I don't think I need to report it as a bunch of people beat me to it just this morning.
I don't think I need to report it as a bunch of people beat me to it just this morning.
Damn, son! Where'd you find this?
kung yang listahan na yan na mga "big fish" daw e hindi nila verified, e di lalo na yung mga small fish na 500 na ang napatay. mini-mini-miney-mo na lang ba justice system natin? pen pen de sarapen kutsilyo de almasen, kung saan tumigil ang pag-ikot ng bote siya ang taya (well, patay). e di paris na lang din sila nung mga NPA nung kasalukuyan ng purge na naganap nung late 1980s. mamaya yan may mass graves na.
May nakuryente ba? Sino ba ung sobrang atat na magpost sa list dito? Sabagay may disclaimer. Sa FB lang daw napulot.
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Duterte rejects criticism of hero’s burial for Marcos
Ako ang dyos ako ang masusunod.“I will allow the burial of Marcos in the Libingan ng mga Bayani,” Duterte said, adding that as a former president and soldier, Marcos was entitled to it.
“As a matter of fact, I voted for him during his first term,” he said.
“Kung ayaw ng ibang Pilipino fine. Mag-demonstrate, go ahead. You can use the streets, one month. [If other Filipinos oppose it, fine. Hold demonstrations, go ahead. You can use the streets for a month],” Duterte said.![]()
Watched CNN PH earlier today, and they were talking about Duterte invoking immunity as president as "unprecedented".
By that same logic, doesn't that mean that past presidents also have immunity? What's the point of charging GMA for the PCSO/fertilizer/ZTE/etc. scam, or P-Noy regarding the Mamasapano massacre kung immune naman pala sila?
What if the next president is crooked? Me immunity pa rin?
Last edited by badkuk; August 8th, 2016 at 11:08 AM.
‘Talipao, Sulu mayor’ blacklisted by Duterte died in 2013 – police
Cop on Duterte drug list died in 2013 – Davao Sur policeZAMBOANGA CITY – Mayor Benhar Tulawie of Talipao, Sulu, will not be showing up in Camp Crame to meet with Philippine National Police Director Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa. This is because Tulawie died three years ago.
Tulawie’s name was one of the local chief executives mentioned by President Duterte on Sunday as involved in the illegal drug trade.
Supt. Junpikar Sittin, former police chief of Jolo town, said Tulawie died three years ago.
Sittin said the mayor was 70 years old when he died.
Kung ayaw nyang dalawa mag pakita sa Crame eh di sundan sila ni Bato sa impyerno para patayin uli. Simple!DIGOS CITY, Davao del Sur — The provincial police command in Davao del Sur on Monday said that one of the police officers named by President Duterte as among those involved in the illegal drugs trade died in 2013.
Senior Supt. Samuel Gadingan, provincial police chief, told the Inquirer that Police Officer 3 Filomeno Toronio died of cardiac arrest while he was assigned with another police unit in Mati City in Davao Oriental. It was not clear what triggered the cardiac arrest.
He said Toronio was relieved, in 2006, from the Digos City Police Office during the leadership of then Senior Supt. Anselmo Pinili for unknown reason.
****** inang intel yan, naka ilang re-validation pa yan ha. Pusta ko ang dalawang itlog ni bato, wala din silang ebidensya sa mga ibang buhay pa sa pesteng listahan na yan.
The drug war hypocrisy | BusinessMirror
The drug war hypocrisy
THE global hypocrisy about the Duterte administration’s so-called war on drugs makes a Manila estero smell sweet by comparison. “Look at Columbia,” the local and foreign experts say. Even the government there—Columbia being the world’s largest producer of cocaine—admits it has failed. “Look at Mexico,” where 100,000 people have been killed and the drug trade is still rampant.
Apparently, these experts would have a difficult time picking an apple out of a basket of bananas. Columbia does not produce 250 tons of cocaine —50 percent of global production—for its 50 million people. The $30 billion that the Mexican crime cartels earn each year is not from selling to Mexicans but to the United States.
The Drug Policy Alliance (DPA)—a US non-governmental organization—is a leading voice against the Philippines. The DPA mission “envisions a just society in which people are no longer punished for what they put into their own bodies but only for crimes committed against others.” DPA members are certainly entitled to their opinion that it is just fine for someone to use the drug. And if, by chance, the user goes crazy and kills, at least the family of the dead can take comfort that the user will be tried for murder.
