth certificate Philippines" will quickly inform you of this matter if you are unaware of it.

Surely Senator Recto knows the problem is fraud and not that these documents expire. Surely he knows that government agencies and private businesses are only safeguarding themselves. Surely he knows that his bill will make fraud much more easy. So what is the point of his bill?  It's just a whitewash to make it appear red tape has been cut and the government is now working in the best interests of Filipinos. But preventing fraud is certainly in the best interest of Filipinos which is why recently issued documents are usually required.

Recto University is not the only place fraudulent documents can be obtained but it is the most famous. So when will new Manila Mayor Isko Moreno shut the place down? That will not be as easy as driving away vendors from the main streets because the cops get a big cut of the profits. Recto University is still in operation as just a few days ago 22 forgers were arrested.
https://journal.com.ph/news/metro/22-forgers-nabbed-recto-university-raid
AGENTS of the National Capital Region Police Office yesterday raided several known fake diploma mills known as “Recto University” in Sta. Cruz, Manila, and arrested 22 persons for  manufacturing  counterfeit public documents. 
NCRPO director Major General Guillermo Lorenzo T. Eleazar said the suspects were found either owning or maintaining stalls and other establishments along the stretch of Quezon Boulevard in Sta. Cruz which are known for producing fake diplomas, transcript of records, Voter’s ID, driver’s license, passport, birth certificates and Social Security System IDs. 
Eleazar said he ordered the raid following of persistent complaints about the presence of document counterfeiters that openly ply their trade between Claro M. Recto and Rizal Avenue in Sta. Cruz, Manila. 
He said anyone can acquire fake diplomas for P500 or more depending on the type of university. The suspects can also manufacture counterfeit passports provided they have the original. 
The presence of these ‘fake diploma mills’ have also prompted calls for new Manila Mayor Isko Moreno to order an honest-to-goodness campaign in the area.
Leave it to Senator Recto to whitewash the problem, exemplified by Recto University, as one of inconvenience rather than as one of fraud.

Here's a case of fraud and deceit that has to do with drugs.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1145584/nbi-agents-seize-p2m-meds-sold-in-sari-sari-store-in-iligan-city
Operatives of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), raided a sari-sari store in Purok 9, Barangay Palao here around 5 p.m. Monday, July 22, and seized various medicines worth around P 2 million. 
The store was owned by a certain Florencia Hinampas, who has been selling medicine samples and prescription drugs for about four years already, according to lawyer Abdul Jamal Dimaporo, NBI-Iligan head. 
Dimaporo said the operation stemmed from a request by courier company Air 21 to have its delivery personnel investigated for several instances of lost medicine shipment. 
The local franchisee of Air 21 has been facing numerous complaints from pharmaceutical distributors about missing shipments. This has alarmed Air 21 as its clients have refused to pay for the courier cost of the missing shipments. 
Ilian Macala, the franchise owner of Air 21 in Iligan, said he lost almost P500,000 from their clients who refuse to pay because the shipments were not delivered to them. 
One company, Boehringer Ingelhem (Philippines) Inc., complained about undelivered medicines for diabetes. 
Dimaporo said that the NBI was able to trace the missing shipments to Hinampas’ sari-sari store, sold to it by Air 21’s delivery personnel, 42-year old Jalil Bangcola
The said store has been selling prescription drugs and drug samples at prices lower than in pharmacies, Dimaporo added. 
After the raid, Bangcola admitted to two instances when he sold the medicines shipped through Air 21 to Hinampas, the first being sometime in March this year. 
He said the need to provide for his family pushed him to do the act. 
Hinampas admitted to being in the business of selling prescription drugs and medicine samples through her sari-sari store for four years now but said she did not know she is violating the law. 
During Monday’s raid, the store was manned by Hinampas’ nephew, Dindo Ebarle, who has attended to the store for some two years now. 
Ebarle revealed that the store’s supply of medicine samples come from medical representatives who offered him their horde of sample medicines, which he can sell at a competitively low price. 
He also confirmed to have transacted with Bangcola.
(These medicines for high blood, for diabetes, these antibiotics. These should be used based on the proper prescription so that these are not harmful to people. Many buy here without the required prescription from a doctor.)
For four years a sari-sari store has been illegally operating as a pharmacy selling sample medicines sold to them by medical representatives and also buying medicines twice from an Air 21 courier who stole them from customers rather than deliver them. The courier says he did this because he needed to provide for his family. Now he will not be able to provide for his family at all since he will be in jail and likely never able to obtain a job again.

