MANILA (AFP) -             
Tens of 
thousands of security forces fanned out across the Philippines Sunday on
 the eve of national polls, following a bitter and deadly election 
campaign plagued by rampant vote-buying and intimidation.
Elections
 are a traditionally volatile time in a nation infamous for lax gun laws
 and a violent political culture, and they have been inflamed again this
 year by allegations of massive corruption from the local village to 
presidential level.
"Vote-buying is everywhere," Commission on Elections (Comelec) commissioner Luie Guia told reporters.
"We are receiving reports that everything is being used to buy votes, not only money. It could be (plastic) basins, groceries."
Such
 small gifts are an effective, if illegal, way for politicians to win 
support in a nation where roughly one quarter of its 100 million people 
live below the poverty line.
To try to check vote buying, the 
election commission has banned mobile phones in polling places. This is 
so people cannot photograph their ballots to prove to vote-buyers that 
they cast their ballots for the right candidates.
At the national level, presidential and vice presidential rivals are also accusing each other of trying to rig the elections. 
President
 Benigno Aquino, who is limited by the constitution to a single term of 
six years, has warned the favourite to succeed him, Rodrigo Duterte, is a
 dictator in the making and will bring terror to the nation.
Duterte,
 mayor of the southern city of Davao, has in turn accused Aquino's 
administration of planning "massive cheating" to ensure that his 
preferred successor, former interior secretary Mar Roxas, wins.
Followers
 of Duterte, who has admitted links to vigilante death squads in Davao 
that rights groups say have killed more than 1,000 people, have warned 
of a "revolution" if he loses. 
Meanwhile, at least 15 people have died in election-related violence, according to national police statistics.
In
 the latest suspected case, a grenade blast killed a nine-year-old girl 
behind the house of a powerful political warlord in the strife-torn 
province of Maguindanao late on Saturday, said Chief Inspector Jonathan 
del Rosario.
The girl's death has not yet been included in the 
tally, although it likely will be, according to del Rosario, spokesman 
for a police election-monitoring taskforce in Manila.
"This looks like it is election-related but we have a process we have to follow," he told AFP.
Del
 Rosario said 90 percent of the nation's police force, or about 135,000 
officers, were already on election-related duty and had been authorised 
to carry their assault rifles. He said they were guarding polling and 
canvassing places and manning road checkpoints.
© 2016 AFP
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