SAN FRANCISCO, Agusan del Sur (MindaNews / 8 March) – San Francisco Mayor Grace Carmel Paredes-Bravo has offered a P100,000 cash reward for residents who can provide information leading to the apprehension of the suspects behind the fatal shooting of two oil palm workers and the injury of another during an ambush on February 29 at Barangay San Isidro here.
The reward, funded from her own pocket, will be given to an individual who can provide information that will help in the arrest of the suspects, as the local police have already identified persons of interest in the crime.
“I hope this will bring justice to the victims, and prevent such incidents from happening again,” Bravo stated in a message posted on her Facebook page on Wednesday.
She emphasized that the reward would aid in gathering more information and evidence against the perpetrators, as she believes, based on police investigation, that there are other individuals involved in the commission of the crime.
Police Major Milan Naz, the local police chief, expressed gratitude to the mayor for the reward offer, stating that “it will help in resolving the crime promptly.”
The shooting incident occurred February 29 noontime while the victims, Rolando Ayaton and Jimmy Boy Lucero, were transporting harvested oil palms at the foot of Mt. Magdiwata near the national highway.
Another worker, Daniel Gallemba, was injured in the ambush.
Ayaton died on the spot, while Lucero succumbed the following day.
Police investigators are exploring the angle of a land conflict between a Manobo group called Oyay Mansaloay Antod Ogow Bando Ugong (OMAUBAO) Tribal Clan Organization and NGPI Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Multi-Purpose Cooperative (NGPI ARB MPC).
In December 2022, agrarian reform beneficiaries and officials of San Francisco Water District have protested against the occupation by OMAUBAO members of areas in San Francisco and Rosario towns in Agusan del Sur, which are planted with oil palm and they claimed as their ancestral domain.
Bardo “Datu Hag-um” Bando, the leader of OMAUBAO and who is also the Indigenous Peoples Mandatory Representative to the municipal council, cited the certificate of recognition of their Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) application, issued by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples on Dec. 14, 2022, as the basis of their claim.
The Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) provincial office has already covered the contested oil palm farms under the Support for the Parcelization of Individual Titles (SPLIT) program.
In an interview with local reporters on March 4, Bando denied OMAUBAO’s involvement in the incident, stating that their clan has a standing agreement with the DAR provincial office to resolve the conflict.
He emphasized that the perpetrators should be held accountable for the crime, describing it as a cowardly act.
“If you ambush, do it to your armed targets, not innocent civilians,” Bando said. (Chris Panganiban / MindaNews)