How was this place able to operate for four years with impunity? Is it likely that no one in authority, the police or barangay officials, was aware that this sari-sari store was operating illegally as a pharmacy? With many buying there it is not likely. Possible but not likely. And what about the medical representatives? They are supposed to give those medicines to doctors and hospitals. By selling them cheaply to a sari-sari store they are guilty of fencing. How many other sari-sari stores are  illegally operating as pharmacies after buying fenced goods from medical representatives?

Allow me to end this article the same way I ended my previous article about Recto University.

"The foundations of this nation are rotten to the core. At surface level everything looks white and beautiful. But inside are dead men's bones and every sort of filth. A nation cannot be built on fraud. There must be trust. What kind of nation is it when you can't trust anyone and everything is a lie?"

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Lechon!!!!

If you live in the Philippines or are visiting the Philippines then you either have or will inevitably be chowing down on lechon. It's the national food. Rice, Red Horse, and lechon. That's what Pinoys live on. But have you ever considered the process of how that tasty pork makes its way to your plate? Let me show you.

First of all you need a pig.  Can't make lechon without a pig.


That's a right fat looking oinker going on the last tricycle ride he will ever take. Those two gentlemen are delivering that pig to a house where a fiesta will be had and a pig is needed to feed all the guests.

Once the pig arrives he has to be killed. Simply plunge a knife into his throat and drain him of his life. After that he must be washed and gutted. Slash open the abdomen and remove all the entrails and replace them with spices like lemongrass and garlic and whatever secret combination your family might have on hand. Then sew him up and shove a pole right through his mouth and out his anus and you are ready to go.






While you were getting the pig ready hopefully someone else was preparing the fire pit where he is to be roasted. 


That may not look like much but it will get the job done. After two hours the pig corpse should almost be transformed into tasty lechon. 


Notice the pool of pig juice in the ash pit. Hungry yet?


The next step after the lechon is fully cooked and ready to eat is to box it up for the fiesta.  When it's party time, eat and enjoy. Don't forget the gravy.



If you ever wondered how a pig becomes lechon now you know!

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Martial Law: Hiking the Ante

Cheap Trick wrote the song Surrender which has the following lyrics:
Father says your mother's right  
She's really up on things 
Before we married Mommy served 
In the WACs in the Philippines
Neat, huh? I do believe this is the only rock 'n' roll song which mentions the Philippines. The WACs were the Women's Army Corps which operated until 1978. You can read all about them here. I would love to tell you all what that lyric means but that is not why we are here. Instead we are going to talk about a different surrender. 
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1075178
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1075236

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1075304
Many NPA members continue to surrender to the government. Is this a good thing or is this a bad thing? It's kind of both. It's good they are surrendering but it's not good that instead of being held liable for their crimes they will be receiving so many benefits or as Duterte calls them gifts "from the Filipino, paid by the people’s taxes."

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1143009/duterte-hikes-ante-for-communist-rebel-surrenderers
President Rodrigo Duterte hiked the ante for surrendered communist rebels and promised more benefits to those who were already given houses. 
Speaking at the turnover of houses to former rebels in the 3-hectare Freedom Residences in Barangay Cuambogan, the President urged rebels to rebuild their lives. 
“We have been at war for 53 years,” the President said. “Tell those fools who are still in the mountains to stop because the government has wasted billions on this war.” 
“Do it while I am still in the position because after I’m gone and you’re still there, life would be very difficult for all of you,” the President said. 
At the same time, he urged the surrendered rebels not to sell the houses that the government has given them or he will crush their faces. 
“Were all of you here given a house? How much will you sell it for? Don’t give that to other people, OK? Or else I will crush your faces,” the President said. 
The 34 housing units he distributed are part of 60 homes within the site reserved for surrendered communist rebels by the National Housing Authority (NHA). 
Originally earmarked for soldiers and policemen, the NHA, through Administrative Order No. 10, reallocated the housing units at Freedom Residences to rebel returnees. 
Duterte said the government gave them the houses so they could send their children to school, but he noted that the resettlement site was some distance from the city. 
“I’ll buy you a truck because it’s too far [to Tagum from] here … I’ll provide the transpo,” the President said, adding that the former rebels should gain skills for their “new struggle.” 
“Go back to school, struggle to live,” he told the rebels as he ordered Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (Tesda) chief Isidro Lapena to put up a skills training center right within the site. 
“This would be a gift from the Filipino, paid by the people’s taxes, so take care of it,” he said.
Duterte might be right in saying that after he is gone life will be more difficult for NPA members. He is an admitted friend of the communists on record admonishing people to pay NPA taxes and even giving them millions himself. The level of irony in the name of these housing units, Freedom Residences, is astonishing seeing as they were earmarked for AFP and PNP members but are now being given to rebels.  Would they really sell them or give them away to others? 

