By Mortz C. Ortigoza
In the last Monday’s
press conference laced with humors and innuendos, presumptive president Rodrigo
Duterte bared the probable heads of cabinets and the chief of the Philippine
National Police.
Although the top honcho of the PNP is equivalent to a bureau chief, the police organization
is a powerful agency that would play a vital role in Duterte’s knuckle duster fight against notorious criminals.
He cited Chief
Superintendents Ramon Apolinario and Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa and Senior Supt.
Rene Aspira as probable chief of the PNP.
Chief Superintendent
and Senior Superintendent, to the uninitiated on the rankings of the former
Philippine Constabulary after it “broke-away” from the Armed Forces of the
Philippines in January 29, 1991 through Republic Act 6975, are the equivalent of
military ranks of Brigadier General and Colonel.
“I asked them to talk among themselves since
they were my chiefs of police and they have sterling records during their
stints in Davao City,”
the president-elect said to that effect.
When I asked my
sources from the police, who are alumni of the Philippine Military Academy
(PMA), if the trio are “mistah” or classmates at the PMA as mentioned by Duterte
and who would be the next chief of the PNP among them after Director
General Ricardo Marquez submitted his courtesy resignation, I was told that
Apolinario is a member of PMA Class 1985 while dela Rosa and Aspira are part of
PMA Classes 1986 and 1987, respectively.
Shoo-in
“Who do you think would be the shoo-in?” I posed to one of my sources.
Before he gave me a
direct answer, he told me that General Apolinario even if he is a member of Class
1985 will retire on 2019 while dela Rosa will retire on 2018.
“Bato joined the PMA older than his classmates
thus he will retire upon reaching the compulsory retirement age of 56 two years
from now”.
He said that if the
president asked them to talk, the logical thing there is for Bato (“stone”
because of his muscular body) to assume the top plum before he bows in 2018,thereafter Apolinario
succeeds him.
My source did not tell
me when Aspira will retire.
My source told me that
the promotion for the four stars' Director General of the police is not a
problem because Duterte can promote dela Rosa to another three stars
immediately.
Bato can be promoted
to multiple stars' rank
A member of PMA 1986
told me in the past (click here):“The president can promote a colonel to one
star general, then after a week he can be a two-star general, then a week later
a three- star police general that could even bypassed those senior officers”.
“What will happen to PMA Classes 1983, 1984,
and 1985 that are still with the PNP?” I asked.
He told me some of the
members of Class of 1984 particularly would become Bato’s deputies.
“Would it not be
awkward he would be “barking” orders to the “Cows” (third year) when they were
still plebe (first year) at the PMA?” I asked.
He cited to me the
case of former PNP Chief Recaredo A. Sarmiento II, a member of PMA Class 1966,
whose deputies were Class of 1964.
“There was no problem about seniority there, PMA Class 1964 were
professional. They were soldiers who soldiered on”.
PMYer hits Class 1984
He cited however the
problem with PMA Class 1984, the adopting class of presidential and administration candidate Mar
Roxas:
Many of them
unabashedly campaign for Roxas. Many of them however left Roxas when they knew
he has no Chinaman’s chance to win the presidency.
In my earlier
interview with vice presidential bet Senator Chiz Escudero, during the time he
and presidential aspirant and Senator Grace Poe lorded the polls, Chiz told me
the following when I asked him if my source was correct that Poe would get the police honcho from
PMA Class 1987, Escudero’s adopting PMA Class:
“He is too young”.
“We have to follow the rule, PMA 1984 is the
ruling class followed by PMA classes of 1985, 1986,” he added.
It can be recalled
that Escudero angrily asked later Director General Ricardo Marquez for the
relief of Chief Superintendents Renier Idio, Bernardo Diaz and Ronald Santos –
all members of PMA Class 1984 after reporters saw them last April 2, a campaign
period, with Roxas protégée Director Generoso Cerbo, Jr. (PMA ’84), his fair
haired boy for the PNP post, in Novotel hotel at the Araneta Center in Cubao,
which is owned by the family of Roxas.
With Class 1984 being
demonized, does that mean General dela Rosa get from the “less tainted and less partisan” Class of 1985 for them to be plucked in at some powerful posts at Camp Crame?
He did not answer.
PMA Class 1986
benefits on Bato’s promotion
“How about those PMA
Class of 1986 of dela Rosa who supported other presidential candidates other
than Duterte, would they be “condemned” to perpetuity being colonels and not
promoted to become a one star general so they can be regional director, a
lucrative post especially in Luzon?”
My source told me that
they would have no problem with that. It is a PMYer's custom that
classmates help fellow classmates.
By the way, another
member of Class 1986, whom I bumped into in a mall, told me that eight of their
batch is already one star ranked.
Presently, Apolinario
is the officer-in-charge of the regional police of the Mimaropa Region, dela
Rosa is the executive officer of the Directorate for Human Resource and
Doctrine Development (he was relieved as brigade commander few days before
election day by the PNP hierarchy after he threatened to crush election
cheaters), and Aspera is the chief of staff of the PNP-Anti-Kidnapping Group.
(You can read my selected columns at
http://mortzortigoza.blogspot.com and articles at Pangasinan News Aro. You can
send comments too at totomortz@yahoo.com)