Showing posts with label ARMM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARMM. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Blast rocks Cotabato anew


KIDAPAWAN CITY -- The military said an explosion rocked anew Cotabato City Saturday morning, just few meters away from the regional headquarters of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (Armm).
A bomb expert from the 7th Marine Battalion Landing Team who refused to be identified said another improvised explosive device (IED) was discovered just few meters away from the blast site.
But while they were on the process of defusing the bomb, he said they found a firing pin attached to the explosive.
     
No was hurt in the blast.
   
The two bombs were made from an 81-milimeter mortar round, authorities said.
     
The explosion in Cotabato City came some 10 hours after two motorcycle-riding men lobbed an explosive in front of heavy equipment owned by a Chinese-owned construction firm doing road rehabilitation projects along Pigcawayan-Pikit highway in North Cotabato.
Pigcawayan police identified the injured persons as Dave Potenciano, 35, and James Barte, 19.
     
Extortion is likely the motive behind the blast, Pigcawayan town police chief Donald Cabigas.
     
Cabigas said the construction firm received an extortion letter two weeks ago demanding from them protection money worth P5 million.
     
The firm, however, refused to heed to their demands, Cabigas said.
------------------------------------------------------------------
By Malu CadeliƱa Manar | Sunday, March 4, 2012 | SunStar.Com.Ph | Article Link

PH gov’t: No new peace talks with MNLF


CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY, Philippines—Government is committed to “find solutions to issues” bugging the full implementation of the Final Peace Agreement (FPA) it inked with the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) in 1996, but it will not tackle new ones that would precipitate fresh negotiations.
Presidential adviser on the peace process Teresita Quintos-Deles stressed this point during the high-level meeting March 1 to 2 in Bandung, Indonesia, between government and the MNLF under the auspices of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).
The meeting sought to thresh out issues related to the parties’ respective compliance with the FPA.
In her opening address, a copy of which was given the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Deles cited that the OIC’s Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM) itself recognized that the tripartite process’ aim “is not to renegotiate the agreement but rather to review its implementation…”
Earlier, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which has been negotiating for peace with the Philippine government, criticized the bringing up of the issues of power-sharing, wealth-sharing and territory in the review.
Apart from being “outside the competence of the FPA,” these are already in the official agenda of the MILF’s peace negotiations with government, according to the group that broke away from the MNLF in the 1970s.
“While we support the full implementation of the FPA, we cannot understand the wisdom of inputting new issues” into the review process, said an MILF statement.
The negotiation between government and the MNLF officially ended September 2, 1996, “which means that no new agenda will be discussed except those related to the implementation,” the MILF further noted.
Starting as a breakaway faction from the MNLF, the MILF is currently engaged in peace talks facilitated by Malaysia.  The talks are already into the final phase.
The MILF has been saying that its peace formula seeks to deepen and widen the gains so far achieved for Moro self-governance.
According to a news release from the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP), the governors of five provinces in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) joined the government contingent in the Bandung meeting.
Also in the delegation were Representatives Jesus Sacdalan of North Cotabato and Sandra Sema of Maguindanao. Sacdalan and Sema are chair and vice-chair, respectively, of the House committee on peace, unity and reconciliation.
Deles said their presence was meant “to demonstrate the seriousness of government’s intent…to bring proper completion and closure to a process that has gone on for far too long.”
Deles explained that the current efforts to do institutional overhaul of the ARMM overseen by an interim leadership appointed by President Aquino have been in keeping with “an understanding” reached mid-2011 “to forge partnership between the government and the MNLF in pursuit of governance reform.”
A former MNLF fighter and woman leader, Bainon Karon, was appointed ARMM regional vice governor.
Deles noted that ARMM reforms “have drawn in and will continue to draw in more MNLF partisans, onto the straight path of public service exercised as a public trust.”
She expressed confidence that by the second half of the year, “the transformation that we are working to make happen in Muslim Mindanao” would have made an impact.
The review of the 1996 FPA is undertaken by the OIC’s Peace Committee for Southern Philippines chaired by Indonesia, which also brokered the pact.
-----------------------------------------------------
By  |  | Sunday, March 4th, 2012 | Article Link

Friday, March 02, 2012

Survey: Marines well-loved in Sulu


Eighty percent of Sulu residents trust the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and 98 percent credit it for securing their communities. These emerged from a recent survey in the island province made infamous by the Abu Sayyaf terrorist group. Sulu in the ’70s to early ’80s also saw separatists fiercely fighting government troops.

