The Focal Figure in the Missing Riffles

The Senate has requested the Philippine National Police (PNP) and National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) to find the provider of the missing 1,004 AK-47 rifles, which apparently wound up in the possession of New People’s Army (NPA) rebels in Mindanao.

During the knowing about the Senate advisory group on open request led by Sen. Ronald dela Rosa, PNP and NBI authorities said they have no data about the whereabouts of Isidro Lozada, proprietor and owner of Caraga Security Agency, supposed to be the “focal figure” in the missing rifles.

Related Posts

The Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong, then, at that point head of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG), told the board that Lozada showed up at his office in February 2014. The Senate board resuscitated the test after President Duterte requested specialists last July to figure out who was liable for the missing attack rifles purportedly offered to the radicals.

Along with this, Dela Rosa said Lozada supposedly purchased the guns from Twin Pines Inc. weapon store in Butuan City and offered them in clusters to the NPA working in the Caraga locale. Lozada allegedly utilized four organizations, Caraga Security Agency, Isla Security Agency, Claver Mineral Development Corp. what’s more, JTC Mineral Mining Corp., all situated in Mindanao, as the implied end-clients of the rifles.

Magalong said Lozada conceded that he sold the attack rifles to NPA purchasers for P52,000 each, in tranches of 30 to 50 units for every exchange in business sectors, transport terminals, ocean and air terminals from 2011 to 2013. The PNP officials denounced for the situation drove by resigned general Gil Meneses denied any cooperation in the exchanges.

Consequently, Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said those behind the supposed offer of powerful weapons to the NPA ought to be rebuffed. That supposed deal happened numerous years prior before I turned into the guard boss. Assuming valid, I trust the offenders are rebuffed.

The blood of officers, cops and regular folks killed by the NPAs with those guns is in their grasp. Morever, The supposed deal to the NPA of the AK-47 rifles purchased by the PNP as far back as 2011 was found after more than 40 of the firearms were recuperated in a progression of conflicts with socialist renegades in the Caraga and Western Mindanao locales.

Jasmine C.

Mabuhay! An upcoming Newswriter for the Asian Affairs from the Pearl of the Orient - Philippines. Avid follower of celebrity gossips, fashion news. I got into writing so that my fellow Kababayan will be constantly updated with the latest news.

Recent Posts

STI’s Sudden Slowdown: What Singapore’s Market Pullback Reveals About Global Risk Mood

A​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ Market Catching Its Breath The Singapore market turned noticeably quieter after the Straits Times Index (STI) went down, reflecting…

December 6, 2025

Waves of Power: Decoding China’s Bold Fleet Deployment Across East Asian Seas

In​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ response to a sudden and highly visible spike in strategic naval operations, the attention of the world has been…

December 5, 2025

Rising Regional Tensions: How Naval Build-Up Near Taiwan and Japan Is Reshaping East Asian Security

The fast naval build-up in the area of Taiwan and Japan is causing the tension of East Asia to be…

December 5, 2025

Shifting Investment Tides: Asia’s IPO Boom and the AI-Bubble Warning for 2026

The future of Asia in 2026 has an excellent combination of both opportunities and risks: a fresh wave of IPO…

December 5, 2025

When Hunger Has a Gender: Unpacking the Global Food Access Gap Women Face

On​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ a dining table, food from many different cultures may look the same, but that is not the case. After…

December 5, 2025

Asia Power Index 2025: Unmasking the Power Shifts in a US–China Dominated Region — And India’s Strategic Rise

Asia​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ Power Index 2025 reveals a significant change of the region of Asia, transforming the entire continent. While the struggle…

December 5, 2025

This website uses cookies.

Read More