‘Jueteng whisleblower’ mayor’s house blasted; troops deployed
>> Monday, April 29, 2013
By Myds
Supnad
BUGALLON, Pangasinan -- Two more V150
armored vehicles and additional army troops were deployed here and other parts
of the province to prevent bloodshed following the grenade attack on the house
of mayor Rodrigo Orduna due to reported political rivalry.
Major Gen. Gregorio
Pio Catapang, Jr., commandeer of the Army’s 7th Infantry Division, whose
area of jurisdiction is Region 1 and 3, bared this Thursday saying he ordered this to
maintain peace. as elections are drawing near.
General Catapang’s
action came after gunmen hurled Wednesday morning a grenade into the
house of Orduna, the whistle blower who accused Gov. Amado Espino of
accumulating allegedly hundreds of millions of pesos from the illegal game
jueteng.
Orduna’s expose
triggered the filing of a plunder case against Espino in what he described as
lack of merit and politically motivated to destroy his credibility.
Espino said he also
wanted the Philippine National Police to immediately
conduct a thorough and independent investigation of the grenade
blast so the truth will come out.
Espino and Orduna were
former political allies but their relationship turned sour, after Orduna allied
himself with gubernatorial candidate Hernani Braganza, a political rival of
Espino.
On the other hand,
Espino’s ally also filed a plunder case against Braganza.
The grenade exploded
in front of the door of Orduna’s house, but no one was hurt.
Espino said
Pangasinan had been known as a peaceful province with
little track record of political violence for decades.
With the incident,
some mayors and provincial officials of Pangasinan recently circulated a signed
manifest seeking the ouster of acting provincial police director Marlou Chan,
an intelligence expert, on charges of partisan politics and incompetence at
preventing and solving an increasing number of unsolved
shooting incidents in the province since he was assigned here.
Chan denied he
had been partisan.
Local LP stalwarts
said had deplored the grenade attack a “deplorable act” that police must probe.
No one was hurt in the
blast which police said damaged the front door, including the gutter wall, in
the house of Orduña in the town proper.
Police said the
grenade was lobbed at 1:35 a.m.
Chan, said they were still investigating the
incident and could not comment yet on the possible motive behind it.
Chan said they now
have to secure the family of Orduña who is running for vice mayor in the May 13
polls.
The mayor refused to
be interviewed on the grenade blast.
Orduña, a
self-confessed jueteng operator, hogged the headlines when he filed a plunder
case at the Office of Ombudsman against re-electionist Gov. Amado Espino Jr.
for allegedly receiving about P900 million in jueteng payola.
Espino has denied the
allegations. He and Orduña used to be long-time political allies until the
mayor joined LP.
“We are asking the authorities to investigate
this deplorable act and arrest whoever is behind the attack,” said former vice
governor Oscar Lambino, spokesman and vice chairman of the local LP.
Alaminos City Mayor
Hernani Braganza, the LP’s gubernatorial candidate, called on the police to
beef up security for Orduña and increase police visibility in Bugallon and
other election hotspots in the province.
Bugallon is listed as
one of the 14 priority areas of concern in the May 13 polls due to intense
political rivalry.
“The attack on Mayor
Orduña deals a serious blow to efforts to ensure safe and fair elections in
Pangasinan. Our law enforcement agencies should conduct more checkpoints and
increase police visibility to prevent the outbreak of election violence,” he
said.
Espino, for his part,
also asked the police to conduct a thorough and independent investigation into
the grenade blast.
An independent and
non-partisan probe of the grenade blast would be the first decisive step to
keep it that way, he said.
“I don’t want anybody
to stage-manage violent acts that make it appear that politics has anything to
do with crimes in my province,” he said.
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