Americans Among 19 Killed in Philippines Clash
Two U.S. nationals were among 19 suspected New People's Army fighters killed in clashes with troops in the Philippines, as officials and rights groups dispute the circumstances.
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Two Americans flew to the Philippines in March. By April 19, they were dead.
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What happened in between is now the subject of a growing dispute between the Philippine military and human rights groups. And the US Embassy has not said a single word about it.
Philippine authorities confirmed that Lyle Prijoles and Kai Dana-Rene Sorem were among 19 people killed during clashes with government troops in Toboso, Negros Occidental. Officials say all 19 were suspected fighters with the New People's Army, a communist insurgent group designated as a terrorist organization by both the Philippines and the United States.
Both Americans had arrived in the country just weeks before the encounter. Authorities believe they traveled to the province before the clashes began.
But here is where the two versions of this story split completely.
The Philippine military says troops responded to a tip from local residents about rebel activity in the area. A rebel commander with a bounty of one million pesos was reportedly killed. One soldier was injured. Twenty-four firearms were recovered at the scene.
Human rights advocates say civilians were among those killed.
The National Union of People's Lawyers identified several of the dead not as fighters but as a student leader from the University of the Philippines, two farmers' rights activists and a local journalist.
Four people whose presence in that area had nothing to do with armed insurgency. At least according to the groups raising the alarm.
If you have followed this far, here is the part that puts this into a wider picture.
The New People's Army once fielded around 25,000 fighters. Officials say that number has collapsed to fewer than 900 due to sustained military pressure, internal divisions and surrenders. The insurgency is losing ground.
But that context cuts both ways. A weakening movement under pressure is also one where the line between combatant and civilian can become dangerously blurred in the field.
Philippine officials warned Americans of Filipino descent in the US against being recruited by left-leaning groups into supporting insurgent movements. The task force used the term "terror-grooming" to describe that process.
Rights groups are calling for international oversight and an independent investigation. They argue the incident could reflect a broader pattern of violations of international humanitarian law in rural parts of the country.
Peace talks between the government and the NPA, previously facilitated by Norway, collapsed under former President Rodrigo Duterte after both sides accused each other of continuing hostilities during negotiations.
Those talks have not resumed.
Two American citizens are dead in a rural Philippine province. The circumstances are disputed. The US Embassy in Manila has not responded.
That silence is its own kind of answer. And it is one that Prijoles and Sorem's families are still waiting to understand.
Editor's Note: The incident highlights the continuing complexity of the Philippines' decades-long insurgency, raising concerns over foreign involvement and renewed calls for accountability from groups such as the National Union of People's Lawyers.