Dont get me wrong. Were all for beefing up the morale of our national policemen, and praising them for their valorous deeds yes, they have performed gallantly in a number of conspicuous ways but the PNPs performance still leaves very much to be desired. Police Director General and Chief PNP, Arturo C. Lomibao, who has exhibited the energy to rush almost everywhere (no desk-bound Police Chief is he), has been doing his level best. But its just like the Herculean labor of cleaning out the Augean Stables. Theres too much fart and horse-dung all over the place.
The dilemma is that, after practically just a year and a half at the helm, General Lomibao may be compelled by the calendar to retire on his next birthday, this July 5th, 2006. (He was born in Mangaldan, Pangasinan, on July 5, 1950).
Unless the President does the unorthodox and unexpected, extends Lomibao as Police Chief for another two or three years, the PNP Director General is by now a "lameduck" coasting towards the end of his tenure before even having enough of an acceleration time to bring himself up to speed. The same will be true, alas, of almost any successor now in prospect to Art Lomibao. A quick in and a quick out!
At this stage, the bad eggs in the police establishment must be gleefully awaiting the coming retirement of Lomibao, so they can get a more "friendly" police boss, one who shares their shakedown sentiments and their enjoyment of the profits of racketeering. What Im trying to say is that Police Chiefs, no matter how earnest or reform-minded, come and go with such remorseless rapidity that they cannot even hope to manage to put a dent in the system.
A couple of months ago, according to the National Security Adviser, Secretary Norberto B. Gonzales, Lomibao had gone over the figures with him and said that the PNP needed at least P33 billion to modernize itself, retrain, recruit and expand its reach which includes, besides battling crime, battling insurgents like the Communist New Peoples Army.
The other day, in this corner, I reiterated that the Armed Forces could be transformed into a formidable military only by allocating the huge, one-time amount of P100 billion to bring it up to scratch creating a streamlined, well-equipped, adequately-armed, military force, which included helicopters, aircraft and naval craft, attuned to our needs in this 7,100 island archipelago.
While we're kicking these figures around, might as well put in what Education needs hold your breath: It was estimated by the DepEd that P133 billion is required, if truth be told, to upgrade our dismal educational set-up in which, by the way, by the calculation of the short-time DepEd Secretary Butch Abad (before he decamped to join the "Hyatt 10") more than 70 percent of our high school students do not even qualify for college.
Where to begin, since such substantial sums are not easily available at the same time, is the immediate problem. Each of the three choices cries out for priority and urgency. But we can tackle them only one by one. Doing all three at the same time would simply overwhelm us.
On the slopes of hesitation, however, too many a battle has been lost. No matter what: Let us begin!
Why should 15 percent of the ranks of rookie cops be reserved for the feminine gender? GMAs explanation was simplistic, though it held some sense.
She smiled as she hinted that women were kinder, gentler, etc. With more women in the police plantilla, she dimpled, "desperate housewives can now . . . what was it? . . . now Dial 117 for police assistance, confident that theyll find a friendly face at the police desk" when they get to the police station. Now, its cute to know that La Gloria, like most mortals, enjoys watching that fascinating American television series featuring the fables, follies, and foibles of Desperate Housewives in Wisteria Lane (even Laura Bush does so, by her own earlier admission), but Im not altogether sure that women are necessarily kinder to other women. On the other hand, Im no expert. To the day I die, I confess, Ill never understand them. If the Bible says that God fashioned Eve, the first woman and our world mother out of Adams rib, she and her daughters have been ribbing man ever since. (Please forgive me for that awful pun, but it was both vulgar and irresistible).
In any event: When the citizen dials 117 for police help, whats important is that help comes, not another robber, bully or hoodlum, this time in uniform.
GMA was right to indicate that our policemen must regain the peoples trust. She pledged them police patrol cars, and other equipment, to enhance police visibility, so that our citizens could look at the patrolmen on the beat and in their prowl cars and feel "safe" that their guardians of the law are guarding them.
Anyway, many grand words were expressed on the PNPs 15th anniversary yesterday. The men and women in uniform stood stolidly in the sun, absorbing the Presidents message. Lets see how this will be translated into action.
"Forty-five more are in various stages of construction and 34 more are scheduled for this quarter alone," he said. By the time he "retires" in July, he vowed, his 250-station target will be reached.
Then he retailed his own shopping list. General Lomibao disclosed that we need 50,000 more policemen, 20,000 more handguns, and 734 more police station buildings.
"We need 500 patrol jeeps and cars for our city and municipal police stations. We also need 180 troop carriers for our mobile groups in the regions and provinces to complete our mobility requirements."
"And these are just the basics," he reminded the audience in the grandstand but those remarks were obviously directed to the President.
Lomibao, alas, is racing against the clock. Over his head hangs the specter of the fact that by next years 16th anniversary commemoration, he will be long gone. This is why it is essential for him to do something for which he will be remembered.
Americas General of the Army George C. Marshall (after World War II fated to help rehabilitate and raise Europe, including defeated Germany, from the ashes under his great Marshall Plan) said the following in his September 27, 1941, address to the first graduates of the US Armys Officer Candidate Schools:
"Remember this: the truly great leader overcomes all difficulties, and campaigns and battles are nothing but a long series of difficulties to overcome. The lack of equipment, the lack of food, the lack of this or that are only excuses; the real leader displays his quality in his triumphs over adversity, however great it may be."
This was just before Pearl Harbor, the Japanese sneak attack, on December 7, 1941. Within weeks those same OCS graduates were embroiled in combat lacking equipment in an armed forces which had seen its battleship fleet destroyed at a single blow; Bataan and Corregidor conquered by the Japanese, and a war having to be fought on three continents. By the time World War II ended, with 10 million Americans under arms, the United States had assembled aside from the Russians (assisted by US Lend Lease) the mightiest army. But it was the early months that counted, with all of Marshalls doubts set aside and the "difficulties" surmounted.
Can Art Lomibao surmount his present "difficulties"? This is the challenge.