| |
PANFILO
"PING" M. LACSON
Senator of the Republic
"What
is right, must be kept right; what is wrong, must be set right."
Senator
Panfilo Morena "Ping" Lacson means everything he
says. You can trust his word. And he says what he wants to
say especially when it is the truth and it stands for what
is right.
On
occasions, his can be a sharp tongue. He means no harm. He
only wants to bring everyone to his wits and senses. There
is no body language needing mystical interpretations. There
is no doublespeak needing complex deciphering.
These
two characteristics are ingrained in the Lacson family of
Imus, Cavite. Despite its humble status, the family reared
and nurtured its children on the values of integrity and self-discipline.
Inspite
of financial hardship, Ping’s parents were grimly determined
to send everybody to school. Poor as they were, Ping’s
parents always reminded their children - "Wala kaming
maaring iwanang materyal na bagay para ipamana sa inyo maliban
sa edukasyon. Ang edukasyon ay hindi maaring mawala o agawin
ninuman. Sukdulang hindi kami kumain nang tatlong beses isang
araw, makatapos lamang kayong lahat sa pag-aaral." Aside
from being very, very honest and hardworking, Ping’s
parents were likewise gifted with determination and courage
to pursue their goal and obligations. In reverence, their
children now try their best to make their remaining years
on earth comfortable, but being very simple folks, they still
insist to live modestly in their old house in Imus, Cavite.
Ping took the family name he is carrying by heart and grew
up a very principled person.
Ping spent three years of pre-law in Lyceum of the Philippines
before a high school friend invited him to take the entrance
examination for admission to Philippine Military Academy .
His fascination with principles became more deeply embedded
at the PMA where he graduated in 1971. He nourished those
principles at the Philippine Constabulary which he joined
after graduation. He worked on them at the Metrocom Intelligence
and Security Group (1971-1986), PC-INP Anti-Carnapping Task
Force (1986-1988), as Provincial Commander of the Province
of Isabela (1988-1989), as Commander of Cebu Metrodiscom (1989-1992),
and as Provincial Director of the Province of Laguna (February
to July 1992). He would nourish the same principles at the
Presidential Anti-Crime Commission as Chief, Task Force Habagat
(1992-1995). He would live by them at the Presidential Anti-Organized
Crime Task Force as its Chief (July1998-January 2001). And
he would apply them to everyone at the Philippine National
Police Chief, PNP (November 1999-January 2001).
I.C.U.
is the simple and straightforward acronym which Ping Lacson
used to describe the ills of the police institution. In his
14-month stint as “chief PNP,” Ping, now a senator
of the realm, used to summarize the institution's malaise
as a case of the Inept, Corrupt and Undisciplined cop. For
years and years, this is exactly how the public has come to
characterize the man who is supposed to protect him from crime
and malevolence. A slothful and bumbling keystone cop, addicted
to sleaze and graft, whether lowly kotong or the more lucrative
jueteng intelihensya, or worse, wired to drug syndicates.
It was an image that had stuck in the public mind, of a protector
one does not welcome, feared not by criminals but by the victims
themselves.
So low was the PNP in public esteem that according to surveys
then, its net satisfaction rating was negative 18, cellar
dweller among government institutions. Ping went into the
lecture circuit, and admonished his men, officers as well
as lowly cops, about the evils of being I.C.U. And his antidote
was just as simple and straightforward — cops must have
Aptitude, Integrity and Discipline. A.I.D. was the medicine,
bitter though it was to many, that Lacson forced doses upon
them.
First in his
agenda was the immediate return of recovered carnapped vehicles
as well as vehicles being held as evidence. Apparently, as
a matter of practice, a number of policemen have illegally
appropriated for themselves these vehicles for operational,
and at times personal purposes. Hundreds of cars, in various
makes and colors, suddenly showed up in the police camps,
and car theft victims were delirious at recovering their possessions.
The few who dared to defy the orders were identified, arrested,
dismissed from the service and charged in court.
|
|
| |
Then he went after the kotong cops, appropriate
for the keystone variety that populated the PNP, but of
the worse kind, since they preyed on poor jeepney and taxicab
drivers as well as haulers and truckers. Subsequent arrests
reinforced the message, and kotong, scourge of the poor,
miraculously stopped. Unofficial reports have it that the
jeepney and taxi drivers increased their daily revenues
while truckers and haulers saved up to PhP 1000.00 per trip.
