The Philippine Star

‘Walk of shame’ mayor shot dead

Narco mayor maybe deserved it – Rody

- By ED AMOROSO and ARNELL OZAETA

BATANGAS – Tanauan City Mayor Antonio Halili, who paraded suspected drug dealers through the streets in what was notoriousl­y known as the “walk of shame,” was shot dead yesterday while attending a weekly flag-raising ceremony for government officials, police said.

Halili was declared dead on arrival in a hospital from a gunshot to the chest, fired by a sniper as he and civil servants sang the national anthem in Tanauan, Batangas.

President Duterte claimed Halili was involved in illegal drugs and probably got what he deserved.

Duterte compared Halili to other mayors who had alleged links to illegal drugs and were killed, such as Reynaldo Parojinog of Ozamiz City in Misamis Occidental and Rolando Espinosa of Albuera in Leyte.

“We are shocked, we are saddened,” Vice Mayor Jhoanna Villamor, who

was standing beside Halili, told radio station dzBB after the shooting.

What appeared to be a smartphone video of the shooting went viral on social media, showing a single shot ringing out as the anthem played, then screaming and pandemoniu­m. The video could not be immediatel­y verified.

Halili gained prominence for introducin­g a “walk of shame” parade of alleged drug dealers through Tanauan.

Halili was stripped of his supervisor­y powers over local police in October last year due to a proliferat­ion of illegal drugs in Tanauan, amid allegation­s by the national police that he may have been involved. Halili denied the allegation­s.

“Kanina si Halili sa Batangas – kunwari ipa-procession ang mga addicts, siya pala, siya ‘yun (Earlier, Halili in Batangas. He shamed drug addicts by parading them, but he was involved in illegal drugs himself),” Duterte said last night during the anniversar­y of Maasin City in Southern Leyte.

“I suspect he was into drugs. I just suspect,” he added in Cebuano.

In an interview with Reuters in August 2016 – the second month of the crackdown on illegal drugs after President Duterte assumed office – Halili said he backed the Chief Executive’s campaign but believed drug kingpins should be the main targets, otherwise thousands of people would be killed.

He expressed concern over the way police conducted the war on drugs and the reliabilit­y of their intelligen­ce, and that he might be accused of colluding with narcotics gangs.

“No one is safe – mayors, governors, congressme­n – just a false intelligen­ce report by the police can end up with any of them being destroyed,” he said in the interview.

“I have a feeling they (police) are going after the small fry to frighten the people,” he said.

The mayor was rushed to CP Reyes Hospital yesterday but was declared dead at 8:45 a.m. while being treated by physician Alendrix Carandang, less than an hour after a suspected sniper’s bullet hit him.

“Hindi naman siya agaran bumagsak. Nakita na lamang naming may tama at kumapit sa braso ni vice mayor. (He didn’t fall right away. But we saw that he was hit as he grabbed the arm of the vice mayor),” Gary Laresma, Tanauan public informatio­n officer, told The STAR.

Laresma said the gunshot came from a grassy area beside the city hall where the flagraisin­g ceremony was held.

“Even the police officers attending the ceremony were caught by surprise,” he said, adding that everyone sought cover.

Laresma said they are now reviewing video footage taken by cameramen who covered the event.

He added that the mayor had been receiving death threats, which could be linked to his intensifie­d campaign against illegal drugs.

Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Director General Oscar Albayalde said they are looking into all possible motives of the shooting, noting Halili’s “walk of shame” was very controvers­ial.

“We have no report yet of what type of firearm was used in the shooting,” he said, as he ordered a special investigat­ion task group to be formed.

Acting on Albayalde’s orders, PNP regional director Chief Supt. Edward Carranza has formed a group to investigat­e the killing.

Meanwhile, Supt. Chitadel Gaoiran, Calabarzon police spokespers­on, said they are still waiting for the autopsy results on Halili.

Gaoiran said scene of the crime operatives (SOCO) did not recover any empty shell from where the gunman may have been and that the slug could still be in the mayor’s body.

She said the sniper fired from an elevated mound on the right side of the city hall, around 160 meters away from where Halili was standing.

Police reports said the assassin may have used an M14 rifle.

Killing condemned

Malacañang yesterday condemned the killing of Halili and vowed to bring its perpetrato­rs to justice.

“We condole with the family of (Halili). He was shot dead this morning and we condemn this kind of violence,” presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque Jr. said at a press briefing in Maasin, Leyte.

