4 killed in gunbattle as robbers seize bus
ROBBERS seized a passenger bus and engaged security forces in a highway chase and gunbattle that killed four civilians in the Philippines, police said yesterday.
The army initially blamed New People's Army rebels waging a 41-year rural-based insurgency for the shootout on Wednesday east of the capital, Manila, as rebel and government representatives met for informal talks in Hong Kong.
An investigation later showed three robbers commandeered the bus as a getaway vehicle, rammed through police and army roadblocks and opened fire on security forces chasing them, said Quezon provincial police chief Eric Velasquez.
He said the bus conductor, one male, and two female passengers were killed after the driver slammed the bus into a tree. Two suspects were in custody and one escaped.
"It was a running gunbattle. Shots were fired. When they stopped, they were still firing. One suspect escaped," Velasquez added.
He said the bus had only six passengers when the three men boarded, announced they were members of the communist rebel New People's Army, and put a gun to the driver's head. It was not immediately clear why they introduced themselves as rebels, possibly to cover their tracks and confuse authorities. The four dead were civilians "caught in the crossfire," he said.
Regional military spokesman Colonel Generoso Bolina said yesterday he was relying on initial information that the attackers were communist rebels, who have a strong presence in the province.
The rebels are considered a terrorist organization by the US and the European Union.
President Benigno Aquino III has formed a negotiating team to resume talks with the guerrillas, but sporadic fighting has continued. Peace talks brokered by Norway have been suspended since 2004.
The army initially blamed New People's Army rebels waging a 41-year rural-based insurgency for the shootout on Wednesday east of the capital, Manila, as rebel and government representatives met for informal talks in Hong Kong.
An investigation later showed three robbers commandeered the bus as a getaway vehicle, rammed through police and army roadblocks and opened fire on security forces chasing them, said Quezon provincial police chief Eric Velasquez.
He said the bus conductor, one male, and two female passengers were killed after the driver slammed the bus into a tree. Two suspects were in custody and one escaped.
"It was a running gunbattle. Shots were fired. When they stopped, they were still firing. One suspect escaped," Velasquez added.
He said the bus had only six passengers when the three men boarded, announced they were members of the communist rebel New People's Army, and put a gun to the driver's head. It was not immediately clear why they introduced themselves as rebels, possibly to cover their tracks and confuse authorities. The four dead were civilians "caught in the crossfire," he said.
Regional military spokesman Colonel Generoso Bolina said yesterday he was relying on initial information that the attackers were communist rebels, who have a strong presence in the province.
The rebels are considered a terrorist organization by the US and the European Union.
President Benigno Aquino III has formed a negotiating team to resume talks with the guerrillas, but sporadic fighting has continued. Peace talks brokered by Norway have been suspended since 2004.
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