CABANATUAN
CITY, Nueva Ecija, January 19, 2013–Fifteen of Nueva Ecija’s 27 municipalities and four of its five cities –
or roughly 60 percent - have been tagged
by the Philippine National Police (PNP) as election “hot spots.”
Senior Superintendent Crisaldo Nieves,
PNP provincial police director, said the areas in their election watchlist are
the cities are Cabanatuan, Gapan, Muñoz and San Jose and the towns of Aliaga,
Bongabon, Cuyapo, Gabaldon, Gen. Natividad, Guimba, Jaen, Licab,Lupao, Quezon, Rizal, San Isidro,
Talugtog, San Antonio and Sto. Domingo.
Among cities, only Palayan was not
included in the list, while among towns, those not included were Cabiao,
Carranglan, Laur, Llanera, Nampicuan, Pantabangan, Peñaranda, San Isidro, San
Leonardo, Sta. Rosa, Talavera and Zaragoza.
Nieves said that an area is
categorized as an election hot spot based on the following parameters : the
presenc e of private armed groups, intense political rivalries,
election-related incidents, shooting incidents victimizing elected government
officials, the proliferation of losse firearms, barangay affectation, the
presence of organized crime groups and other threat groups.
Cabanatuan, the province’s commercial and
trade center, leads the list due to the intense rivalry between reelectionist
Mayor Julius Cesar Vergara and Board Member Emmanuel Antonio Umali, younger
brother of reelectionist Gov. Aurelio Umali. Both camps traded barbs in the
run-up to the aborted December 1 plebiscite to ratify Presidential Proclamation
480 converting the city into a highly urbanized city.
The mayoral contest in Gapan is
considered heated due to the rivalry between reelectionist Mayor Christian
Tinio and Maricel Natividad, scion of ex-three term mayor Ernesto Natividad who
has gone into hiding for his involvement in the 2006 raid of a cockpit arena of
a political rival whose two sons were among those killed.
In Muñoz, comebacking former
three-term mayor Nestor Alvarez is facing Vice Mayor Esther Lazaro in a reprise
of a brief power grab by the vice mayor who occupied city hall following the
brief disappearance of Alvarez’s brother, Mayor Efren Alvarez over a criminal
case.
In the case of San Jose, it will be a
rematch between reelectionist Mayor Marivic Belena and estranged
brother-in-law, ex-vice mayor Mario Salvador who lost to her in the 2010 polls.
In Palayan City, the
contest between businesswoman Rianne Cuevas and comebacking former three-term
mayor Pacifico Fajardo, also a former three-term congressman is considered not
as heated and politically charged to
declare inclusion in the watch list. (Manny Galvez)
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