The police — specifically Avelino Razon, the deputy chief of the Philippine National Police who also heads the Task Force Usig, which was formed to investigate the killings of journalists — should really stop misleading the public about the cases it has claimed to have solved. The other day, Razon said the police has solved 21 out of the 26 cases of journalist murders it was investigating.
Razon’s basis for saying that is not a resolution by the courts on these cases, which is, to most people, the only logical — and just — way to solve a crime. His basis is, at best, dubious: the police considers a case solved once it has identified a suspect. In many cases, the identity was all that was needed — it doesn’t have to be the arrest of a suspect or the filing of cases against him.
Of course, the suspects in many of the “solved” cases remain at large. And in the cases that were resolved by the court, like the case of Edgar Damalerio, we can’t really say that these have been solved because the masterminds are still out there.
Nabiktima na nga ang mga mamamahayag at ang kanilang mga pamilya, ginagago pa sila ng PNP.
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