The Freeman

Reported ‘death threat’ on priest out to muddle SLF issue

- — Juancho R. Gallarde

Dumaguete City Mayor Felipe Antonio Remollo said the alleged death threat on a parish priest is all “hearsay, without basis and an attempt to muddle the debate over the establishm­ent of a sanitary landfill (SLF) in the city.

Remollo, citing that the breaking news came from a radio station, said the media in Dumaguete is generally fair with their reporting except for a station-produced program that seemingly “never runs out of attacks against the administra­tion.”

Included in these “attacks” is the alleged death threat on Father Pepe Vincoy, and linking it to the priest’s open objection to the establishm­ent of an SLF for environmen­tal reasons.

As a result, the public is now being lured into believing that opposing the SLF would be a life-threatenin­g stand, even if the project proponents insisted that they are open to objections from any sector for responsibl­e discussion, and would never go into hostile retort or intimidati­on.

Remollo, however, did not take chances on this threat, as he already directed Superinten­dent Jonathan Pineda, City Police chief, to conduct a thorough assessment of the situation and, if possible, provide the priest with a security escort.

Results of the investigat­ion, however, disclosed that Father Vincoy did not personally receive the death threats but was told by a listener of what he heard over the radio program of an anchor, whose identity is being withheld.

According to Pineda, the perceived death threat did not come from the priest himself but from a radio anchorman, who claimed he received the same text messages during his radio program.

Pineda sent intelligen­ce operatives to Vincoy’s place and provided him with security measures, citing possibilit­ies that some quarters may take advantage of the situation.

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