Whether it was ransom or some other reason behind the kidnapping of Cristina Julieta Victoria, 10, and Julio Carlos Tomas, 5, the crime was an affront not only to the sensibilities of the community but was also a defiance of government.
Just a few days ago, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo proudly announced that the end was near for big-time kidnappers. Now this.
If the children of top officials and of wealthy families who can afford security details can be kidnapped with impunity, who is safe?
With the recurring involvement of military and police types in kidnapping, bank robbery and similar gun-related major crimes, we reiterate some suggestions we have made before.
Anybody who openly carries a gun must be presumed to be a soldier, a policeman or a licensed private guard. But he must be (1) on official mission and (2) in proper uniform.
Anyone not in uniform who is seen toting or brandishing a gun will be presumed to be an outlaw and may be shot outright if he resists arrest. The uniform for on-duty private guards must be starkly different from those of the military and the police.
Government agents on mission but not in uniform, such as NBI and AFP intelligence agents, must not draw their concealed weapons until needed. They must train themselves for this rule.
Civilians (those who are neither military, police or uniformed guards) who have permits to carry firearms outside residence must not display the weapons so as not to be mistaken for persons impersonating soldiers, policemen, licensed guards or government agents.
The licensed weapons of these civilians with permits to carry are to be taken out, drawn or displayed only when extremely needed under situations that will be defined in administrative orders.
Nobody who is not military, police or an on-duty guard will be allowed to wear the restricted uniforms or any facsimile thereof. The uniforms of military/police trainees (including ROTC), security guards, and the like must be redesigned so as not to be mistaken for military/police uniforms.
The cloth used for military and police uniforms may not be produced, bought/sold and tailored except for authorized military or police use.
Wearing restricted uniforms when not on duty or when not authorized must be penalized severely.
The basic idea behind all this is that when we see somebody toting a gun, we should be able to determine immediately if he is a soldier, a policeman, an on-duty agent, a licensed guard or an impersonator who must be acting with criminal intent.
In the case of the Ledesma kidnapping, witnesses and lawmen who happened to be there would have been able to react with dispatch if there was no confusion as to the status of the gunmen.
Joint statements, like that one Reyes issued with his Malaysian opposite number Najib Tun Razak during his visit in Kuala Lumpur, sometimes have tricky nuances that bind the parties in subtle ways.
For instance, in the Reyes-Najib joint statement, the two parties said, "Malaysia and the Philippines would like to see that the issue (of deportation of Filipinos) should not be sensationalized to the extent that it would jeopardize the existing good relationship between both countries."
"There is this issue of the deportees, and so we felt that this is as good as any time to visit," Reyes told reporters after holding talks with Najib.
If the Agence France Presse report on the matter is correct, we think it was careless of Reyes to have used the term "deportees" and "deportation" and thereby implied admission of the fact of deportation.
There are many terms in the dictionary that could have substituted for "deportation." Reyes should have had the sense, or at least the vocabulary, to look for another word to use both in his remarks to media and his joint statement with Najib.