Gunmen hiding in a sugarcane field ambushed a truckload of
policemen and village guards who had provided security for a village festival,
killing nine and wounding nine others Sunday in the central Philippines,
officials said.
About 20 gunmen raked the victims' truck with automatic
weapon fire before dawn in the foothills of Mount Kanlaon in Negros Occidental
province, firing nearly 300 rounds of ammunition. One police officer was among
those killed and two others were wounded, provincial police Chief Celestino
Guara said.
Eight other people, mostly village guards, were killed,
including two women, who hitched a ride on the truck. Seven other villagers
were wounded. They had joined the police in helping protect the festival late
Saturday and were traveling back to a police station when they were attacked,
police said.
"Our policemen managed to return fire but there were
just too many gunmen firing away," Guara said by cellphone from the scene
of the attack.
Road checkpoints were set up and government troops launched
a hunt for the attackers in Negros Occidental, a poor, sugar-producing province
about 470 kilometers (280 miles) southeast of Manila.
Police said the attackers may have been communist New
People's Army guerrillas. "Before withdrawing, the gunmen yelled, 'Long
live the New People's Army,'" Guara said.
One of the three police officers in the truck had received
death threats over a land dispute, and his adversaries may have enlisted the
help of the Maoist guerrillas to go after him, Guara said.
However, army brigade commander Col. Oscar Lactao said the
attackers may have been members of an illegal logging group. A forest ranger
was killed by suspected illegal loggers in the area last year, he said.
The killings are the latest in a flurry of gun violence that
has revived calls for tighter gun controls.
The country has long grappled with
communist and Muslim insurgencies, crime, and armed groups controlled by
politicians, warlords and powerful families.
Police estimate there are more than half a million unlicensed
firearms in the country, down from more than a million a few years ago.
Sunday's
attack occurred despite a national 150-day ban on the carrying of firearms
outside residences imposed by election officials to prevent violence ahead of
congressional and local elections on May 13. Jim Gomez, The Associated Press,
Manila
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