Ucanews.com reported that Zara Alvarez, a volunteer for the Church-Workers Solidarity group in San Carlos Diocese, was gunned down in Bacolod City. She had been receiving death threats for more than a year.
Her death came a week after the murder of well-known labor and agrarian reform activist Randall "Randy" Echanis, who was shot dead in his Manila home Aug. 10.
Alvarez was affiliated with leftist groups Anakpawis -- of which Echanis was chairman -- and rights group Karapatan, which he co-founded. She once served as Karapatan's education director and a paralegal staff member.
In August 2019, Alvarez told ucanews.com that church work took her to the peripheries where "farmers who fight a daily struggle live in a place that can only be described as hell on earth."
She also said more than 87 farmers and activists in her province whom she knew had been murdered.
"Every time my phone rang, I knew someone had died," she had said.
She said that despite the death threats, she had to respond to her call "because the pursuit of justice has to continue."
"Receiving death threats has already become one small part of our work," she said.
Karapatan said Alvarez's death was part of a "pattern of killings." It said "she was among those tagged as 'terrorists' in a proscription case that the Department of Justice filed in 2018. Her name and those of many others were stricken off the list, but the threats against her by alleged state forces continued," Karapatan said on social media.
Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos called the killings "a clear mark of the shameless immorality of the Philippines."
He urged churchgoers to campaign for an end to extrajudicial killings where the perpetrators go unpunished.
Last year, Bishop Alminaza told ucanews.com that attacks on church workers like Alvarez were not new and were even to be expected.
"Anyone who chooses to be prophetic and follow Christ's works should be aware and prepare for the consequences," Bishop Alminaza said at the time.