The Philippine Star

Illegal gambling eyed in slay of human rights lawyer

- Emmanuel Tupas, Gilbert Bayoran, Christina Mendez, Rhodina Villanueva

Police are looking at illegal gambling as among the possible motives for the killing of human rights lawyer Benjamin Ramos in Kabankalan, Negros Occidental on Tuesday night.

“An angle that is being investigat­ed is his involvemen­t in gambling as he is reportedly deeply engaged in the vice,” Chief Superinten­dent John Bulalacao, Western Visayas police director, said yesterday.

Bulalacao said probers are also looking at the cases that Ramos handled, noting that the victim had assisted farmers accused of land grabbing.

“We already have persons of interest,” he said without elaboratin­g.

Meanwhile, the military dismissed allegation­s that they were behind the killing of Ramos.

“Don’t look at us. He was not a threat to us,” Col. Benedict Arevalo, 303rd Infantry Brigade commander, yesterday said.

Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo also dismissed insinuatio­ns that the government had a hand in the incident.

Panelo said President Duterte expressed his condolence­s to the family of the victim and gave assurance that no stone would be left unturned in the investigat­ion.

“Putting the blame of the slaying on the government... not only is reckless; it is irresponsi­ble and baseless as well. It will not reduce the sorrow of the bereaved family nor will it bring closer to the attainment of justice,” he said.

The Leo Panaligan Command of the New People’s Army, human rights group Karapatan and other militant organizati­ons said the “death squad” of the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s perpetrate­d the murder of Ramos.

Ramos was secretary general of National Union of People’s Lawyers in Negros Occidental and a counsel of the families of nine farm workers killed in Sagay last month.

Internatio­nal human rights advocates said the murder of Ramos showed the ”persistenc­e of injustice... where landlessne­ss has bred decades-old agrarian conflict.”

Carlos Conde of the Human Rights Watch Asia division said the incident was “sadly not surprising in a country where impunity for extrajudic­ial killings and other serious rights violations prevails.”–

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines