Presidential candidate Rodrigo Duterte campaigns on a peace and order platform in the province where communist guerrillas and government forces often clash
WARM WELCOME. Residents of Ubay town in Bohol rush to Rodrigo Duterte's helicopter landing site on April 4, 2016. Photo by Ryan Macasero/Rappler
BOHOL,
"Leftist
ko, pero dili ko extreme left. Ari ko sa ilok," he cracked a joke before a visibly excited crowd
on Sunday, April 3. (I'm a leftist, but not on the extreme left. I'm closer to
the armpit.)
Bohol, a province
of 750,000 registered voters, is also the setting for frequent clashes between
the communist New People's Army (NPA) and the Armed Forces of the Philippines .
Duterte told the
crowd that he tells criminals in Davao
City , "When I say
get out, get out. Or you'll be killed. Pero wala'y apil ang NPA (NPA
members are not included)."
Ubay was an area
where the military frequently experienced clashes with the Communist Party of
the Philippines '
armed group.
He said that
while he would target criminals, he wouldn't kill NPA members because they are
fighting for "an ideology." Duterte joked, however, that he would
tell communist guerrillas to get out of his city and "go to Cebu and Bohol instead."
2013
earthquake
Duterte's
national campaign manager himself was a former NPA guerilla. Leoncio Evasco is also the mayor of Maribojoc town here, one
of the areas hardest hit by the powerful 2013 earthquake.
Evasco stood by
Duterte's side as the candidate addressed the packed Tagbilaran City Square .
Duterte told
Boholanos of how Evasco, a former priest, turned from a detained NPA rebel into
his chief of staff and campaign manager.
Evasco was best
known for refusing aid from the Red Cross during the 2013 Bohol
earthquake. He was criticized by Red Cross chairman Richard Gordon for not
cooperating with the agency; he criticized the organization for not working
with the local government units in distributing aid.
According to JP
Maslog, a volunteer organizer for Duterte from Tagbilaran, the Davao City
mayor came to volunteer and help in Maribojoc right after the earthquake. The
local chief executive handed over a check for P1 million from the Davao City
government to the municipal government of Maribojoc.
Duterte's
appeal
"Whenever
candidates and presidents came to here to Tagbilaran, I've never seen so many
people packed into the City Square ,"
Maslog told Rappler.
Duterte connected
with the crowd through his Bisaya brand of humor.
"Naa ka'y
bana, day? (Do you have a husband, miss?)" Duterte asked one woman in
the crowd. She nodded.
"Patyon
nako? (Should I kill him?)" Duterte jokingly responded.
Julie Nicolo, a
hairdresser from Dawis town, said that drug crimes are on the rise in her
municipality and in Tagbilaran, where she works.
But could Duterte
stop drug crimes in 3 to 6 months, as he has been promising
during the campaign? "I don't know, but let's give him a chance,"
Nicolo said in Visayan.
Nicolo said that,
aside from Duterte's promises of peace and order, what appeals the most to her
are his ideas of job creation and countryside development through federalism.
(READ: Will federalism address PH woes? Pros and cons of making the shift)
A little more
than half of the mayors in Bohol
are members of the ruling Liberal Party, which has fielded former Interior
Secretary Manuel Roxas II for president. In 2013, LP bets won 29 of the 47
mayoral races in Bohol .
http://www.rappler.com/nation/politics/elections/2016/128251-duterte-bohol-not-kill-npa
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.