Restoring the "old glory of the policeman"
was foremost in Ping’s mind when he thought of the
drive against kotong cops. But Ping’s passion to rid
the poor of mulcters and tormentors can be traced back to
his younger days when his father was a driver himself and
his mother was a market vendor who sew all his clothes.
Since his youth he hated bullies especially those preying
on the hapless. Once, still in his well-ironed clothes,
the young Ping pounced on a drunk toughie much bigger than
him. Ping could no longer stand the persistent harassment
the neighborhood suffered from him.
Ping Lacson became synonymous to kotong-buster
and drivers of jeepneys and delivery trucks enthusiastically
displayed his campaign stickers along the country’s
major routes during the last senatorial election.
To impress on his officers how serious his
crusade to reform the police was, Lacson ordered them off
the golf courses during work hours. The first to receive
such orders were his own PMA classmates in the PNP hierarchy.
One ranking police officer flaunting political connections
ignored the orders and was promptly chastised. Suddenly,
the golf courses were returned to businessmen and sportsmen,
minus the ubiquitous presence of strutting officers and
their numerous bodyguards.
Then, slim Ping decreed a 34-inch waistline
max, and suddenly, pictures of huffing and puffing generals
and colonels all exorcising the bulge from their systems
caught the nation's attention. He gave his generals a deadline,
and even impossible 40-inchers forced themselves to trim.
Many grumbled at first but soon recognized the benefit to
their health and kept the good habit of keeping fit for
work even when Lacson was no longer their chief.
He enforced a strict “no-take”
policy on jueteng intelihensya or protection money, something
that incurred him the ire of unrepentant police scalawags
and their cohorts. When a certain regional commander in
Luzon played deaf to his orders, he shamed him before peers
and even a congressional committee. The guy promised “no
take” in a month's time, and he complied. Thus, even
the self-confessed jueteng bagman, Chavit Singson, could
not pin Lacson down on his tale of the ledger.
His handling of funds was exemplary, and
would make a good case study in “corporate”
governance. Only 15 percent of operating funds would be
retained at headquarters, and 85 percent to the field units.
Suddenly the mobile patrol had gasoline aplenty. The desk
officers had paper and carbon too. Even gasoline allocation
for the director general's office, which Lacson found to
be capable of running a hundred cars on a daily basis, was
downloaded to the field units. Morale was lifted. And Ping
gave them a new uniform to boot, the better to show the
public his cops had changed. Almost overnight, the image
of keystone cop was transformed into one of reliable friend.
Using transparency to cut down on graft,
he published an itemized breakdown of the PNP budget on
the internet with hotline phone numbers and e-mail addresses
so that police personnel and the public in the province
could report corrupt officials to the office of the PNP
chief. Apparently the sting worked. During his tenure, Ping
dismissed more than 2,000 police officers for violations
against the public trust.
Realizing that the PNP can not fully rely
on government to provide basic police equipment , Lacson
initiated the establishment of the PNP Foundation Incorporated.
The Foundation banked principally on the credibility restored
by Lacson and raised over one hundred sixty million pesos
from donors coming from the simplest folks to the biggest
business enterprises. It is worthy to note that the interest
generated by the PNPFI from its corpus of funds was sufficient
to provide 100 motorcycles to the PNP even a year after
Ping stepped down as Chief PNP. It is slated to provide
a hundred more within the year. The Foundation is being
managed by reputable personalities led by Congressman Gilbert
Teodoro as chairman.
In his short 14-month stint, cut short by
Edsa II, Ping was able to effect a magical turnaround in
public perception of the police institution. In the last
quarter survey for the year 2000, the Philippine National
Police had a net approval rating of positive 58, with only
11 percent of the population retaining their negative image
of the police. Never had so much been done in so little
a time.
