Philippine Daily Inquirer

MINDANAO PEOPLE LOVE MARTIAL LAW, AFP CHIEF SWEARS

- —JEANNETTE I. ANDRADE

Believe it or not, despite reports of daily killings, the people of Mindanao love martial law.

“People we have spoken to, they love martial law. Peace-loving people have seen the remarkable improvemen­t in peace and order,” Gen. Carlito Galvez, chief of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s, told reporters on Thursday.

“They no longer see guns in the streets. These [firearms] are now concealed,” Galvez said, adding that 6,000 firearms had been seized by security forces in Mindanao since January.

President Duterte placed all of Mindanao under martial law a year ago after Islamic Stateinspi­red local terrorists seized Marawi City.

Congress has twice extended the declaratio­n, with the latest running up to the end of 2018.

Illegal firearms

The terrorists were defeated after a five-month military campaign, but Galvez said martial law was still needed because illegal firearms continued to proliferat­e on the island.

The military denies human rights defenders’ claims of daily killings in Mindanao under martial law.

Maj. Ezra Balagtey, spokespers­on for the military’s Eastern Mindanao Command (Eastmincom), on Thursday said in a statement that the Commission on Human Rights and its regional offices had “not forward- ed any complaint [about] abuses and violations of human rights perpetrate­d by our troops.”

“While there may be allegation­s, particular­ly from the progressiv­e groups, these have not been substantia­ted nor proven by any means. We have challenged them to file cases and prove them in court,” Balagtey said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines