‘Toboso probe must yield laws to prevent deaths’

LocalPolitics
30 Apr 2026 • 10:09 PM MYT
The Manila Times
The Manila Times

One of the longest-running English broadsheets in the Philippines

‘Toboso probe must yield laws to prevent deaths’

MANILA, Philippines—The National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac) on Thursday said a planned congressional inquiry into the April 19 clash in Toboso, Negros Occidental should lead to concrete legislation to prevent similar incidents.

The statement followed the filing of House Resolution 968 seeking an investigation into the encounter between government forces and members of the New People’s Army (NPA).

NTF-Elcac Executive Director Ernesto Torres Jr. welcomed the move but said that its value lies in outcomes, not rhetoric.

“Legislative inquiries, when conducted in good faith, are an important part of democratic governance,” Torres said, adding that lawmakers’ efforts to “establish facts, clarify circumstances, and determine whether policy or measures are needed are important exercises of oversight.”

Torres said the inquiry must be “anchored on evidence, objectivity, and the commitment to truth.”

He reiterated that the Toboso incident was “an armed encounter between government forces and the NPA’s North Negros Front,” triggered by civilian information and confirmed by intelligence reports, including the recovery of weapons and the presence of an armed formation.

“These are the conditions of an active conflict environment,” he said, noting that even the Communist Party of the Philippines admitted that a “tactical defeat” occurred.

“You cannot claim a ‘tactical defeat’ and, in the same breath, insist that those involved were merely unarmed civilians,” Torres added.

He warned that such contradictions “risk distorting the facts surrounding what was clearly a combat situation.”

“The pursuit of ‘balanced narratives’ should not lead to false equivalence between state forces operating under the Constitution and armed groups that function outside the rule of law,” he said.

Torres said that accountability mechanisms exist within government operations, citing the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ rules of engagement, adherence to international humanitarian law, and chain of command.

He said the focus of the inquiry should be on prevention, particularly addressing how armed groups recruit individuals, including the youth

“Addressing these conditions requires more than hearings. It requires sustained governance, development, and community engagement,” he added.

Torres warned against politicizing the issue, saying the loss of life should not be reduced to competing narratives.

“In the end, the measure of any inquiry is not how many narratives are presented, but whether it leads to better protection for communities, greater accountability, and a clearer path toward lasting peace,” he said.