BFF-26 Philippine mayor on Duterte’s ‘narco-list’ slain by ‘sniper’

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PHILIPPINES-POLITICS-CRIME

Philippine mayor on Duterte’s ‘narco-list’ slain by ‘sniper’

MANILA, July 2, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A Philippine mayor on President Rodrigo
Duterte’s list of allegedly narcotics-linked officials was shot dead Monday
by a “sniper” in a broad daylight attack at a town ceremony, police said.

Antonio Halili was hit in the chest by a single shot fired from a
distance, unleashing chaotic scenes during the weekly flag raising ceremony
at the town hall in Tanauan, south of Manila.

In the moments that followed, terrified onlookers screamed and the mayor’s
security details opened fire, video of the scene showed.

However, the shooter managed to escape and Halili was pronounced dead at
hospital.

Town police chief Renato Mercado told AFP the shot was fired from about
150 metres (490 feet) away.

“The distance from the position was extraordinary. It could not be done by
an ordinary person. His skill can be compared to a trained sniper,” he told
AFP.

The controversial Halili had compared himself to Duterte as he publicly
shared the president’s hardline position against crime and illegal drugs.

But in 2017, Halili’s name surfaced on a “narco-list” presented by
Duterte, of officials allegedly linked to narcotics.

Halili was stripped of control of the police following the publication of
the list, but he denied any ties to drugs.

Though the Philippines sees occasional slayings of local politicians, the
brazen nature of the killing and links to Duterte’s drug war drew immediate
outrage.

“This is clearly another case of EJK (extra-judicial killing) resulting
from the so-called drug war launched by the government,” opposition leader
Senator Francis Pangilinan said in a statement.

“It is this Philippine image of a ‘wild, wild west’ that has also dampened
the desire of both foreign and local investors,” he added.

The government has said that more than 4,200 suspects have been killed as
part of the war on drugs that is the centrepiece of Duterte’s administration.

But rights groups charge that the actual death toll is three times higher
and that the police and shadowy vigilantes are murdering people even without
proof they are linked to drugs.

Three other mayors on the “narco-list” have been shot dead, one of them
while being held inside a jail cell.

Mercado, the Tanauan police chief, said that the killing may be linked to
the illegal drugs allegations.

Duterte’s spokesman Harry Roque condemned the crime and praised Halili as
the mayor of “one of the most progressive towns,” in his province.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1350 hrs