Philippine Daily Inquirer

Kidnapping­s linked to 2016 polls

- Julie Alipala, Inquirer Mindanao

ZAMBOANGA CITY—The city’s highest ranking police officer is linking the spike in kidnapping­s in parts of Mindanao, particular­ly Western Mindanao, to an underworld campaign by politician­s to raise funds for next year’s elections.

Senior Supt. Angelito Casimiro, the city police director, said his experience while working in the Presidenti­al Anti-Organized Crime Task Force (PAOCTF) convinced him that the recent rash in kidnapping cases in the Zamboanga peninsula and the provinces of Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi was perpetrate­d by politician­s who are also involved in criminal activities.

Kidnapping, Casimiro said, was also rampant during his PAOCTF days whenever elections draw near.

“With the forthcomin­g election and if we go back to previous elections, it’s (kidnapping) one source of money for political purposes,” Casimiro told the INQUIRER.

In the early days of May alone, 10 cases of kidnapping­s had already been recorded in Western Mindanao and Northern Mindanao.

These include the May 3 kidnapping of mining executive Priscillan­o Garcia and his driver, Almatrapy Gua, in Bongao, Tawi-Tawi; the May 4 abduction of Rodolfo Boligao, Coast Guard members SN2 Gringo Villaluz and SN1 Rod Pagaling in Dapitan City; and the May 6 kidnapping of Guan Lim Maujon in Siasi, Sulu. Maujon had been rescued while the other victims remained in the hands of their captors.

Casimiro said kidnapping­s are most common in areas “where there is a presence of bandits and guerillas.”

“Some individual­s in areas, where there are armed groups, must be planning to run for political position and they need the money,” he said.

But Casimiro would not name any politician suspected to have links with kidnappers or armed groups such as the Abu Sayyaf.

Lt. Gen. Rustico Guerrero, head of the Army’s Western Mindanao Command, told the INQUIRER that some kidnapping­s in the past were related to elections but said he doubted if the 2016 elections and recent kidnapping­s were connected.

“In previous preelectio­n incidents, that may be true,” he said.

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