Exterior

Interior
These houses look pretty nice. Rather swanky. It seems they come fully furnished which is a big plus. Duterte seems to be enjoying that comfy couch and the big TV. No wonder he would be wary that some of the surrenderees might give away their houses or sell them. They could make quite a few  million pesos. How many shanty dwellers would appreciate such living quarters? But while shanty dwellers with several children trying to make their way selling fruits and snacks are taxpayers they aren't former rebels so they get nothing.

All those surrenderees makes the DILG believe that the communist insurgency will be over within two years.  Which is about the end of Duterte's presidency. How convenient.
http://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2019/07/19/govt-on-pace-to-end-npa-insurgency-in-2-years-dilg/
More and more local government units are flexing their muscles against the New People’s Army as shown by resolutions condemning the rebel group. 
According to the data from the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), there were already 272 LGUs that have passed resolutions declaring the NPA persona non grata. 
Secretary of Interior and Local Government Eduardo AƱo, during a press briefing on Wednesday afternoon in The Royal Mandaya Hotel, said that since the implementation of Executive Order 70, the government has taken massive steps in ending the decades-old conflict. 
“We already adopted a whole of nation approach along with all national government agencies led by the President,” he said, adding that the LGUs, AFP and the PNP are also supporting the initiative. 
The fact that 272 LGUs have declared the NPA persona non grata is a manifestation that the strategy is working. “So the President was right in saying that in two years we will finish this (insurgency),” he added. 
Earlier, two barangays in Paquibato District have declared the communist NPA persona non grata.
Does the NPA really care if these LGUs have condemned them as persona non grata? How much stock can really be put into those resolutions as proof that the insurgency is on the wan? Sure it appears that many are surrendering but how many continue to join and how many still remain? 

Muslims terrorists also continue to surrender and avail of government benefits.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1075439
After a weeklong negotiation, five members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) surrendered to military authorities in Talitay, Maguindanao on Thursday and handed over assorted high-powered firearms.  
“The former BIFF rebels decided to go back to the fold of the law because of the hardships they experienced in fighting government forces and also due to their desire to live normally as farmers and fishermen together with their families,” he said in a statement. 
After their surrender, the former BIFF fighters received livelihood and housing assistance to help them start a new life.
How does one mentally go from being a terrorist to being a farmer or a fisherman? They will receive money and housing assistance of course and all at the expense of the Filipino as Duterte says. "A gift from the Filipino, paid by the people's taxes."  It's not even a sick joke, it's just sick. These men will never be held accountable for their crimes against the people yet the people will be paying their way. Blasting soldiers with a rifle one day, blasting fish with dynamite the next. 

Perhaps the biggest deal for Muslim terrorist surrenderees is that offered to the MILF and MNLF.

https://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1850/govt-to-waive-restrictions-for-moro-combatants-who-will-opt-to-become-cops--soldiers
A report by Mindanews Monday, says that the government will waive the height, age and educational requirements for combatants of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) who want to become police or army troopers, top national and regional government officials confirmed over the weekend. 
“MILF members will be given priority in the hiring process for security forces in the newly-created Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM)”, OPAPP Sec. Carlito Glavez, Jr. said. 
In the same report, Galvez particularly cited the Police Regional Office-BARMM, 6th Infantry Division (ID) based in Maguindanao, 1st ID based in Zamboanga del Sur and 11th ID based in Sulu would give priority in the hiring process to qualified Moro combatants, including members of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF). 
“We will write the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) and the PNP (Philippine National Police) that qualified applicants coming from MILF and MNLF communities be given preference as part of community policing and the normalization process,” Galvez told MindaNews in a text message. 
In terms of the waived educational attainment, undergraduate Moro combatants hired as state troopers should finish a degree within 15 years of service, Galvez said as quoted by Mindanews. 
Galvez, BARMM interim Chief Minister Ahod Ebrahim and Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo AƱo had discussed the matter of foregoing some requirements for Moro combatants to become members of government forces. 
Ebrahim told MIndanews in a text message in Filipino “It is not an integration (of Moro combatants into government ranks) but a normal process. Part of the (peace) agreement allows the waiving of some requirements to accommodate more qualified applicants,” 
Waiving the height, age, and education requirements to become a police officer or join the army means short, old, and dumb MILF and MNLF terrorists will now be eligible to join the security forces. The same terrorists who brutalised Mindanao will become the security forces of the BARMM charged with keeping the peace. They will still have their weapons but their titles will change from terrorist to PNP officer or AFP soldier. And that is part of the normalisation process which most people do not know about.

