PINUKPUK, Kalinga
-- The Philippine Army sought community support against proliferation of
members of the rebel New People’s Army in Cordillera.
This, as one
policeman and nine other cops, including a police colonel, were killed in an
encounter last June 5 between the NPA and the joint forces of the Regional
Mobile Force Battalion and the Mountain Province Provincial Mobile Force
Company.
“No LGUs and
barangay officials would be proud to say that their area is infested with NPA
because it is a negative mark on the locality and at the same time the people
are denied of business, peace, and opportunities. That is what we do, partner
our effort with the LGUs,” said Brig. Gen. Leopoldo Imbang, commander of the
503rd Brigade covering the Cordillera.
Imbang said
residents' cooperation is of utmost importance, since they are the ones living
in the communities, which should be peaceful.
"It will
be a concerted effort lalo na ng community doon
na (especially the community that) they have to help the police, lalo na
silayung andun madalas (especially since they are always
there). Importante dito (What's important here is), in order for
it to be successful, it must be an integrated effort of the AFP, PNP, and the
LGU,” Imbang said.
Citing Army records,
Imbang said the NPAs in the Cordillera are mostly in the far-flung sitios,
at the boundaries with other provinces in northern Luzon.
This, he
said, is why the Army has patrol and security operations at these sites.
He added the permanent
detachments of the Philippine Army are in Abra, Kalinga, and Ifugao, but there
is none in Mountain Province or in Sagada, where the recent encounter happened.
Imbang
explained that analyzing the situation in the Cordillera, the provinces are
generally peaceful.
“Sa region,
we have managed the security well, although there are some incidents like in
Sagada, wherein a security patrol of the police doing barangay visitations had
an encounter with the NPA,” he said.
He said
residents play an important role in keeping peace and order in the community,
especially in giving information on the presence of rebels in their villages or
the presence of strangers.
Imbang said
that based on the report of the wounded policemen, the persons they encountered
were speaking in the Filipino, which is unlikely that they are Cordillerans but
are personalities coming from the lowlands, from Metro Manila, or other parts
of the Visayas.
He said the
PNP and the AFP share intelligence and operational information, working
together to ensure the safety of the community.
Imbang
assured that the PNP will not stop doing their job despite the casualties.
He said the
PNP is mandated to be in the community and those who had an encounter with the
NPAs went to the area to confirm information on the presence of NPAs. But then,
he said, the leftists were already positioned.
Imbang said the NPA
situation in Sagada needs to be addressed fast, as it destroys the province’s
reputation and at the same time breaks the peace in the community.
Sagada is
highly visited by tourists, both local and foreign, due to its idyllic nature.
“Cordillerans are
peace-loving people and they refuse the NPAs,” Imbang noted.
Kalinga police director
Senior Supt. Alfredo Dangani told the PNA the provincial cops are on alert,
especially after the incident.
He said
unannounced checkpoints are regularly conducted as a way to keep criminals and
leftist rebels at bay.
The Kalinga
police, Dangani added, is doing border patrol on a 24-hour basis, especially at
night.
“Deployment and operations
are intelligence driven, based on report sharing and fusion with the AFP, to
preempt major crime incidents,” he said.
Kalinga is
one of the areas in the region, where a number of encounters with the NPAs were
recorded in the first quarter of the year, Dangani added. -- PNA
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