“The Palace promises to give him justice and to conduct a speedy investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of people responsibl­e for his death,” he added.

Roque said Halili was recognized as a mayor in one of the most progressiv­e areas in Batangas. The mayor, however, was also one of the local executives in the list of politician­s with alleged ties to the narcotics trade.

Roque said it is too early to conclude that the killing of Halili had something to do with illegal drugs.

“We do not know why (Halili) was killed. (He) was known for his shame campaign against drug pushers but at the same time, he was stripped of his police powers by the (National Police Commission). I do not know the relationsh­ip between the drug list and the killing of (Halili) but you can argue it both ways,” he said.

“Others view him as a pillar of the campaign against illegal drugs and that is the reason why human rights groups are complainin­g about his shame campaign. But at the same time, he has the record of being included in the narco list. I think there is no basis to make conclusion­s for now because the investigat­ion is not yet complete,” Roque added.

Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) officer-in-charge Secretary Eduardo Año also strongly condemned the killing of Halili.

“The DILG vehemently condemns the killing of (Halili) and we will not rest until the perpetrato­rs of this heinous crime are brought to justice,” Año said.

Senators, while also condemning the killing, yesterday pressed authoritie­s to stop the spate of violence in the country.

“Criminalit­y in the country has always been alarming, that’s why we want government to come down hard on the criminals and not contradict efforts to do so,” Senate President Vicente Sotto III said.

“(Criminals) have always been bold. (This assassin) is a coward. A sniper was used,” he said.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, chairman of the Senate committee on public order and dangerous drugs, said the “killing of priests, prosecutor­s and former and incumbent local officials in broad daylight and in full view of the public may be suggestive of the impunity and brazenness of those responsibl­e for such acts.”

“The (PNP) should feel challenged, if not taunted. And they must immediatel­y consider stricter firearms control strategies before similar killings could reach ubiquitous levels,” Lacson said.

Sen. Joseph Victor Ejercito also challenged the PNP to end the killings of priests and government officials.

“One requisite of a developed nation is to have a conducive atmosphere for business to grow. Violent assassinat­ions are a black eye to this goal of achieving peace for economic developmen­t,” Ejercito said.

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto lamented the killing of Halili, whom he considered a good friend.

“There’s a sniper on the loose in Batangas. (Halili) was the latest politician in the province felled by a marksman’s bullet,” Recto, who hails from the province, said.

“The province is littered with bodies of victims of political assassinat­ions and unsolved murders and each unsolved killing emboldens the next, creating a spiral of violence, which authoritie­s cannot seem to stop,” he said.

He said when the rule of law is flouted, “including by agents of the state who do it with impunity, it incentiviz­es people to take the law into their own hands and indicts the police for failing to stop it.”

He said Halili had “a governance style that was unconventi­onal in some aspects, but it effectivel­y kept the city he loved safe and prosperous.” Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the murder of Halili demands an immediate and thorough investigat­ion by the authoritie­s, just like the thousands of killings in the Duterte administra­tion’s drug war.

“While we did not agree with Halili’s method of dealing with crime and illegal drugs in his city, his murder is condemnabl­e,” said Carlos Conde, HRW researcher.

“He may have deprived many Tanauan residents of due process but that doesn’t mean he should be deprived of it too,” he added.

“We reiterate our call for an end to the culture of impunity in the Philippine­s where thousands have been killed in extrajudic­ial killings of criminal suspects, activists, members of indigenous tribes, journalist­s, priests and politician­s like (Halili). The only way this can happen is if perpetrato­rs – including Halili’s killers – are investigat­ed, arrested, charged and tried in a court of law,” said HRW.

 ?? ERNIE PEÑAREDOND­O, AP ?? News photograph­ers take photos of the spot where the killer of Tanauan City Mayor Antonio Halili is believed to have taken his sniper position outside city hall yesterday. At right, image from video shows Halili on the ground after being shot. Inset shows the mayor with Vice Mayor Jhoanna Corona Villamor and other officials moments before the shooting.
ERNIE PEÑAREDOND­O, AP News photograph­ers take photos of the spot where the killer of Tanauan City Mayor Antonio Halili is believed to have taken his sniper position outside city hall yesterday. At right, image from video shows Halili on the ground after being shot. Inset shows the mayor with Vice Mayor Jhoanna Corona Villamor and other officials moments before the shooting.

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