Suspected communist guerrillas burned a small plane used for aerial agricultural spraying and a warehouse near an airstrip in the southern Philippines in their latest attack, police said today.
At least six New People's Army rebels disguised as policemen barged into the government-owned Philippine Agricultural Aviation Corp late yesterday in far-flung Tubay town in Agusan del Norte province and used aviation gas stored in the compound to set a parked single-engine plane ablaze, police Inspector Napoleon Boiser said.
Boiser, who heads the police forces in coastal Tubay, said the gunmen, who identified themselves as communist insurgents, also burned a warehouse and an electric generator after disarming two guards. They took two shotguns before fleeing, Boiser said by phone.
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The rebels, who have been fighting since 1969 in one of Asia's longest-running Marxist insurgencies, have escalated attacks against agricultural plantations and mining companies that they accuse of exploiting workers or damaging the environment.
The attacks have further dimmed prospects of a resumption of stalled peace negotiations. In contrast, government talks with the largest Muslim rebel group in the country's south have progressed and led to the signing of a new Muslim autonomy deal in March.