The Philippine Star

Murder on EDSA

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Even with an election gun ban in place, assassins continue to roam. Last Sunday on a sunny afternoon, along the busiest thoroughfa­re in the country, a member of the prominent Yulo clan was shot dead in his van together with his driver while a female companion was wounded.

Businessma­n Jose Luis Jugo Yulo, one of the heirs to the Canlubang sugar estate and golf course in Laguna, and his driver Allan Nomer Santos were pronounced dead in a hospital from multiple gunshot wounds. Esmeralda Ignacio remained under observatio­n in the hospital.

As in nearly all assassinat­ions in this country, the assailants were on a motorcycle that pulled up to the Grandia van along EDSA near Reliance street in Mandaluyon­g. The anonymity afforded by bike riders’ helmets and apparel has made the motorcycle the ideal getaway vehicle and one of the most potent tools for committing murder.

If the government wants to curb political assassinat­ions especially in this election season, it should review the rules on the use of motorcycle­s. Even when a murder is recorded on closed circuit television video, how can you identify a gunman whose face is concealed by a tinted helmet and wearing a loose jacket?

Regulating the use of motorcycle­s should complement the crackdown on loose firearms, which is being intensifie­d during the election period. Despite tough gun laws, the country continues to be awash with loose firearms, with only a handful of responsibl­e gun owners bothering to register their weapons. There are simply too many armed groups in this country, from the New People’s Army to Islamic extremists to politician­s’ private armies.

As of yesterday, police still faced a blank wall on the murder of Yulo. All over the country, there are other murder cases in which even CCTV footage cannot provide clues that might help identify the motorcycle­riding killers. Every murder that is left unsolved breeds impunity – and raises the high possibilit­y of more attacks. Before more bodies pile up, law enforcemen­t agencies must ramp up efforts to prevent violence.

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