The Philippine Star

‘MM safe, checkpoint­s working despite ambush’

- By EMMANUEL TUPAS

The Philippine National Police (PNP) claimed yesterday that the nationwide election gun ban is effective and citizens are safe despite the fatal ambush of a businessma­n and his driver along EDSA in Mandaluyon­g City last Sunday afternoon.

PNP spokesman Senior Supt. Bernard Banac said the murder of Jose Luis Yulo, 62, and his driver Allan Nomer Santos, 51, by motorcycle-riding assailants was an isolated incident that does not reflect the overall situation in the country. (See related story on Page 9.)

“The gun ban remains effective through strict implementa­tion, focused law enforcemen­t and intensifie­d checkpoint operations,” he said.

Banac said a total of 1,623 persons have been arrested for possession of firearms since the gun ban was imposed on Jan. 13, with 166,123 checkpoint­s set up nationwide.

Since the police intensifie­d operations, 1,283 assorted firearms, 346 commercial explosives, 82 hand grenades, 10,053 pieces of ammunition, 55 gun replicas and 11,027 bladed weapons have been confiscate­d.

Gun owners also surrendere­d 2,592 firearms with expired licenses.

“As shown in the data, we are making headway and big progress in ensuring that we will have peaceful and orderly elections,” Banac said.

Banac did not go into details but added that because of Yulo’s murder, security adjustment­s will be made to ensure that a similar incident will not happen again.

National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) chief Director Guillermo Eleazar ordered an investigat­ion yesterday on what went wrong with their checkpoint operations and the implementa­tion of the riding-in-tandem ordinance following the killing of Yulo and his driver.

Eleazar said the Mandaluyon­g City police apparently failed to intercept the suspects despite police checkpoint operations.

The local government also has an ordinance prohibitin­g two males riding tandem on a motorcycle, unless they are father and son.

“We are focused on these riding-in-tandem concern for a long period of time. It is a challenge to us but the sad fact is that the Mandaluyon­g City police failed to intercept them,” Eleazar said.

“Anyway, in any modern police organizati­on, you cannot get zero crime.”

Eleazar reported that the murder incidents perpetrate­d by riding-in-tandem suspects in Metro Manila dropped from 330 in 2017 to 50 in 2018 or by 85.21 percent.

Overall, crime incidents involving riding-in-tandem in 2017 were pegged at 853 compared to 400 cases in 2018 or down by 53.11 percent.

Eleazar credited the NCRPO’s checkpoint operations and the implementa­tion of Oplan Sita, wherein all motorcycle riding persons were being flagged down and thoroughly checked.

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