Philippine police extorted money after murdering S. Korean man
PHILIPPINE police kidnapped and murdered a South Korean businessman, then led his wife to believe he was alive for months to extort money from her, authorities said yesterday.
The killing is the latest in a long series of criminal acts by the Philippine police force, regarded as one of the nation’s most corrupt institutions.
The man disappeared from his home in the northern city of Angeles in October last year, and his wife initially paid a ransom of 5 million pesos (US$100,000), national police spokesman Dionardo Carlos said.
However, the man was strangled to death and burned to ashes in a crematorium on the day he was abducted, the South Korean foreign ministry said, citing a Philippine government report.
The crematorium was owned by a former police officer, the ministry said.
The South Korean government identified the man only by his surname of Ji and said he was in his 50s. Philippine media said he was a businessman who had been living in the Philippines since 2008 and had been working for a manpower company.
South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se demanded answers after receiving a phone call from Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay to inform him of the murder.
“Minister Yun, expressing grave shock over the implication of Philippine police officers in the case, asked that the Philippine government get to the bottom of the case and bring those responsible to justice,” a foreign ministry spokesman said.
Ricky Santa Isabel, one of the officers accused of going to Ji’s house and abducting him, surrendered this week, according to Carlos.
He said another two officers who went with him to the house, as well as their superior, were under investigation.
All four accused officers were from the Anti-Illegal Drugs Group based at national police headquarters in Manila, Carlos said.
He said a retired police officer was also believed to be involved but had fled to Canada, and that there were South Korean accomplices. Carlos did not elaborate on the identities or actions of the South Korean suspects.
Santa Isabel and his two colleagues went to Ji’s house on the pretext of a drug raid, according to Carlos.
The abductors demanded from Ji’s wife a ransom of 8 million pesos on October 30, 12 days after he was killed, according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper, which first reported the news.
It said that she paid 5 million pesos, but the kidnappers then demanded another 4.5 million pesos and continued to say he was alive.
Carlos said the problem of kidnappings for ransom by corrupt police had existed for a long time.
“It turned out it was an old modus operandi where bad cops claim there is a drug raid and turn it into a kidnap for ransom,” Carlos said.
At least 167 policemen are being investigated for being involved in money-making rackets, some under the cover of the drug war, Metro Manila police chief Oscar Albayalde said.
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