Philippine Daily Inquirer

HOW were 2 Japanese tourists killed in northern Palawan?

- By Redempto D. Anda @demptoanda­INQ

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY— Authoritie­s are eyeing a Japanese criminal syndicate behind the murder of two Japanese nationals in Culion town in Palawan province, after investigat­ors arrested a Japanese citizen last week as the principal suspect behind the hit job.

Supt. Gabriel Lopez, Palawan police chief, told reporters during the presentati­on of the suspects at the Western Command headquarte­rs on Monday that the murder of Itani Masaru, 59, and Arai Yoshihiro, 24, had “the character of a yakuza killing.”

The yakuza is the blanket name used by the general public for Japan’s largest organized crime syndicate that dabbles in drugs, protection, loan-sharking, gambling, smuggling, prostituti­on and real estate rackets.

He said investigat­ors were looking at insurance fraud as a possible motive.

The Coron police, which led the investigat­ion, on Sunday filed multiple murder charges against six people, including the principal suspect, Hiroyuki Nagahama, who was identified by other suspects as the mastermind.

Also charged were five members of a local gang, Commando Brotherhoo­d, based in Puerto Princesa City and led by a certain Sonny “Tatan” Anicete. The others were Reynante Labampa, Jovec Viscaya and two men identified only as Bando and Jhun.

Authoritie­s have placed under custody two persons who admitted to being part of Commando Brotherhoo­d and witnesses to the murder, including the operator of the boat that the victims had used for an island-hopping tour before they were reported missing on Tuesday last week.

Michael Suangco, the boat operator and a member of the Commando Brotherhoo­d, told reporters that Masaru and Yoshihiro were shot and killed on the island of West Galoc in Culion. They were dismembere­d and thrown into the sea (the bodies were not recovered, contrary to earlier reports) as Suangco’s group left for El Nido town in the northern mainland.

“We threw them, piece by piece, into the water,” Suangco said in Filipino.

Nagahama, through an interprete­r, claimed that he was not involved in the murders.

“That is not true. Do not believe them,” his interprete­r told reporters.

Palawan Gov. Jose Alvarez told the Inquirer that police found insurance documents among the victims’ belongings, indicating that they were covered by multiple death insurance policies.

“They (police) are looking at this as the possible motive,” Al- varez said.

Lopez observed that the manner by which the victims were killed had the trademark of a yakuza hit. He said the local government was coordinati­ng with Japanese authoritie­s to deepen the investigat­ion.

Suangco said one of the suspects ordered him, under threat that he would be killed if he did not cooperate, to load the body parts into his boat.

“He (Nagahama) was not satisfied with just killing the victims that he even ordered the boat sunk. We are coordinati­ng with other agencies to establish possible links with the yakuza,” Lopez said.

Police described Nagahama as a “frequent traveler” to Palawan who set up restaurant­s in the tourist towns of El Nido and Coron.

 ?? —REDEMPTOAN­DA ?? Palawan Gov. Jose Chavez Alvarez (left, seated) and Lt. Gen. Raul del Rosario, Western Command chief, present Hiroyuki Nagahama (left, standing) and another suspect in the killing of two Japanese tourists in the province.
—REDEMPTOAN­DA Palawan Gov. Jose Chavez Alvarez (left, seated) and Lt. Gen. Raul del Rosario, Western Command chief, present Hiroyuki Nagahama (left, standing) and another suspect in the killing of two Japanese tourists in the province.

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