ILOILO CITY—The three Ati tribal leaders of Boracay Island just came from a meeting with nuns about 9 p.m. on Friday to prepare for Mass on Sunday and discuss the beautification of their community.

While walking home in Barangay Manoc-Manoc, Dexter Condez and his two female companions noticed a man wearing a jacket and cap following them. When they passed a dimly lit area, the man suddenly approached them, pulled out a gun and repeatedly shot Condez then fled on foot.

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One of the female tribal leaders ran to the community less than 100 meters away and sought help. The other attended to Condez who was bleeding and unconscious.

Condez, 26, was pronounced dead at Don Ciriaco S. Tirol Memorial Hospital on Boracay Island. Investigators found at least six bullet casings of a still unknown caliber of gun near the crime scene.

Condez was the spokesperson of the Boracay Ati Tribal Organization whose members have been fighting for land of their own on the 1,032-hectare Boracay Island which they consider their ancestral domain.

Senior Insp. Joeffer Cabural, chief of Boracay Tourist Assistance Center, the island’s police force, said the killer had yet to be identified and the motive for the killing was still unknown.

He said they still could not say if the killing was related to the dispute over land being occupied by the Ati.

But Church leaders in Boracay said the killing was most likely linked to the dispute over the 2.1-ha land that was covered by a certificate of ancestral domain title (CADT) granted by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) to the tribe on Jan. 21, 2011.

The NCIP and anthropological studies have supported claims that the Ati were the earliest settlers on the island but were displaced and driven away, especially starting in the 1970s when tourists and investors started to descend on the island.

The tribe occupied the property last year but at least three claimants were opposing the CADT.

Condez was among the tribal leaders who were involved in a confrontation with at least

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20 security guards employed by the Cebu-based J. King and Sons Co. Inc. at the Ati community last year.

“Dexter had no personal enemies, and we could not think of any reason why he would be killed other than his standing up for the right of the tribe to their land,” said Sr. Hermi Sutares of the Holy Rosary Parish Ati Mission (HRPAM).

The HRPAM, put up by Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul in 2000, has been helping the Ati acquire a permanent place of their own on the island.

Sutares said she and other nuns of the HRPAM and seven Ati leaders, including Condez, had a meeting at the former Ati community in Sitio Bulabog in Barangay Balabag. Condez and the two other tribe leaders walked home to Barangay Manoc-Manoc after the meeting ended around 8 p.m. on Friday.

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