Cagayan Valley police chief survives NPA ambush
>> Tuesday, July 4, 2017
By
Raymund Catindig
GATTARAN, Cagayan - The Cagayan Valley province police director
survived an ambush by New People’s Army rebels here Monday in Barangay San
Carlos.
It was not
clear if people were hurt in the incident but reports said Senior Supt. Warren
Tolito, provincial police chief, was in a convoy with several policemen to
inspect the house of Army veteran Dexter Remodaro, which was also attacked by
the rebels night of June 25.
The attack
hurt civilians Vilma and Jeraise Raguingan, who are being treated for bullet
wounds in a nearby hospital.
Provincial
police spokesman Supt. Chevalier Iringan said they have yet to confirm if there
were casualties in the attack.
He said
Tolito and his group were heading to interior Baggao town to do an ocular
inspection when an undetermined number of rebels fired at the approaching
vehicles.
As of 3:45
p.m. Monday, Tolito sent a text message saying they were still “inside the
danger zone.”
The NPA’s
Henry Abraham Command also said in a statement that they raided Remodaro’s
house because the military intelligence group used it for several activities.
Chief Supt.
Robert Quenery, Cagayan Province Police head, condemned the attack on
Remodaro’s residence and called on the Commission on Human Rights to also issue
a condemnation.
“Violence
has no place in Cagayan Valley whose people only want to live in peace and
harmony,” Quenery said.
The attacks
came as the government peace panel awaited President Duterte’s order that will
determine whether negotiations with the National Democratic Front would be resumed or not.
Although
Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, who is also the panel chairman, said the
government continues to be willing to resume the talks, the NDF must first
prove its sincerity to negotiate.
The
communist group would also need to cooperate in providing an atmosphere
conducive for negotiations to flourish, which includes the observance of its
earlier promise to hold off offensives, he added.
Although
Bello appears to have not been informed of the ambush, he told Manila newsmen
the NDF must show that the negotiation is still important to them “because if
that is not important, we should not talk anymore.”
“The NDF is claiming that they are helping the
President with his anti-drug campaign. But I told them ‘no matter the reason,
it still does not conform with your commitment of no offensive’,” he added,
stressing that trust and sincerity are important between negotiating parties.
“If you
don’t trust the person you are talking with and there is always doubt, nothing
will happen,” Bello said.
In a
statement, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) said it is still
looking forward to continuing the peace negotiations with the government.
It added that
the CPP is also waiting for directives from NDF negotiating panel chief Fidel
Agcaoili and chief political consultant Jose Ma. Sison.
“Like the
(government) panel that makes recommendation to Duterte, so does the NDFP
negotiating panel make recommendations to the NDFP National Council, of which
the CPP is part, as well as to the CPP Central Committee which commands the
NPA,” the statement read in part.
The CPP
added that it looks forward to the embargoed 5th round of NDF-GRP peace talks
in August or September.
The
revolutionary forces continue to regard peace negotiations as an opportunity to
resolve through dialogue the fundamental socio-economic issues at the root of
the armed conflict, even as the people are compelled to wage ever greater
resistance against the oppression, exploitation and armed suppression by the
reactionary state, the CPP said.
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