No images? Click here FRONT-LINERS OF THE FAITH Nuns belonging to the Franciscan Daughters of St. Elizabeth wait for their turn to be vaccinated against COVID-19 at the Cathedral Shrine and Parish of the Good Shepherd in Barangay Fairview, Quezon City, on Saturday. The Catholic Church has recently offered to provide venues for the government’s inoculation drive. The sisters here are receiving CoronaVac shots. —Niño Jesus Orbeta WorldPolitics marring search for virus origin–WHOThe World Health Organization warned that efforts to find the COVID-19 origins were being “poisoned” by politics after the US president pursued a theory that it leaked from a Wuhan lab. Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net NewsConcepcion renews call for vaccine passesPresidential adviser Joey Concepcion renews the business groups’ call for fully vaccinated people to be issued digital passes to ease their entry into various establishments. Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19. Banner Story2 aging Red leaders shot dead at homeBy Nestor P. Burgos Jr. and Nestle L. Semilla ILOILO CITY—Two aging consultants to the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) in the aborted peace talks were killed in separate incidents on Friday night, one by assassins in Cebu and the other by the police during a raid in Iloilo. Killed in the raid was Reynaldo Bocala, 75, and his companion, Willy Epago, who allegedly put up a fight against officers who tried to serve warrants for his arrest at his house at Barangay Balabag in Pavia town, Iloilo. Bocala, husband of NDFP consultant in Panay, Maria Concepcion “Concha” Araneta, allegedly occupied various positions in the rebel movement, including deputy secretary of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) in Panay. He carried a bounty of P4.8 million on his head. In Cebu, former priest Rustico Tan, 80, was gunned down by unidentified assailants while sleeping on a hammock inside his house on Camotes Island. Tan left the priesthood several decades ago and joined the New People’s Army (NPA). He later served as peace negotiator during the administration of President Corazon Aquino. He was still an NDFP peace consultant before his death. 4 more under Du30 Since the collapse of the talks under President Duterte, four other peace consultants to the NDFP had been killed—Randall Echanis, Randy Malayao, Eugenia Magpantay and Agaton Topacio. Six others had been arrested and detained on various criminal charges—Francisco “Frank” Fernandez, Renante Gamara, Alfredo Mapano, Vicente Ladlad, Rey Casambre and Adelberto Silva. Ladlad, Casambre and Silva were among 19 people recently designated as terrorists under the antiterror law. They also include CPP founder Jose Maria Sison, who lives in exile in the Netherlands, and Rafael Baylosis, who was arrested on illegal arms possession charges which were dismissed by the court. Police Staff Sergeant Florente Gorrea, an investigator with the Camotes police, said Tan’s killing “seems” to have “something to do with personal grudge.” The CPP condemned the killings “in the strongest terms.” “It is an outrage that the fascists are targeting NDFP peace consultants who are in their senior years,” CPP spokesperson Marco Valbuena said in a statement on Saturday. The party ordered the NPA, its armed wing, “to punish the criminal perpetrators of these murders.” It pointed to Mr. Duterte and the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict as “masterminds” of the killings. ‘Clearly coordinated’ “Clearly these were coordinated at a high level with the aim of driving terror into the hearts of the people and their revolutionary forces,” the CPP said. The raid on Bocala’s home and the attack on Tan both occurred around 8:20 p.m. on Friday. The CPP said Bocala and Epago were killed “tokhang-style” as they could not have fired at the raiders because they were unarmed. The rebels’ peace consultants “are being summarily executed in line with Duterte’s the ‘take no prisoners’ fascist policy in the vain hope of making the people and their revolutionary forces surrender to his terrorist regime,” the CPP said. Formal negotiations under the Duterte administration ended in November 2017 after the President reportedly was dismayed over continued rebel attacks against government troops while talks were ongoing. He subsequently declared the CPP and NPA as terrorist organizations. Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque on Thursday said the communist rebels would be hounded wherever they are even in their old age like the Nazis of Germany after World War II. He was responding to a question during a press briefing on what measures were being taken by the Duterte administration to make the CPP indemnify its victims of human rights abuses and atrocities. PNP projects impact “Let us see, and I’m sure that like the Nazis, many of whom hid and grew old but were still arrested and 50 years later were held to account, I am confident that the CPP-NPA will not escape their crimes. Justice will catch up with them,” he said. In a statement, Police Brig. Gen. Rolando Miranda, Western Visayas police director, said the killing of Bocala will “gravely affect” the operation of the CPP and NPA in Panay “because he [was] the one managing the finances of the (CPP in Panay).” He was monitored to have been staying at the house in Pavia just three days before the raid. Bocala was wanted on charges of murder, arson and robbery in various courts, the police said. The raiders recovered two .45-caliber pistols, rebel documents and cellphones. Bocala also had with him a “Document of Identification No. PP 978525” issued by the NDF on Aug. 26, 2016, designating him as “consultant” for the Visayas. This was supposed to give him immunity from arrest under the NDF-government Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees. Unlike his wife Concha Araneta, he was not among the NDF consultants who were seen and known publicly and attended the peace negotiations in Norway. Bocala was captured in 2001 in a firefight with government troops in Igbaras town in Iloilo but was released on bail and assumed to have rejoined the rebel movement. His wife, the alleged head of the CPP in Panay, was captured in Iloilo City in 2015. She was allowed to post bail in 2016 as a consultant of the NDF and joined the peace negotiations between the government and the NDF in Norway. Shot while in hammock Araneta disappeared following the collapse of the peace talks but has been releasing statements online as NDF Panay spokesperson. She is also being sought by the PNP and the military after the peace talks collapsed. Tan was on his hammock when he was shot, the bullets hitting his face and body. According to Tug-ani, the official student publication of the University of the Philippines Cebu, Tan was arrested in 2017 in Santander town, Cebu, based on 14 warrants of arrest for murder issued by the Regional Trial Court Branch 47 in Bohol. The charges were dismissed by the court in October 2019. Tan was again implicated in another murder case in Bacolod City in Negros Occidental but was freed in March 2020 by release on recognizance. After his release, he went into organic farming on Camotes Island. —WITH REPORTS FROM DEXTER CABALZA AND INQUIRER RESEARCH Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialSafer speed limitsRoad safety advocates are pushing to lower the speed limit to 30 kilometers per hour on urban roads, particularly where people walk, live, and play, to make such roads safer and reduce the occurrence of accidents that could be fatal. According to the Metro Manila Accident Reporting and Analysis System, there were 65,032 road crashes recorded in Metro Manila last year, mostly involving motorcycles, followed by cars, trucks, and bicycles. The report estimated that 178 crashes happen daily in the metro. More worryingly, the highest number of road crash fatalities—20 percent—involved pedestrians hit by vehicles. 'As we embark on building back better from the COVID-19 pandemic, the time has come to return urban streets to people,' said Etienne Krug of the World Health Organization. 'Such low-speed streets are the foundation on which to build safe, healthy, green and livable cities, cities for people.' Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Saturday, May 29, 2021
Inquirer Newsletter May 30, 2021
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