The Philippines has a long tradition of political violence -- fuelled by lax gun laws and politicians with private armies. (Representational Image)
Manila:
A candidate for mayor in the southern Philippines was shot dead today, police said, bringing to at least 15 the number of people killed in violence related to national elections.
The Philippines has a long tradition of political violence -- fuelled by lax gun laws, politicians with private armies and corrupt law enforcement agencies -- and dozens of people are killed each election campaign.
In the latest incident, unknown gunmen broke into the home of politician Armando Ceballos in a mountainous town in the southern Philippines at dawn today and shot him dead, a provincial police spokesman said.
"The killers wore bonnets... as of now we are treating this as an election-related case," the spokesman, Chief Superintendent Surki Serenas, told AFP by telephone.
Ceballos was one of two candidates standing for mayor of Lantapan, a remote town about 840 kilometres (520 miles) south of Manila. His opponent is the incumbent vice mayor.
In the far southwestern island of Puerto Princesa, gateway to some of the Philippines' most popular holiday destinations, two supporters of the local mayor were stabbed to death at a campaign sortie late on Thursday, police said.
The two men were part of a motorbike convoy in support of Puerto Princesa city mayor Lucilo Bayron, who is stumping to retain his seat, police investigator Earl Torres told AFP on Saturday.
The attackers were not identified, though the Bayron camp blamed supporters of his rival.
There had been 14 deaths in 26 "validated election-related incidents" of violence between January 10 and May 5, national police said in a statement. It was not clear whether the Puerto Princesa deaths were included in the list.
In the country's deadliest single incident of political violence on record, 58 people were massacred in 2009 as gunmen allegedly belonging to a local warlord in the southern Philippines attacked a group of people to stop a rival filing his election candidacy.
Thirty-two of the victims were journalists covering the contest, making the attack the deadliest ever recorded against media professionals.
Twenty-eight members of the Ampatuan clan accused of orchestrating the killings are on trial for the massacre, but one of them is running for mayor in the family's home territory after the trial court allowed him to post bail.
About 18,000 posts are being contested in Monday's elections, from the president down to the village councillor level.
More than 70 people were killed in violence related to the 2013 mid-term elections.
The Philippines has a long tradition of political violence -- fuelled by lax gun laws, politicians with private armies and corrupt law enforcement agencies -- and dozens of people are killed each election campaign.
In the latest incident, unknown gunmen broke into the home of politician Armando Ceballos in a mountainous town in the southern Philippines at dawn today and shot him dead, a provincial police spokesman said.
"The killers wore bonnets... as of now we are treating this as an election-related case," the spokesman, Chief Superintendent Surki Serenas, told AFP by telephone.
Ceballos was one of two candidates standing for mayor of Lantapan, a remote town about 840 kilometres (520 miles) south of Manila. His opponent is the incumbent vice mayor.
In the far southwestern island of Puerto Princesa, gateway to some of the Philippines' most popular holiday destinations, two supporters of the local mayor were stabbed to death at a campaign sortie late on Thursday, police said.
The two men were part of a motorbike convoy in support of Puerto Princesa city mayor Lucilo Bayron, who is stumping to retain his seat, police investigator Earl Torres told AFP on Saturday.
The attackers were not identified, though the Bayron camp blamed supporters of his rival.
There had been 14 deaths in 26 "validated election-related incidents" of violence between January 10 and May 5, national police said in a statement. It was not clear whether the Puerto Princesa deaths were included in the list.
In the country's deadliest single incident of political violence on record, 58 people were massacred in 2009 as gunmen allegedly belonging to a local warlord in the southern Philippines attacked a group of people to stop a rival filing his election candidacy.
Thirty-two of the victims were journalists covering the contest, making the attack the deadliest ever recorded against media professionals.
Twenty-eight members of the Ampatuan clan accused of orchestrating the killings are on trial for the massacre, but one of them is running for mayor in the family's home territory after the trial court allowed him to post bail.
About 18,000 posts are being contested in Monday's elections, from the president down to the village councillor level.
More than 70 people were killed in violence related to the 2013 mid-term elections.
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