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NEWS REPORTS 

POLICE REPORTS 

No Kalinga culture of firing guns during wakes, burials: Governor Edduba to endorse anti-indiscriminate firing ordinance to SP

  • Writer:  Mark Moises Calayan
    Mark Moises Calayan
  • 1 hour ago
  • 2 min read

Tabuk City, Kalinga – The Provincial Peace and Order Council (PPOC) of Kalinga, chaired by Governor James S. Edduba, will endorse to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan a proposal to craft an ordinance preventing indiscriminate firing in the province.


The prevention of indiscriminate firing in Kalinga was among the matters discussed during the joint meeting of the PPOC, Provincial Anti-Drug Abuse Council (PADAC), Provincial Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (PTF-ELCAC), Provincial Road Management Task Force (PRMTF), and the Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program (ECLIP) Committee on March 30 in Tabuk City.


In his talk during the meeting, Edduba mentioned that he had heard accounts suggesting that firing guns during wakes and burials is considered by some as a tradition in Kalinga.


The governor firmly denied this claim, saying that no such culture exists in the province.


“Regarding indiscriminate firing, this body will endorse to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan the enactment of an ordinance. Ta diay ibagbaga da kanu, tradition kanu ti taga Kalinga nga agpaputok da iti tiempo ti bangungon ket awan met ammok nga kultura ti Kalinga nga kasjay nga agpaputok ka nu adda maiponpon nga tao,” said Edduba.


Reports from the police in recent years show why concern has grown over indiscriminate firing in the Cordillera region, including Kalinga.


During the New Year celebration in 2025, a 16-year-old female from the province was injured after being hit by a stray bullet. Reports said it was the only recorded stray bullet injury in the region at the time.


In 2024, a 12-year-old student in Tabuk City was also wounded by a bullet from indiscriminate firing.


The PPOC’s plan to endorse the proposal to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, headed by Vice Governor Dave Odiem, aims to prevent similar incidents from happening again, ensuring public safety while discouraging practices that may be mistakenly justified as part of Kalinga’s culture.


“This council will endorse a proposal to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan to craft an ordinance that will prevent indiscriminate firing in the province. Awan ti kultura ti Kalinga nga kasjay (firing guns during wakes or burials),” Edduba added.

 
 
 

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