The Borneo Post

Thousands of security forces on alert ahead of Philippine polls

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MANILA: More than 60,000 security forces in the Philippine­s were on alert yesterday to safeguard ballots and polling stations on the eve of the presidenti­al election, a er police reported four people killed in an outbreak of violence.

Elections are a traditiona­lly volatile time in a country with lax gun laws and a violent political culture, but the national police said this season has been comparativ­ely peaceful.

In one of the worst incidents, four people were killed Saturday in a gun ba le between armed supporters of mayoral rivals in Magsingal town in the northern province of Ilocos Sur, the police said. Another four were wounded.

Police in the northern province of Nueva Ecija also arrested two dozen people and seized weapons, including five M-16 rifles, a 12gauge shotgun and 15 handguns, following a shoot-out between bodyguards of two candidates running for mayor of General Tinio.

Five people were wounded in the incident, which also le the same number of sports utility vehicles riddled with bullets.

More than 18,000 posts, from president to town councillor, are up for grabs in the elections.

The son of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos looks set to win the presidenti­al vote by a landslide, returning the clan to the pinnacle of political power.

Rights groups, Catholic church leaders and opponents see the elections as a make-orbreak moment for the country’s democracy, amid fears Marcos Junior could rule with a heavy fist.

Personnel from the police, armed forces and coast guard have fanned out across the archipelag­o to help secure polling stations and ballots, escort election officials and guard checkpoint­s. The security deployment involves around 48,000 soldiers and 16,000 police, officials said.

“Based on our planning... we are confident that we’ll have a secure and orderly election,” said armed forces spokesman Colonel Ramon Zagala.

There have been 16 “validated election-related incidents” since Jan 9, including four shootings and a “slight illegal detention”, Alba said. That compares with 133 incidents during the 2016 presidenti­al elections and 60 in the 2019 mid-term polls.

Police spokeswoma­n Colonel Jean Fajardo a ributed the sharp drop to a heightened security presence, as well as military and police operations targeting ‘loose firearms’ and private armed groups. The election commission largely prohibits the carrying of weapons during the election period that lasts until June 8.

Experts say the explosion of social media, which has made it easier to report incidents, and the growing domination of political dynasties, which smother electoral competitio­n, have helped tamp down election violence.

In the country’s deadliest single incident of political violence on record, 58 people were massacred in 2009 as gunmen allegedly belonging to a local warlord in the southern Philippine­s a acked a group of people to stop a rival filing his election candidacy.

Thirty-two of the victims were journalist­s covering the contest, making the a ack also the deadliest on record against media profession­als. The introducti­on of electronic voting in 2010 has made it harder for widespread vote-rigging that has historical­ly plagued Philippine elections.

But Marcos Jr, who still insists he was cheated of victory in the 2016 vice presidenti­al race, has warned of electoral fraud in these polls and urged his supporters to be alert.

“We will win as long as you stay awake on Monday so there won’t be another tragedy,” Marcos Jr told hundreds of thousands of fans at his final campaign rally on Saturday. "Many undesirabl­e things happen if we stop paying a ention.”

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