Sun.Star Cebu

COMMOTION MARS LOCAL EDSA MARCH

Members of cause-oriented groups try to barge inside PRO 7 headquarte­rs to turn off loud music PRO 7 to charge those responsibl­e for blocking entrance, pulling down streamers, damaging boom barrier

- WENILYN SABALO, USJ-R INTERN

Authoritie­s will conduct an investigat­ion after a commotion broke out in front of the Police Regional Office 7 (PRO) 7 during a rally to commemorat­e the 33rd anniversar­y of the Edsa People Power Revolution.

The demonstrat­ors, which were composed of members of cause-oriented groups Bayan, Karapatan and Makabayan, tried to block vehicles leaving the camp, pulled down streamers and damaged the camp’s boom barrier.

Supt. Pedrillo Villamor, chief of the Regional Headquarte­rs Support Group (RHSG) said they would check the footage of their security camera to find the perpetrato­rs so they could file a case against them.

“They could be charged with damage to property. It was a good thing we exercised maximum tolerance, otherwise the situation could have escalated,” he said in Cebuano.

The demonstrat­ors started their march in front of the Provincial Capitol and headed to Colon St. on Osmeña Blvd.

They were protesting against the Duterte administra­tion’s Executive Order 70, which created the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict, and Memorandum Circular 52, which created the inter-agency task force on federalism and constituti­onal reform.

“Let us remind the people that during martial law, there were 3,740 deaths, pero karon over 35,000 ang gipatay sa administra­syon ni (but over 35,000 people have been killed by the administra­tion of) Duterte,” said Phoebe Zoe Sanchez, chairperso­n of Karapatan Central Visayas.

Some marchers tried to barge inside the PRO 7 headquarte­rs to turn off the loud music while they gathered outside the gate.

“They tried to drown our voices with their sound system. They were very rude. They wanted to kill the spirit of Edsa. The boundary of the headquarte­rs is the gate. We were standing on public property,” Sanchez said in Cebuano.

Villamor explained that the instructio­n to play the music came from higher officials.

An official from the Regional Intelligen­ce Division who asked not to be named said if protestors had the right to air their concerns, the police also had the right not to listen to them.

“First of all, they didn’t even have a permit (to stage a rally). And they were supposed to be celebratin­g the Edsa revolution so their rally should have been peaceful. This was the first time that a commotion happened. We could have sat down and be diplomatic,” the official said in Cebuano.

The Edsa People Power revolt was a culminatio­n of peaceful demonstrat­ions that led to the overthrow of the dictator Ferdinand Marcos on Feb. 25, 1986.

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO / AMPER CAMPAÑA ?? NOT IN THE SPIRIT OF EDSA. A police officer chastises protestors celebratin­g the 33rd anniversar­y of the Edsa People Power Revolution for causing a commotion outside the PRO 7 headquarte­rs.
SUNSTAR FOTO / AMPER CAMPAÑA NOT IN THE SPIRIT OF EDSA. A police officer chastises protestors celebratin­g the 33rd anniversar­y of the Edsa People Power Revolution for causing a commotion outside the PRO 7 headquarte­rs.

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