DPA is calling for the United Nations (UN) to “take immediate action against the Philippines for the hundreds of extrajudicial killings of suspected drug offenders.” Now the hypocrisy goes to biblical proportions.
Where do you think all the shabu in the Philippines comes from? From The New York Times: “Just before dawn on December 29, 2013, the southern Chinese fishing village of Boshe awoke to over 3,000 police officers who destroyed 77 methamphetamine labs, seized 3 tons of crystal meth and more than 100 tons of meth ingredients.”
The US Department of State in their 2014 annual report says, “China is one of the world’s largest producers and exporters of precursor chemicals, with approximately 160,000 precursor companies and production facilities.” China is obviously not the only trafficker, but it is unlikely that Philippine shabu is coming from Argentina, South America’s largest producer of precursor chemicals.
Go on the Internet and you can buy and legally import to the Philippines from Chinese chemical companies all you need to make shabu. Some are substitutes for the “real thing,” but the company will tell you how to alter the legal chemicals to use in meth production. The finished shabu will not be five-star but certainly good enough to sell to any pedicab driver with an extra P50.
When will the DAP suggest China be taken to the UN for facilitating the manufacture of this illegal killer drug?
The Philippine government allowed the drug problem to slowly grow and it must now be brought to an end. President Duterte said exactly what he intended to do and what the results would be. No one is happy with the killings and it is a bloodbath. But the reality is that there are actually more users of meth in the Philippines than there are in the United States (1 million).
Undoubtedly, the government is more than willing to listen to all suggestions on how to protect Filipinos from this Chinese drug menace. Suddenly, the global voices are quiet.
Congressmen, governors involved in drugs next —DILG chief
Published August 7, 2016 11:49am
By TRICIA ZAFRA, GMA News
Interior Secretary Ismael "Mike" Sueno on Sunday said more names of public officials including congressmen, governors and barangays captains, allegedly involved in the illegal drugs trade may soon be announced by President Rodrigo Duterte.
Sueno said that the names in the next announcement may include public officials in Metro Manila.
- See more at: Congressmen, governors involved in drugs next —DILG chief | News | GMA News Online
July 29th, 2016 post
Columbia
‘We’re ready to face Duterte drug probe’
LOCAL officials publicly linked by President Duterte to illegal drugs on Sunday moved quickly to clear their names, all claiming surprise and shock and even fear for their lives, given the brutality of the administration’s campaign against the narcotics trade.
Obeying Mr. Duterte’s order, they turned themselves in to police, denying they were involved in illegal drugs and saying they were ready to face investigation.
Mr. Duterte early on Sunday named 159 current and former local, military and police officials, lawmakers and judges whom he alleged were involved in illegal drugs.
Hours after the President read their names from a list of drug suspects, the officials showed up at police stations across the country or traveled to Manila to fight the charges.
First to turn up at Philippine National Police headquarters in Camp Crame, Quezon City, on Sunday morning was Mayor Cipriano Violago Jr. of San Rafael, Bulacan province.
He arrived at 8 a.m. and went straight to the major crimes investigation unit of the PNP-Criminal Investigation and Detection Group to give a statement.
Former Judge Lorinda Toledo-Mupas of the Dasmariñas City Municipal Trial Court in Cavite province arrived at about the same time, but she did not speak to reporters.
Mupas, who was sacked by the Supreme Court in 2007 for gross ignorance of the law and was perpetually barred from holding public office, is the wife of Pasay City Regional Trial Court Judge Jesus Mupas and mother of former Councilor Mark Joseph Mupas of Cavite City.
Former Mayor Rasmiya Macabago of Saguiran, Lanao del Sur province, arrived at 1:15 p.m., accompanied by her lawyer
Read more: ‘We’re ready to face Duterte drug probe’ | Inquirer News
Follow us: *inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook
It seems we have a standoff. i hope this does not get messy.
Sereno to judges: Don’t surrender to cops sans arrest warrant
If you read through the article, she cites that
- a number of the judges have no jurisdiction over drug cases(family court lang daw)
- one judge that they are currently investigating for drug links wasn't in Duterte's list
- Judge Natividad was shot dead January 2008(while boarding his car after returning from a Mercury Drug store. Task Force Natividad was formed to investigate his murder, but nothing came out of it. Police speculate that the killing was in retaliation to a civil case he presided on.)