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Philippine President’ s war on drugs escalates as cops gun down 14 people including mayor denounced by Duterte, arrest daughter in drug raid

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Philippine cops gun down 14 people including mayor denounced by Duterte, arrest daughter in drug raid, Sunday
Ozamiz City Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog Sr.  and 14 others were killed in the firefight with police
His daughter, Vice Mayor Nova Princess Parojinog,  and five others were taken into custody
The mayor’s office died in the raid as well
Officers were serving warrants to Mayor Parojinog to search his houses for the suspected presence of drugs and unlicensed firearms when gunmen opened fire on law enforcement
The ensuing clashes  led to the deaths  of mayor and at least 14 other people  
Police said a grenade held by one of the politician’s bodyguards exploded in the home and could have been responsible for the deaths
Mayor Parojing who also face corruption charges was among the politicians President Rodrigo Duterte publicly linked to illegal drugs 
Authorities said assault rifles, grenades, methamphetamine
and cash were seized in the raids
He is the third mayor to be killed under Duterte’s crackdown on drugs, which has left more than 3,000 suspects dead
Current Ozamiz police chief Jovie Espenido was also the Albuera police chief Last year, when the then-detained town Mayor Rolando Espinosa Sr, was shot inside a jail cell during a police raid in the central province of Leyt
Ozamiz City Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog Sr. (l.) and his daughter, Vice Mayor Nova Princess Parojinog 1Ozamiz City Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog Sr.  seen [left], with his daughter, Vice Mayor Nova Princess Parojinog was gunned down Sunday as his men resisted arrest during a drug raid. The mayor’s wife also died in the raid

Philippine police said they fatally shot 14 people Sunday, including the mayor of the port a city mayor of Ozamiz, who was among the politicians President Rodrigo Duterte publicly linked to illegal drugs, in the bloodiest assault so far under Duterte’s anti-drug crackdown.
Officers of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group were simultaneously serving six search warrants against properties of the mayor and other Parojinog family members for drugs and unlicensed firearms when they were met with violent resistance at about 2:30 a.m., Sunday, police chief Jovie Espenido said.
Gunmen opened fire on the police, sparking clashes that killed the mayor and at least 14 other people, the Ozamiz police chief said.
“He’s a high-value target on illegal drugs,” Espenido, who oversaw the simultaneous, post-midnight raids on the mayor’s residence and three other houses, said at a news conference.
“We enforce the law to protect the people who want peace in this country,” he said. “How can we enforce the law if … we’re scared of the drug lords? That cannot be, they should be afraid of people who do good for all.”
At least five people, including Parojinog’s daughter, who serves as vice mayor of Ozamiz, were arrested during the raids. Policemen were approaching the mayor’s house when his bodyguards opened fire and hit a police car and wounded a police officer, sparking a firefight amid a power outage, Espenido said.
A grenade held by one of Parojinog’s bodyguards exploded during the clash inside his house and it remains unclear if he and his wife were killed by the blast or police gunfire or both, Espenido said, adding that assault rifles, grenades, suspected methamphetamine
and cash were seized in the raids.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte 6.jpgCritics of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte say his accusations of drug-trade ties are merely means of quelling dissent

Parojinog’s daughter, Vice Mayor Nova Echaves, was arrested and was to be flown to Manila for security reasons, regional police Chief Superintendent Timoteo Pacleb said.
“The administration vowed to intensify the drug campaign,” presidential spokesman Ernesto Abella said in connection with Sunday’s raids in Ozamiz. “The Parojinogs, if you would recall, are included in [President Duterte’s] list of personalities involved in the illegal drug trade.”
Parojinog, who also faced corruption charges, had denied any links to illegal drugs.
He was the third mayor to be killed under Duterte’s bloody crackdown on drugs, which has left more than 3,000 dead in reported gunfights with police and thousands of other unexplained deaths of suspects.
The anti-drug campaign killings have been widely criticized by Western governments and human rights groups that have called for an end to what they suspect were extrajudicial killings related to the anti-drug campaign.
Last year, police officers shot dead Albuera town Mayor Rolando Espinosa Sr. inside a jail cell in the central province of Leyte, and a week before that, another mayor and his nine bodyguards were gunned down allegedly during a firefight on a road in the southern Philippines.
Espenido was the Albuera police chief when the then-detained Espinosa was killed during a police raid in a jail in a nearby city in Leyte.
Duterte has vowed to defend policemen who would face criminal and human rights charges while cracking down on illegal drugs. He recently ordered a police officer charged in connection with Espinosa’s death to be reinstated after briefly being charged and suspended following the jail killing.
All three mayors were among more than 160 officials Duterte named publicly as being linked to illegal drugs in August last year as part of a shame campaign.
Duterte has vowed not to stop until the last drug dealer in the country has been eliminated.

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