NTF-ELCAC urges public to await full evidence in Toboso encounter probe

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• GILBERT P. BAYORAN

The National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) on Friday (May 8) called on the public to refrain from drawing premature conclusions regarding the April 19 encounter in Toboso, Negros Occidental, stressing that a full forensic and operational investigation is still ongoing.

NTF-ELCAC executive director Ernesto Torres Jr. said the preliminary observations of forensic pathologist Dr. Raquel Fortun should be treated with respect but viewed within the broader context of a comprehensive investigation into the incident, which left 19 alleged New People’s Army (NPA) combatants dead.

In a statement, Torres emphasized that mass-casualty investigations require extensive procedures, including crime-scene processing, cadaver recovery, autopsy examinations, ballistic analysis, witness interviews, and chain-of-custody verification before any definitive conclusions can be reached.

Members of the PNP Scene Of the Crime Operatives scour evidences at the encounter site in Brgy. Salamanca, Toboso, Negros Occidental.

He added that the findings reportedly involving five bodies do not, by themselves, establish that a massacre occurred. Instead, it said the observations raise questions that should be addressed through the official report expected to be released by authorities.

The task force also defended the handling of evidence at the encounter site, saying government troops and police personnel conducted recovery operations under hazardous conditions.

The area remained dangerous due to the possible presence of improvised explosive devices, booby traps, and armed stragglers following the firefights.

Torres further said that the later recovery of a firearm by an independent fact-finding group indicated that the area had not yet been fully secured after the clashes.

On the issue of the reported mistaken turnover of one body to relatives, the task force said the incident should not be interpreted as evidence of bad faith or an attempt to conceal information.

It maintained that the error arose from the identification and claiming process conducted by relatives.

The Philippine Army reiterated that the Toboso incident involved “running firefights throughout the day,” during which armed rebels allegedly attempted to evade pursuing government forces.

Twenty-four firearms were reported by the 79th Infantry Battalion to have been recovered from the encounter site. | GB