MANILA, Philippines—State authorities on Saturday arrested a top
leader of the New People’s Army (NPA) who had received military training
in Libya and had a P5.6 million bounty on his head.
A statement from the military’s Southern Luzon Command said
alleged NPA leader Benjamin Mendoza and three companions were arrested
shortly after midnight outside a hideout in Quezon City.
The military said 61-year-old Mendoza (aka Lorens/Kenji/Dave) was
a member of the Communist Party of the Philippines’ Central Committee
and secretary of the Southern Tagalog Regional Party Committee (STRPC).
Mendoza has two arrest warrants issued against him by the Regional Trial Court in Lucena City for rebellion.
Also arrested were Mendoza’s companion Josephine Mendoza, aka
Luisa, said to be an executive committee member of the STRPC, and two
unidentified members.
They were arrested at 12:15 a.m. by joint
elements of the 2nd Infantry Division, Philippine Army, other AFP units
and the Philippine National Police (PNP) along Aurora Boulevard, Quezon
City.
Mendoza was said to have taken a course in
commando operations, heavy weapon operations, bomb making and sniping in
Libya from 1981 to 1982. Two years later, he became the NPA commanding
officer in Oriental Mindoro. He went on to higher positions in the
rebels’ Southern Tagalog front.
According to Solcom, Mendoza held on to his
leadership post despite having been meted “Lifetime Disciplinary
Action” by the rebel leadership for his extensive involvement in
“Operation Missing Link (OPLM),” the rebels’ attempt to cleanse its
ranks of “deep penetration agents of the military in their Laguna and
Quezon. The rebel organization’s OPLM is said to have resulted in the
torture and death of hundreds of rebel fighters.
The military statement said Mendoza was
also known to have “led the most number of successful NPA operations
with the least numbers of NPA casualties in 1991.”
Mendoza carried the alias “Ka Even” in
1975, when he led the Samahan Demokratiko ng Kabataan (SDK) in the
National Capital Region (NCR), a youth organization outlawed after the
declaration of martial law in 1972. Mendoza joined the clandestine
Communist Party of the Philippines and later became the commanding
officer of the Crispin Tagamolila Command, in charge of the central
committee security. He was assigned to the Southern Tagalog region, his
work focusing on ideological and political organizational tasks, the
military report added.
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Ranking NPA leader nabbed in QC
4:21 PM