This waiving of requirements pertains to both the MILF and the MNLF. Since the MNLF is not a party to the BARMM agreement does this perhaps have anything to do with Duterte's recent meeting with Misuari on July 10th?

https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/07/10/duterte-misuari-meet-in-palace-for-third-time/
President Duterte met for the third time with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founding chairman Nur Misuari in MalacaƱang Tuesday. 
While MalacaƱang has yet to release details of the meeting, official photos showed Duterte and Misuari in an embrace as Cabinet members stood by.
No details of the meeting have been released which makes this meeting ripe for speculation. Imagine the leader of a nation meeting with a terrorist he considers his friend and not divulging to the people what they discussed. That is exactly what happened here.

What it boils down to is that all these freebies being paid for by taxpayers and given to surrendering terrorists as well as allowing MILF and MNLF terrorists to join the AFP and PNP is only dressing up wolves in sheep's clothing.  Instead of actually ending the insurgency by destroying the terrorists and rebels the government believes it can waste taxpayer money by doling out money and houses and transforming killers into farmers.

It's all a cheap trick!

Monday, July 22, 2019

Hi, my name is...5

Some of these people are dying to meet you! Say hello and be nice.


Hi, my name is, Teodoro Mejares.  I am 53 years old but sad to say I had to bail myself out of jail over an illegal possession of a gun charge. I paid my fine and was on my way home with my wife and grandchild when a motorcycle rode up and stopped in front of me. I knew what was about to happen and I pleaded with the assassins to spare my life but they shot me dead anyway.





Hi, my name is REDACTED. I am a German living in Lapu-Lapu City and I have a dirty secret. I make child pornography. It's a family business as I use my two-year old son in some of the videos and images I make. The Australians found my stash back in 2017 and since then they have been keeping an eye on me. Today it all came to a head when with the coordination of the PNP and German authorities I was busted thus spelling the end of my career as a pornographer.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/235196-german-trafficker-arrested-lapu-lapu-city-cebu-july-2019

Hi, my name is Jerry Brown but you can also call me Jerry Rockstone.  I am an ex-U.S. Marine and all I need is a little bit of money.  Not much. Just enough for me to retrieve my luggage from storage. It's very nice luggage. $150,000 nice. What's that you say? My accent? It's American because I'm an American. You don't believe me? No it's definitely not a Liberian accent because I'm an American and I really am an ex-Marine. And my name is certainly not Justin Wisdom Barlee. I'm Jerry. Call me Jerry. Now about that $150,000...can you help a brotha out? Hey where are you going! I am not trying to scam you. Promise!

https://philippineslifestyle.com/us-marine-fraud-pasay-city/

Hi, my name is Eduardo Dizon and I am a radio journalist. Ever since I started speaking out against the KAPA investment scheme I have been receiving death threats. I even reported these threats to the police. What can they do anyway? Well I was driving home when several men on motorcycles pulled up and fired at my car killing me pretty much instantly. Lucky me I have become the 13th journalist killed since Duterte took office.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/07/12/1934113/kidapawan-radio-commentator-shot-dead

Hi, my name is Manuel Tan. I run a hardware store in Tacoloban City. As a Chinese businessman I am always working which is why I arrived early at my store on Sunday morning. As the guard was opening the gate three men approached my vehicle and fired at me. Then they boarded their motorcycle and got away. Just goes to show that having a security guard isn't a guarantee you won't be assassinated. 


https://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/1814196

Hi, my name is Jesus de Guzman. I was driving to church when all of a sudden a fat guy in a green jacket on a motorcycle comes speeding up and fires at me. As I was breathing my last a priest approached the car to administer the last rites but he was shooed away by the cops. Now my soul won't be able to rest in the next life.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/metro/700941/one-dead-in-shooting-incident-on-osmena-highway-in-makati/story/

