Posted by: DAVAO TODAY Posted date: December 10, 2013 In: Extrajudicial Killings, Headline,Human Rights
by DAVAO TODAY
DAVAO CITY – The New People’s Army and a human rights group claimed government troops killed an indigenous leader in Maco, Compostela Valley last week.
The human rights group Karapatan also said the soldiers hid the body in a funeral parlor in another town before neighbors who searched for him found out the next day.
Karapatan’s secretary general Hanimay Suazo said Pedro Tinga, a 57-year old Mansaka tribal leader in Barangay Malamodao, was killed in an operation by the Philippine Army’s Alpha Company of the 71st Battalion last Friday.
She said reports from their quick-response team reveal that residents of Malamodao last saw Tinga harvesting peanuts in his farm.
The NPA’s Comval Davao Gulf Sub-Command also condemned the killing and denied the death was due to their armed encounter with the AFP.
In a statement, the NPA spokesperson Daniel Ibarra said the military operations “left a civilian dead, the detention of three others, and the dislocation of hundreds more in Maragusan and Maco towns since November 18 up to December 6.”
The NPA identified the detained civilians as Dodong Camporemundo, Orong Gabriel and Abla Bakud, all residents of Purok 2, Brgy. Malamodao.
The NPA said aerial bombings by the soldiers resulted to evacuation of farmers in Brgys. Teresa and New Barili.
In Karapatan’s documentation, residents heard gunfire and bombings in Brgy. Malamodao forcing them to flee.
“Few minutes later, (a) volley of gunfire erupted then paused for several minutes. Then another round of volume fire that lasted for about 30 minutes (came) before the arrival of two helicopters that bombed the area six times,” the statement said.
Farmers ran down from their farms for safety but “were put on hold by the military… they were only allowed to go home at around 3pm with military escorts,” the report said.
One farmer whom Karapatan identified as “Paco” said he did not see Tinga coming with them.
Witnesses told Karapatan they went searching for Tinga until Saturday.
They said when they learned that the military carried a dead body the night before and brought it to a funeral parlor in the next town, they went to search for the body.
“They went to the funeral and found out that the dead body was Pedro Tinga himself. He sustained multiple gunshot wounds in the frontal area of his body that caused his death,” the report added.
The NPA also scored Malamodao Brgy. Captain Edgar Reyabonansa whom the AFP pressured “to gag the victim’s family and prevent them from pursuing charges against the enemy.”
“Indeed, the blatant cover-up and a host of human rights abuses in the last few weeks manifested the AFP’s character as harbinger of injustice and implementer of the hideous policy of neutralization under the Oplan Bayanihan,” Ibarra said in their statement.
Meanwhile, the Armed Forces of the Philippines Eastern Mindanao Command claimed their troops killed four NPAs in Barangays Teresa and Malamodao in separate encounters Wednesday and Friday mornings.
The statement said three NPAs were killed in Brgy. Teresa including two “females” while another NPA was killed in Malamodao.
The NPA refuted the AFP saying there were no casualties on their side as their “punitive actions” against the 66th Infantry Battalion, 71st IB, and Division Reconnaisance Company units resulted in the killing of 20 soldiers and wounding of 14 more.
According to Karapatan, Tinga figured in the campaign of farmers and small scale miners who were dislocated after Typhoon Pablo and affected by the Apex Mining operations.
“They have been trying so hard to rebuild their farms so that they can cope up with their daily sustenance… but the shameless elements of the 71st IBPA destroyed what the people had rebuilt as the military showered their farms with bullets and bombs,” Suazo said.
Suazo said residents and the group Indug Katawhan will stage a funeral protest on Wednesday, a day after Human Rights Day.
Karapatan said Tinga is the 26th victim in Southern Mindanao under the “Oplan Bayanihan counterinsurgency program of Aquino.”
Maco is a first-class municipality in Compostela Valley with a population of 72,000 lying 84 kilometers away from Davao City. (davaotoday.com)
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