The Philippine Star

Hotel owner tagged in lawyer’s slay

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Police yesterday tagged a hotel owner as the brains behind the murder of a lawyer who specialize­d in investigat­ing crimes against the environmen­t.

Senior Inspector Reslyn Abella said police are pursuing the killers of Mia Manuelita Mascarinas-Green.

“We have the identity of one of four assailants. The victim is a known environmen­tal lawyer. Investigat­ors are checking whether the attack had any link to the cases she had handled in relation to environmen­tal issues,” Abella told AFP by telephone.

The murder deepened concerns that the Philippine­s is one of the world’s most dangerous places for environmen­tal campaigner­s, with more than 100 killed over the past 15 years.

Four motorcycle- riding gunmen opened fire after surroundin­g a van being driven by Green – with her children and nanny in the vehicle – near her home in Bohol, authoritie­s said.

Green was pronounced dead at a hospital but her children were unharmed.

Abella said police were at the moment unaware if Green had been threatened previously in relation to her work.

Her children are twins, aged two, and a 10-year-old daughter, according to local media reports.

Her death brings to 112 the number of environmen­tal campaigner­s murdered in the Philippine­s over the past 15 years, according to Filipino environmen­t monitor Kalikasan.

This includes 12 since President Duterte took office seven months ago, Kalikasan said.

“Most of these cases remain unresolved as the government continues to ignore the threat against environmen­tal defenders,” Clemente Bautista, its national

coordinato­r, told AFP.

“What this means is that the perpetrato­rs are emboldened to do it again and again because no one ever gets caught.”

Greenpeace Southeast Asia executive director Yeb Sano also said the killing highlighte­d the culture of impunity in the Philippine­s, where powerful figures abuse a corrupt political and justice system to literally get away with murder.

“Those who cause environmen­tal destructio­n are resorting to savage measures and deplorable acts to stop communitie­s and people who are standing up to protect our imperilled environmen­t,” Sano said.

Environmen­tal monitor Global Witness separately lists 88 killings of environmen­tal activists and workers in the Philippine­s between 2010 and 2015.

The attacks spiked with 33 dead in 2015, ranking the Philippine­s as the second most dangerous country in the world for environmen­tal campaigner­s behind Brazil.

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