Justice Secretary Leila de Lima on Wednesday said the
limited involvement of the United
States in the January 25 secret police
mission to get two wanted international terrorists holed up in Mamasapano was
covered by existing bilateral agreements and did not transgress Philippine
sovereignty.
Appearing at the House joint probe into the Mamasapano
incident, De Lima also pointed out that the U.S. participation, which was
limited to intelligence sharing and medical evacuation of wounded Special
Action Force commandos, was well within the bounds of the Constitution.
“The bottom line always is the ability of the Philippine
government to determine the extent of U.S. involvement and the full
exercise of its control in making the decisions as to what, who, when and how
of a particular operation,” De Lima told lawmakers.
“So long as these considerations are met and absolute
Philippine control is exercised all throughout, there can be no argument that
U.S. involvement has transgressed any of the constitutional and legal
boundaries on foreign participation in Philippine military and law enforcement
activities under the facts so far established in any of the investigations,”
she said.
De Lima said the presence of the American troops in Mindanao
was covered by the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and the Mutual Defense
Treaty (MDT) with the U.S.
“Foreign affairs is the primary jurisdiction and core
competence of the executive branch of government and therefore the President,
as Chief Executive, may enter into agreements that do not need concurrence of
the Senate as treaties for purposes of enhancing international cooperation in
global law enforcement, specifically against terrorist threats and especially
if such threats find sanctuary through the back doors of the country’s largely
unguarded coastal frontiers like Mindanao,” she pointed out.
The DOJ chief also cited the 2002 Supreme Court ruling in
Lim vs. Executive Secretary which, she said, “painted the allowable activities
for joint military cooperation in broad strokes.”
“It states that the VFA contains no enumeration or
limitation of what activities would be covered by the (agreement) and provides
only the broad limitations that must be approved by the Philippine government
and that they must not be inconsistent with the spirit of the agreement, which
is cooperation,” De Lima said.
In the same hearing, De Lima insisted that President Benigno
Aquino III is not covered by the chain of command within the Philippine
National Police (PNP).
“In my reading of the Constitution and law, the principle of
chain of command does not strictly apply insofar as the President is
concerned,” De Lima said, noting that President’s relationship or dealings with
the PNP is not as commander-in-chief but only as chief executive.
“It is in the same manner as the chief executive over all
executive offices and departments. We all know that in a civilian agency or in
a civilian organization, chain of command is not there,” she said.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=751375
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