Cops dismantle 6 PAGs in Cordillera operations
>> Monday, January 14, 2013
BAGUIO
CITY – Chief Supt. Benjamin B. Magalong, regional director of the Police
Regional Office in the Cordillera, disclosed law enforcers were able to
dismantle six private armed groups (PAGs) in the region as part of their
campaign to ensure peaceful elections in
the coming May elections.
Out
of the dismantled PAGs, Senior Superintendent Roberto Quinto Soriano, PRO-COR
deputy regional director for administration and Abra provincial police
officer-in-charge, cited 5 PAGs with 87 members were from Abra 1 PAG with 12
members is from Kalinga.
“We
want to involve all stakeholders in Abra and Kalinga to be actively involved in
the campaign to guarantee the dismantling of the three remaining PAGs with 27
members in Abra and the lone remaining PAG with 4 members in Kalinga before the
start of the campaign period for the mid-term elections,” Magalong told the
Manila Standard, adding that the positive results of their peacekeeping
foundations which they had put in place over the past several years is “very
challenging” on their part, especially with the outcome of the May 2013
elections.
Abra
was listed as one of the 15 provinces considered “high-risk” areas for election
violence earlier released by the government. Kalinga has also election-related
incidents in the past elections that lined the province up as a potential
election hot spot.
Magalong
said so far there is no politically related violence yet are recorded in the
two provinces just the usual alcohol-related quarrels, personal grudge, family
feuds and love triangles.
He
reported that they have intensified their campaign against PAGS. Part of the
PRO-Cor strategies are to arrest known PAG members who have outstanding warrant
of arrest and to go after criminals charged in court so that they will be
arrested and be prevented from being used by politicians as their private
armies in the coming elections.
They
have also strengthened the campaign for the recovery of loose firearms which is
also one of the major factors on the existence of violence and election-related
incidents that have already claimed hundreds of innocent lives of politicians
and their supporters over the past two decades.
For
loose firearms, Magalong reported that 395 various caliber of firearms in the
region including 174 in Abra from January to November 2012 were confiscated
during numerous police operations.
Magalong
also reported that they have also already shifted from stationary to moving
checkpoints, which is more effective especially with the implementation of the
Commission on Election’s gun ban policy this January 13.
‘We
have around 46 moving check points displaced all over the region including 10
here in Baguio City’, Magalong said, adding that 21 mobile checkpoints are also
being done in Abra daily to enhance their campaign against the proliferation of
private armies province wide.
According
to Soriano, police operating units are also conducting house to house
visitations to those individuals with expired firearm licenses so that they
will be updated on whether or not they are interested to renew their firearm
licenses or their firearms will be declared as loose which could be subjected
to appropriate search warrants.
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