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Thursday, March 24, 2005
Terrorists may also pose as 'beggars': police By Ben O. Tesiorna
* Vendors temporarily banned in the vicinity of churches
AUTHORITIES are keeping their eye on practically everyone just to ensure that no untoward incident will happen during the Holy Week observation.
People dressed as beggars are not spared from scrutiny by authorities.
Davao City Police Office director Conrado Laza said they are now closely guarding all churches in the city as well as all the other establishments or areas where people mostly converge in time for the Holy Week.
It was learned that authorities had already temporarily banned all vendors around the churches for security reasons.
The City Government is said to be feeding the affected vendors at the moment until the time the police and military allow them to go back to their usual business.
Laza said they have requested additional 500 forces aside from the existing 1,700 police personnel of the city.
About 500 soldiers from Task Force Davao are also deployed to secure the people from any terrorist attack.
Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte meanwhile said only one-third of the city police force are assigned to the usual police business while two-thirds are now concentrating on their anti-terrorism actions.
It is for this reason, Duterte said, that he had relegated to the barangay officials the problem on hooliganism in their respective areas.
Duterte said he issued barangay them shotguns last year so they could take care of the peace and order in their barangays.
Soldiers and police have boosted patrols around shopping malls, churches and other crowded places to thwart reported bombing plots threatened by the Abu
Sayyaf as revenge for the death of 23 inmates killed by police in a botched jailbreak last week including three ranking Sayyaf leaders.
A recent intelligence report said Jemaah Islamiyah gave Abu Sayyaf militants at least US$18,500 last year for explosives training.
Jemaah Islamiyah has been blamed for the August 2003 bombing of the J.W. Marriott hotel in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, which killed 12 people, and the October 2002 bombings on Bali Island that killed 202, mostly foreign tourists.
For Bisaya stories from Davao. Click here. (March 24, 2005 issue) Write letter to the editor.Click here. Join the Sun.Star message board.Click here. |
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