Senator
Lacson's cardinal principle is very inspiring: What is right,
must be kept right. What is wrong, must be set right. This
is a leader principle that made him a recipient of 2 Outstanding
Achievement Medals, 5 Bronze Cross Medals, 17 Military Merit
Medals, 3 Medalya ng Kadakilaan, and 3 Medalya ng Kagalingan
Awards. In 1982 he was the PC Metrodiscom Officer of the
Year. In 1988, he received the Ten Outstanding Policemen
of the Philippines (TOPP) and PMA Alumni Achievement Award,
among others.
In academe, the AFP Command and General Staff College awarded
him with a Certificate of Academic Excellence. He earned
his Masters in Government Management from Pamantasan ng
Lungsod ng Maynila.
But
Lacson is not all work. He is a deeply involved family man.
He loves his wife Alice and children Ronald, Panfilo Jr.
and Jeric very much. As a doting grandfather, he loves his
grandchildren even more.
|
|
| |
He always
reminds his loved ones how important it is to uphold integrity
in their lives. If he is strict in requiring discipline
and uprightness among those who work under him, the stricter
he is in demanding the same from his family members.
What do the Filipino People think of him?
Very highly. As Chief, PNP, he enjoyed a very high awareness
of 93% and a high approval rating of 73% nationwide.
He has his fair share of detractors and
critics, as every good leader does. But even some of these
critics grudgingly admire - privately and openly - the seriousness
of mind, honesty of heart and strong conviction of Ping
Lacson. According to one such critic, Lacson is still the
best thing that ever happened to the Philippine National
Police and to peace and order in the Philippines.
People who believe in Ping Lacson continue
to grow in number. Many are of the belief that if he was
able to discipline the PNP, he can do wonders for the country.
Reluctantly at first, he soon decided to continue his crusade
for better public service and ran for the Senate. That was
when his sworn enemies panicked and decided to unleash their
vicious campaign to destroy his name and person.
During the last senatorial election, his
political opponents declared a state of rebellion and issued
warrant of arrest against him. They succeeded in disrupting
his campaign but failed to prevent his multitude of believers
from electing him to the Senate.
Once in the Senate, Ping immediately captured
the imagination of the people as a promising national leader.
That was the beginning of Ping’s unending struggle
to fend off various charges of impropriety that are all
designed to thwart his surging political career. The attacks
have been waged predominantly in the press quoting sources
ranging from con artists to paid propaganda hacks. “Ang
punong mabunga ang siyang binabato,” lament people
in the street.
But despite the distractions coming from
the camp of those desperately seeking his downfall, Senator
Ping Lacson buckled down to work and filed several bills
and resolutions to boost the anti-crime effort in the country.
He never wavered to live up to his reputation as a no-nonsense
public official. In the Senate he once fired and filed charges
against two of his own staff for extorting money.
The Asian Wall Street Journal, speculating
on a crime fighter getting elected President, particularly
quoted Ping, “The only way to clean up crime is to
take care of the derelicts in government.” Those words
send shivers down the spine of inept, corrupt and undisciplined
public officials who have brought misery and poverty to
the people. Coming from an acknowledged crime fighter, those
words are strong affirmation of the principle of waging
war against the very roots of crime to eliminate crime.
And from targeting kotong cops during his
PNP days, Ping advanced and trained his aim against the
biggest kotong enterprises that bleed the people dry –
the Independent Power Producers (IPPs) with their notorious
and oppressive Power Price Adjustment (PPA). He publicly
denounced the scandalous profits these companies amass at
the expense of the people. The long-suffering power consumers
suddenly found an ally who can be trusted to fight by their
side to the finish. Fast and with certainty Ping, the senator,
is learning to carry the broad struggle of the Filipinos
by heart.
So who’s afraid of Ping Lacson? Not
the drivers, not the vendors, not the hard-toiling masses,
not the concerned businessmen, not the honest and patriotic
government employees and certainly not the Filipinos who
are drained by the cycle of corruption that has plunged
the country down the pit of humiliation.
People seeking a brighter future for the
country can only chorus, "What is right, must be kept
right …What is wrong, must be set right."
The voice of the people is the voice of
God. Change for the better is within the power of the people.
It is within their collective will. Freely they must issue
the ORDER now for that change, with determination and without
fear.
|
|