Hi, my name is....  I am a business man from Zamboanga. Only July 8th I was kidnapped by 5 armed men and was held captive in Basilan for 48 hours. Eventually I was released when I promised to pay my abductors P15,000. But actually.....I lied. I made it all up. I just wanted to get the attention of my children. They don't pay me much attention anymore.  Hopefully they will visit more regularly...if the cops don't throw me in jail for wasting their time and resources.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1142065/zambo-businessman-fakes-own-abduction-to-get-familys-attention

Hi, my name is Rempel Joe M. Senados. I was driving along on my motorcycle when another motorcycle with two men pulled up beside me. One of the riders pull out a gun and shot me dead. For what reason? I don't know. Does it matter? Just put my name down as another victim of motorcycle assassins.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1142836/man-shot-dead-in-surigao-city

Hi, my name is Gerald Reparip. I was invited to a birthday party at an abandoned building. Sounds creepy right? Don't worry the people throwing the party are also the caretakers of the building. We had a grand time and there was a lot of drinking. I got very drunk and before I knew it I was raping a one year old little boy. Caught up in passion I choked the life out of him as well. I don't know what to say except I got drunk. It wasn't me it was the Red Horse. I have a seven year old boy myself but now he will have to do without me.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1142755/man-admits-raping-killing-1-year-old-boy-in-makati

Hi, my name is Romeo Entrina Lupida Jr.  After I parked my motorcycle a car crashed into me and dragged my body for 30 meters and then sped off! There were plenty of witnesses but nobody recorded the license plate number and nobody recorded it on their phone! How about that? Everything gets documents on cellphones these days except my death.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1143248/man-dies-after-being-hit-dragged-by-car-in-makati

Hi, my name is Joel Aquino. If anyone knows how ironic life can be it's me. While attending a relative's funeral two men rode up on a motorcycle and shot me dead. Life doesn't get more stupid than that. My death is no doubt due to the fact that my name was on the barangay's drug watchlist.

Hi, my name is Enrique Buenaflor. I have a friend named Franklin Andaya who I was bullying. You know how guys can be.  It's just banter.  But he took it to heart and was really upset about what I said. It was about 2:30am when I was asleep on the sidewalk that he hacked me to death. The whole thing was caught on CCTV but don't expect that to be uploaded to the internet anytime soon.

Sunday, July 21, 2019

How Many People Have Died As A Result of Duterte's Drug War?

How many people have died as a result of Duterte's drug war? That is not as straightforward a question as you may think. What does it mean exactly? What is being asked? Are we asking how many have died as a result of police operations? Are we including how many have died as a result of vigilantes? Are we asking how many drug dealers and users have died? Or are we asking about innocent bystanders as well? It all depends on who you ask.


The official government tally as of July 2019 is exactly 5,526.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1143058/pdea-drug-war-death-toll-now-over-5500-arrests-reach-193000
The number of drug suspects killed in anti-drug operations has reached 5,526, data from the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) showed Thursday. 
Another 193,063 drug personalities, meanwhile, have been arrested in 134,583 operations conducted nationwide. 
The data which covered July 2016 until June 2019 were disclosed during the Real Numbers PH presentation that aims to clarify data on the drug war, amid the 27,000 deaths that human rights groups allege could be related to the drive against the illegal drug trade. 
This also clarifies the 6,600 deaths earlier reported in the unofficial data of the Philippine National Police (PNP). This earlier figure has not yet been verified with PDEA.
The PDEA says only 5,526 people have died as a result of the drug war. But they are only counting deaths from police operations. This number is also lower than the number PNP Chief Albalyde gave just a day earlier which the PDEA calls "unofficial data!" The data from the PDEA is dated July 18th.  Let's go back to one day before, July 17th.

