Philippine police yesterday said that 14 suspected communist rebels were killed after they opened fire during raids in a central province, but rights groups said that the men were farmers and the latest victims of extrajudicial killings.
Dozens of police, backed by army troops, were to conduct court-authorized home searches on Saturday in a city and two towns in Negros Oriental province when the 14 men violently fought back, police officials said.
A police officer was shot in the leg and wounded in the anti-insurgency and criminality sweep that also led to the arrests of 15 other suspects, the officials said.
Regional police chief Debold Sinas said that six suspected insurgents and rebel supporters escaped.
Law enforcement personnel seized three shotguns, 25 pistols, a homemade rifle, three grenades, ammunition and rebel documents in the simultaneous raids in Canlaon city, where eight suspects were gunned down, and the towns of Manjuyod and Santa Catalina, where the rest were killed in the reported gunbattles, Sinas said.
“There were 14 suspects that engaged the raiders in a shootout during the implementation of the search warrants resulting to their deaths,” Sinas told the national police chief in a report.
Human rights and farmers’ groups condemned the killings of the men they said were farmers, including two village chiefs, and called for an independent investigation.
“The appalling conduct of these police operations obviously aims to make peasants, activists and other ordinary citizens of Negros to cower in fear, surrender their rights and accept the wave of terror under the de facto martial law,” the Northern Negros Alliance of Human Rights Advocates said.
The group said six farmers were killed and more than 50 others arrested in similar police raids in December last year in Guihulngan city in Negros Oriental, which lies on a sugar-producing agricultural island long known for its gaping divide between poor people and wealthy land-owning families.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte declared martial law in the country’s south in 2017 to contain a deadly siege by Muslim militants and other insurgents. Although Negros Oriental lies outside the south, it is in a region about 590km south of Manila where military and police forces have intensified counterinsurgency raids in recent years.
Police denied that the 14 men killed in the raids were victims of extrajudicial killings.
Aside from unlicensed firearms, police were looking for suspected New People’s Army guerrillas involved in a failed attack on a Canlaon city police station this month and other assaults on police officers, Sinas said.
Communist guerrillas have waged a rural rebellion in the country for half a century, one of Asia’s longest. The violence has left about 40,000 combatants and civilians dead. It also has stunted economic development, especially in the countryside, where the military says about 3,500 insurgents are still active.
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