The Star Malaysia

Filipino mayor gunned down

Tanauan city official with alleged drug ties shot dead in broad daylight at a town ceremony attended by council staff and villagers.

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TANAUAN ( Philippine­s):

A Philippine provincial city mayor known for parading drug suspects in public but also alleged to have drug ties himself was shot and killed by a sniper in a brazen attack during a flag-raising ceremony in front of hundreds of horrified employees and village leaders.

The apparent lone gunshot felled Mayor Antonio Halili of Tanauan city in Batangas province south of Manila as he and about 300 employees and newly elected village leaders sang the national anthem in a parking lot outside the city hall. The gunman escaped, police officials and witnesses said.

“I didn’t know that it was gunfire until people started screaming ‘ Somebody’s shooting, somebody’s shooting’ while running in all directions and I saw my mayor slumped on the ground,” said village leader Rico Alcazar, who was in a crowd standing behind the 72-year-old Halili.

“Everybody was shocked and it took sometime before some carried the mayor and brought him away in a car.”

Halili’s bodyguards opened fire toward a grassy hill where the gunshot was apparently fired, adding to the bedlam, Alcazar said by phone.

Cellphone video shot by Alcazar shows a few men standing around the fallen Halili as gunfire rings out continuous­ly and people cry, scream, run and take cover during the melee.

A man yells, “The mayor is dead, the mayor was shot,” and another desperatel­y calls for a car to take Halili to the hospital. A third man starts blaming his companions for the security breach.

“They did not see anybody approach him. They just heard a gunshot, so the assumption or allegation was it could have been a sniper shot,” the national police chief, DirectorGe­neral Oscar Albayalde, said at a news conference in Manila, adding that an investigat­ion was underway.

The bullet hit a cellphone in Halili’s coat pocket then pierced his chest, police said. Policemen scoured the hill but failed to find the gunman.

Two years ago, Halili ordered drug suspects to be paraded in public in Tanauan, a small city about 70km south of Manila, in a campaign that was dubbed “walks of shame”.

The suspects were forced to wear cardboard signs that read “I’m a pusher, don’t emulate me” in a campaign that alarmed human rights officials.

Police officials, however, also linked Halili to illegal drugs, an allegation he strongly denied. He said at the time that he would resign and would be willing to be publicly paraded as a drug suspect if police could come up with evidence to support the allegation.

Albayalde said investigat­ors would try to determine if the killing was connected to Halili’s anti-drug campaign.

Halili’s unusual campaign drew attention at a time of growing alarm over the rising number of killings of drug suspects under President Rodrigo Duterte.

Since Duterte took office in 2016, more than 4,200 drug suspects had been killed in clashes with police, alarming human rights groups, Western government­s and UN rights watchdogs.

At least two town mayors linked to drugs were among the dead.

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