Trust our data on illegal drugs or dissolve the government -- Dela Rosa
Senator Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa said Filipinos should just dissolve the government, including the Philippine National Police (PNP), if they cannot trust the Duterte administration’s figures on its anti-illegal drugs campaign.

(Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa / Facebook page / MANILA BULLETIN)
Dela Rosa, an administration ally, made the statement as he expressed his frustration at High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet for linking the government’s campaign to the widespread killings in the country.
“If you don’t trust the PNP numbers, you dissolve the PNP. If you don’t trust the government, tanggalin ninyo ang gobyerno (remove the government),” Dela Rosa said in an interview over ANC Headstart.
“Let the human rights groups rule, sila na ang mag-rule ng ating bansa pag ganun, (They should rule if that’s what they want),” said the former PNP chief.
“Wala na tayong tiwala sa ating (We have no trust with our) government instrumentality. I-dissolve natin lahat pati gobyerno pag hindi tayo maniwala, doon tayo maniwala sa kanila. (Let’s just dissolve the government if we refuse to believe the police, let’s just trust these people),” he pointed out.
At the same time, Dela Rosa questioned Bachelet’s calls for Manila to support “international accountability measures” on the 25,000 alleged deaths under the Duterte’s bloody war on drugs.
Dela Rosa said the human rights groups has unfairly estimated the death toll on the number of drug suspects that were killed in the Philippines, saying the PNP’s official count is only about over 5,000 suspects.
“Sino siya para magsabi nang ganoon dito sa atin? Nakapunta na ba siya dito, naobserbahan ba niya kung ano'ng nangyayari dito? (Who is she to say that to us? Had she visited this country and observed what is happening here?),” Dela Rosa pointed out.
“Ang binabasehan lang niya ay iyong report na ridiculous at preposterous na report na ginagawa ng ating mga kababayan, (She is just basing her ridiculous and preposterous report from some of our people),” he further said.
Dela Rosa said he would welcome any UN representative to come to the Philippines to see for themselves and assess the country’s drug campaign.
“But it’s not for me to decide. It’s an Executive decision,” he emphasized.