https://twitter.com/cnnphilippines/status/1151672574297853952/video/1

You must go to the link and watch that brief clip. PNP Chief Albayalde quotes from PNP statistics and gives a very specific number which the PDEA contradicts the next day. Not only do they contradict it but they call it "unofficial data" even though it is official PNP data! This official PNP data was confirmed just a month earlier on June 18th, 2019.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/06/19/1927750/drug-war-death-toll-now-6600-pnp
At least 6,600 suspected drug offenders have been killed in police operations since President Duterte took office in 2016, the Philippine National Police (PNP) reported yesterday.
Maj. Gen. Ma-o Aplasca, chief of the PNP Directorate for Operations, said the suspects were killed in alleged shootouts with police officers from July 1, 2016 to May 31, 2019. Aplasca presented the report during a command conference at PNP headquarters at Camp Crame in Quezon City. 
The report said 240,565 suspected pushers and users were arrested in the same period. PNP chief General Oscar Albayalde presided over the meeting attended by regional police commanders and heads of national support units.
6,600 is official PNP data. Was it just a joke? Why should we disbelieve them when they are at the forefront of the drug war? Surely their numbers are as good as gold? It is very believable that the number was 6,600 at the end of May and increased to 6,739 a month later. This is still 1,000 more deaths the the official PDEA figure. Why the difference? Why do the PNP and PDEA contradict one another?

Two months before that in April Ateneo University released their findings and came up with a comeptley different number.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1111203/academe-led-database-over-7000-suspects-killed-in-3-year-drug-war
More than 7,000 drug suspects—mostly poor, male breadwinners from Metro Manila—have been shot dead during the course of the Duterte administration’s three-year war on drugs, according to Drug Archive, an independent listing of alleged extrajudicial killings nationwide. 
The Ateneo School of Government on Friday released the updated number of drug-related killings from the Drug Archive, the academe-led database prepared by Ateneo de Manila University, De La Salle University and the University of the Philippines, which was launched in 2017.
7,000 is more than the PDEA and PNP's official tallies.  How is it that their numbers are more than the official government numbers but less than those of various human rights organisations which allege many more deaths have occurred? How is it that the Durg Archive, which is "compiled and validated through news reports," records 7,000 deaths between May 2016 and December 2018 but Rappler reported 7,000 deaths back in 2017?

https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/inside-track/180831-aguirre-drug-war-deaths-7000
Rappler, along with other news outfits, presented a tally of 7,000 deaths as of April 2017 but clarified that the number is cumulative of all the deaths linked to the war on drugs. They are both deaths from legitimate police operations and deaths from vigilante-style or unexplained killings.
Rappler's 7,000 includes deaths from police and assassins. But so does the Drug Archive.
Most of the reported killings -- 4,152 people or 59 percent of the total -- involved police operations, while 2,469 individuals or 35 percent were "killed by assailant." A relatively small fraction, 402 people making up 5.7 percent, consisted of bodies discovered or found. 
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/692540/over-7-000-drug-related-killings-as-of-dec-2018-ateneo-policy-center/story/
It is the tally of those deaths, deaths from assassins and unexplained killings, that have caused a lot of the confusion over the official kill count. The official terms used for such deaths related to the drug war but not as a result of police operations are "Death Under Investigation" and "Homicide Cases Under Investigation." It is the number of those deaths that have pushed the kill count to over 20,000.

https://www.bworldonline.com/bachelet-phl-drug-war-not-a-model-by-any-country/
“The drug policies in place in the Philippines, and its lack of respect for rule of law and international standards, should not be considered a model by any country,” she later added. 
Sought for comment, MalacaƱang said on Thursday that the figures Ms. Bachelet was citing on the number of drug-related deaths at 27,000 was wrong. 
“The problem with that statement coming from that UN official is that… she relies on what she receives (as) information coming from the critics and the detractors of the administration. And we have been saying that this information is wrong. Like, for instance, when she claims that there were 27,000 deaths, the official count is only 5,000,” presidential spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said during a Palace briefing. 
These numbers are from March 2019. Bachelet says 27,000 Panelo says 5,000. Where did she get the number 27,000 from?  Official government statistics of course.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2018/06/11/1823545/pnp-22983-deaths-under-inquiry-drug-war-launched
The Philippine National Police (PNP) has recorded a total of 22,983 cases of killings that were classified as deaths under inquiry (DUI) since President Duterte launched the war on drugs. 
In a report, the PNP Directorate for Investigation and Detective Management (DIDM) said at least 33 persons were killed daily from July 1, 2016 until May 21 this year. 
Earlier, Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Martin Andanar said the #RealNumberPH was the consolidated numbers in the administration’s accomplishment against illegal drugs.  
These are real numbers that we need to know, the others are either false, misinformation or fake,” he said.
Those numbers are from May 2018 so of course they are less than any numbers from 2019. What's important to note is that PCOO Secretary Andanar tells us that #RealNumbers PH is the official tally. But does the PCOO really believe that? No. They don't.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1075130
The Presidential Communications Operations Office (PCOO) on Tuesday said the total number of homicides cases under investigation (HCUIs), under the "Fighting Against Illegal Drugs" chapter in its 2017 accomplishment report, were included to create a distinction on the number of deaths that were all related to the administration's anti-illegal drugs operations.  
"We included the figures on homicide cases under investigation when we published real numbers to make it clear that there is a different number which is directly related to deaths during drug operations since the opposition had been insisting on the numbers most convenient for them to push their political agenda," Assistant Secretary Marie Rafael said in a phone interview. 
From another article we read:
The PCOO reiterated that the numbers under homicide cases under investigation (HCUI) “are not at all related to the anti-illegal drugs campaign.” 
“We are not contradicting these data; in fact, we have been updating these data. May we reiterate that these homicide cases under investigation are not at all related to the anti-illegal drugs campaign,” PCOO said. 
HCUI may have resulted out of road rage, land dispute, business rivalry, family dispute, love triangle, crimes of passion or politics, what may be considered as drug-related incidents are those where the victim is killed by non- government elements because he/she is an alleged informant or the victim is killed and/or raped and killed by a person who uses drugs,” it added.
If HCUIs are not related to the drug war then why include them in that data?  Here is the controversial page in question from The Duterte Administration Year-End Report 2017 Key Accomplishments report.

