18/05/2026
๐๐ป๐ผ๐๐ต๐ฒ๐ฟ ๐๐ฟ๐ถ๐ด๐ต๐ ๐ฌ๐ผ๐๐ป๐ด ๐๐ถ๐ณ๐ฒ ๐๐ผ๐๐: ๐ก๐ง๐-๐๐๐๐๐ ๐ช๐ฎ๐ฟ๐ป๐ ๐๐ป๐ฒ๐ ๐๐ด๐ฎ๐ถ๐ป๐๐ ๐ง๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ฟ๐ผ๐ฟ ๐๐ฟ๐ผ๐ผ๐บ๐ถ๐ป๐ด
The National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) expresses profound sadness over the death of Vince Francis Dingding, a former student leader whose life, talent, and future ended in a tragic armed encounter in Negros Occidental.
This comes as another painful reminder of how the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People's Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF) terror-grooming pipeline continues to trap and consume the very youth it claims to fight for.
Dingdingโs death reflects a troubling pattern that has surfaced repeatedly in previous cases, including the April 19, 2026 encounter in Toboso, Negros Occidental, where some of those killed were young, educated, and idealistic individuals whose journeys allegedly moved through activist spaces, student environments, or social networks before ending inside armed underground structures.
The recurring similarities are difficult to ignore.
For the Task Force, these incidents collectively raise serious concerns over what it describes as a continuing pattern of ideological grooming in which youthful idealism, social causes, and advocacy spaces are gradually transformed into entry points toward clandestine structures and eventually armed struggle.
The tragedy is not merely that lives are lost in encounters, but that many of these young Filipinos may never again have the chance to return to the peaceful futures that once stood before them.
In the recent encounter in Cauayan, Negros Occidental, government forces engaged heavily-armed remnants the NPA, resulting in the deaths of five personalities, including two alleged NPA leaders. Among those identified was Dingding, who served in political and organizational functions within the terrorist movementโs Southeast Front structures in Negros. He was a political instructor and officer within the dismantled Southeast Front.
Beyond operational reports and organizational designations lies a far more painful reality: another young Filipino life has ended in violence; another family now mourns; another future has vanished before it could fully unfold.
The Task Force believes that no Filipino death should ever be celebrated as a victory, least of all the death of a young, educated, and intelligent individual whose life once carried enormous promise. Behind every armed encounter casualty is not merely a name in an after-action report, but a son, a classmate, a friend, a dreamer, and a human life that once held limitless possibilities but was victimized, targeted, lured and trapped in the death factory that is the CPP-NPA-NDF.
Publicly available records show that Dingding once moved within student leadership circles and was associated with the University of the Philippines Cebu community. Dingding was a student leader and council official during his years in UP Cebu โ a profile not uncommon among idealistic young Filipinos who enter civic and advocacy spaces motivated by a sincere desire to contribute to social change and national development. Dingding was active in the Kabataan Partylist.
Public Facebook records indicate that he reportedly had a relationship with Myles Albasin, also a former UP Cebu student leader who was arrested in 2018 as part of a group of suspected NPA members apprehended during operations in Negros Oriental.
Albasin spent years in detention until a Regional Trial Court in Dumaguete acquitted them in late 2025.
These details are not cited to assign guilt by association or to diminish the outcome of legal proceedings. Every individual and every case stands on its own facts. Yet the broader and deeply troubling pattern cannot simply be ignored: too many intelligent, idealistic, and promising young Filipinos have entered environments where activism, ideological conditioning, underground structures, and armed struggle dangerously intersect.
Dingdingโs story bears painful similarities to many others before him โ bright students with tremendous potential who gradually found themselves moving deeper into structures of armed conflict where returning to peaceful civilian life often becomes increasingly difficult.
To many of them, there was simply no opportunity to back out.
This is where the deepest tragedy lies โ not merely in death itself, but in the slow disappearance of futures that could have taken entirely different paths.
Vince Francis Dingding could have become a teacher, journalist, engineer, entrepreneur, community leader, public servant, or any number of things that would have contributed positively to nation-building. He could have lived a long life serving communities, raising a family, building dreams, and helping shape the country he once hoped to change.
Instead, another promising life ended in conflict.
Another young Filipino is gone.
Another family now grieves.
Another set of dreams remains unfinished forever.
For this reason, NTF-ELCAC remains committed to the fact that prevention will always be more important than cure. Once young individuals become deeply embedded within armed organizations, the possibility of simply walking away often becomes increasingly difficult.
Families, schools, universities, communities, and institutions therefore carry a shared responsibility to recognize early warning signs and protect the youth before they are drawn into pathways that normalize violence and eventually consume the very lives they once sought to uplift.
Vince Francis Dingding should not become merely another casualty statistic or another forgotten name in a long history of armed conflict. His story should instead stand as a painful reminder that every wasted youth is a national loss โ and that peace, opportunity, and prevention remain the country's strongest weapons against cycles of violence and tragedy.
https://www.ntfelcac.gov.ph/post/another-bright-young-life-lost-ntf-elcac-warns-anew-against-terror-grooming