SAF commando runs out of phone load amid Mamasapano encounter

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    SAN LUIS, Aurora – When she heard the voice of her  husband and the background on the other end of the phone, Roselle Nacino sensed something  was going wrong.“Bakit me putukan diyan?” Roselle asked PO2  Nicky Nacino    Jr., one of the 44  Special Action Force commandos slaughtered by MILF and  BIFF forces in Mamasapano that  fateful day of Jan. 25.

    But she got no answer, instead Nicky asked him a P100  mobile phone load. That was  about   3 p.m, Roselle recalled  in an interview with the media here.  “Basta load-an mo ko ng P100, bilis,” she recounted.  Afterwards,  they lost touch. “Do’n kinabahan na’ko,”  she said.

    The policeman made another  call about an hour later and this time he managed to  talk to his father, Nicky Sr., according to Roselle. She repeated her question but Nicky   apparently opted to ignore it to prevent her from worrying. “Sabi lang niya ay baka matagalan na siya baka  makauwi tapos naputol na ang  linya,” she said.

    Nacino, nicknamed Dondon  was one of three fallen SAF troopers  from Central  Luzon, the others were PO3 John Lloyd Rebamonte Sumbilla  of Bataan and PO2 Junrel Narvas  Kibeteof Bulacan. His remains lie in estate in  a flag-draped casket in Barangay Ditumabo here where he is recognized as a folk hero. 

    Since his body arrived to a hero’s welcome, hundreds  of people have been flocking to their house here to get a  glimpse of the rookie policeman, including his fraternity brothers from the Tao Gamma Phi. He went home last December 20 and left for Zamboanga  on January 10. He was staring at her and their new born child  Nathan Inigo then broke down before leaving, Roselle said.

    “Mahirap nang umalis ng  bahay pag may baby,”  she recalled him saying.  Then her husband advised her to take good care of their child, as if trying to say goodbye. “Sisiguraduhin daw niya na hindi magiging miserable ang buhay ng anak namin  kung mamamatay siya,” Roselle  added.

    Some people from this  town are now demanding justice for him.  Nacino’s father and namesake Nicky Sr.  said President Aquino promised to help their family cope with the loss of  Dondon who is the sole breadwinner in the  family.

    The slain lawman, the eldest in a brood of six, has  been financing the studies of his siblings Geraldine, a  criminology  student at the University of Baguio and Ricky Boy, a  finance management student at the Saint Louis     University. Councilor Tristan Pimentel,  a fraternity brother of Nacino, stoked the outpouring of sympathy and grief    after filing a resolution for a hero’s burial  for Nacino who was laid to rest at the Ditumabo cemetery yesterday.

    “Dondon is not only a hero  here in San Luis but also of the Filipino nation and to our brothers in the Tao Gamma  Phi fraternity,” he said ahead of the funeral procession. In the necrological service, flyers bearing Nacino’s face  were  distributed with the words  “Heroes are ordinary people who make themselves extraordinary,”  quoting Gerard Way. 

    A tarpaulin posted near the  entrance door of their house showed Nacino’s exploits, including his being a veteran of  the Zamboanga siege where he led police commandos repel 253 members of the MNLF  who tried to take over   Zamboanga City on September 9, 2013.  

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