https://www.foi.gov.ph/requests/aglzfmVmb2ktcGhyHgsSB0NvbnRlbnQiEVBDT08tMzM2Mzg4NTUyMDEyDA

No reasonable reading of this report would lead one to believe that the 16,355 HCUIs are anything but related to the drug war. The numbers are on a page titled "Fighting Illegal Drugs." If people are confused about the #RealNumbers the PNP have themselves to blame for appending the dubious label  "Deaths Under Investigation" to unsolved homicides and including those numbers in the drug war data.

So it's entirely disingenuous when PNP Chief Albayalde mocks those who use official data from #RealNumbers.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1140970/albayalde-dares-rights-groups-name-all-27000-people-killed-in-drug-war
(Can we have a list of names of these 27,000 deaths that they always bring up? Show us the list, the names, and we will gladly investigate all of these if those numbers are true.)
Has anyone presented a list of the names of the dead? I don't think so. But dear readers I happen to have a list of the names of all the people who have died in the drug war using official PNP and PDEA data. Here they are:






That's all of them. Where are the names you ask?  Well you see names belong to people and no people have died during the drug war because drug users and dealers are not people!

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/867331/criminals-are-not-human-aguirre
“The criminals, the drug lords, drug pushers, they are not humanity. They are not humanity,” Aguirre told reporters when asked to comment on the Amnesty report. 
“In other words, how can that be when your war is only against those drug lords, drug addicts, drug pushers. You consider them humanity? I do not.”
https://news.mb.com.ph/2018/02/10/sotto-are-drug-pushers-and-users-part-of-humanity/
“Ang tingin ko dun pa lang sa charge, hindi pwede, eh. Pag sinabi mong ‘crimes against humanity,’ eh sino ba yung humanity na binabanggit?…Humanity ba ang drug pusher at mga abusadong drug user (I think that the charge can’t be. When you say ‘crimes against humanity,’ who is the humanity being mentioned? Are drug pushers and stubborn drug users considered part of humanity)?” Sotto said in a radio interview this afternoon. 
Sotto continued on, saying “Kung sagot nila oo, aba, eh isa sila run o suportado nila ang mga yun (If their answer is yes, then they’re either one of them or they support them).”

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/810395/junkies-are-not-humans
“That’s why I said, ‘[W]hat crime against humanity?’ In the first place, I’d like to be frank with you, are they (drug users) humans? What is your definition of a human being? Tell me,” he said.
The numbers may vary on how many have been killed in the drug war but it is a fact that since drug users and drug dealers are not human no people have died as a result of Duterte's drug war.

Saturday, July 20, 2019

Picture of the Week: Dog on a Tricycle

Look at this dog.  Just look at him.


Look at how he is balanced on the back seat of the tricycle. He is not tied up. He is not sitting down. He is standing up. He is not secure. Any false move and he is dead. But does he care? Probably not.  I bet he loves the wind in his face. Does his owner care? Obviously not. Or else he would have secured the dog. At least the woman has a nice seat.

Hopefully the dog made it safe to wherever they were going.