Incident Summary:

07/18/2017: Assailants abducted Cortes district Vice Mayor Emmanuel Suarez outside his home in Sitio Lubcon, Cortes district, Surigao del Sur province, Philippines. Suarez was released an hour later. The New People's Army (NPA) claimed responsibility for the incident and stated that the attack was carried out to demonstrate against the continuance of martial law in Mindanao.

GTD ID:
201707180019

When:
2017-07-18

Country:
Philippines

Region:
Southeast Asia

Province/administrative
region/u.s. state:

Surigao del Sur

City:
Lubcon

Location Details:
The incident occurred in the Cortes district.

Attack Information
Type of Attack (more) Hostage Taking (Kidnapping)
Successful Attack? (more) Yes
Target Information (more)
Target Type: Government (General)
Name of Entity Government of Cortes
Specific Description Vice Mayor: Emmanuel Suarez
Nationality of Target Philippines
Additional Information
Hostages Yes
Number of Hostages 1
US Hostages 0
Hours of Kidnapping 1
Outcome Hostage(s) released by perpetrators
Ransom No
Property Damage No
Weapon Information
Type Sub-type
Firearms Handgun
Weapon Details
Handguns were used in the attack.
Additional Information
Suicide Attack?No
Part of Multiple Incident?No
Criterion 1 (more) Yes
Criterion 2 (more) Yes
Criterion 3 (more) Yes
Doubt Terrorism Proper (more) No
Perpetrator Group Information
Group Name Group Sub-name Claimed Responsibility
New People's Army (NPA) Front 30 Yes (Confirmed: Unknown; Mode: E-mail)
Perpetrator Statistics
Number of Perpetrators 3
Number of Captured Perpetrators 0
Casualty Information
Total Number of Casualties 0 Fatalities / 0 Injured
Total Number of Fatalities 0
Number of U.S. Fatalities 0
Number of Perpetrator Fatalities 0
Total Number of Injured 0
Number of U.S. Injured 0
Number of Perpetrators Injured 0
Sources
"NPA owns attacks in Surigao," Philippines News Agency, July 20, 2017.
"Vice mayor abducted, then released by suspected NPAs," Manila Bulletin, July 18, 2017.
"Philippines: NPA owns Caraga attacks as protest vs martial law extension," INQUIRER.net, July 18, 2017.