Of the 98 percent who consider the AFP as the greatest impact to local security, 50 percent believe it is making their place a lot safer. Respondents basically were referring to the Philippine Marines, the most visible AFP unit to Sulu locals. The Marine Corps has two brigades consisting of six battalions in the island. Jointly with visiting US forces, they hold medical-dental checkups, erect schoolhouses, dig drainage, and perform other “civil-military operations.” Congratulations are in order for Marine Corps commandant Maj. Gen. Rustico Guerrero, and Naval Forces-Western Mindanao commander Rear Adm. Armando Guzman.

The survey was designed by TNS Philippines and made last Dec. 3-15 with the help of the Notre Dame of Jolo College. Simultaneous polls were done in five other conflict affected areas in Mindanao: Zamboanga, Isabela City, Basilan, Cotabato, and Marawi. The margin of error for Sulu was ±4 percent; in all the survey areas, ±2 percent. Follow-up polls will be made this month.

Compared to the 80-percent trust rating of the AFP in Sulu, it notched 67 percent in the other conflict areas.

Sulu respondents expressed slightly more trust in extremist armed groups than the rest of the conflict zones. But on the whole such trust ratings were less than 20 percent. In contrast, nearly 70 percent of Sulu respondents and more than 60 percent in the other areas consider the Abu Sayyaf a threat. No Sulu family would allow a member to join a terrorist band. Eighty-four percent of Sulu residents feel safe in their communities, almost the same as the rest of the conflict areas, 86 percent.

Most respondents are aware of rewards offered by the government to individuals and groups who help in the capture of armed extremists. But only 23 percent of Sulu respondents and 32 percent in the other conflict zones said they would avail of such rewards. The main reason cited to shun rewards is the fear of retribution.

The survey looked as well into the education, income, employment and lifestyle of respondents. Many more Sulu respondents than in other conflict areas had no electricity, TV sets, mobiles, Internet, radio, running water, refrigerators, or two-wheeled transport in their homes.

The survey would come in handy for Gov. Mujiv Hataman of the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao. More so when he embarks, on orders of MalacaƱang, on a drive against loose firearms.
-------------------------------------------
The Philippine Star
March 02, 2012 12:00 AM

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Iqbal denies Aquino nods on MILF autonomy


PRESIDENT Benigno Aquino III never agreed to a Muslim autonomy that was reportedly proposed by the secessionist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), a rebel official said on Wednesday.
MILF chief negotiator Mohagher Iqbal denied a news report that the Chief Executive already gave his nod on the supposed parliamentary form of government similar to that of Malaysia, which the Muslim rebels reportedly proposed in the peace talks.
"That's spinning (of the story)...who am I to put words on the mouth of the President," Iqbal said.
Oman Tribune quoted Iqbal as saying that Aquino approved such a proposal. But Iqbal said that he was never interviewed by the Oman Tribune.
He said that if there will be any agreement, the statement would come from the MILF panel or from its counterpart led by Marvic Leonen, and not from Aquino.
Iqbal said the MILF's proposal for a "substate" to address the decades-old conflict in southern Philippines remains.
He said that in the formal talks in Malaysia last week, both the MILF and the government peace panels agreed to further discuss on substantive issues, such as the power-sharing, wealth-sharing, and interim mechanism, in their next round of negotiation in March.
The government has been offering a "genuine autonomy" to the MILF in a quest for a just and lasting peace in Mindanao.
Leonen earlier said the administration agrees that there is a need for genuine autonomy, which the current Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao has not delivered.
------------------------------------------------------
SDR/Sunnex
Thursday, February 23, 2012
SunStar.Com.Ph

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Army maintains high alert in Rajah Buayan


KIDAPAWAN CITY - The Army will maintain high visibility in Maguindanao’s politically-troubled Rajah Buayan town even as thousands of evacuees already started returning to their homes following last week’s reconciliation of two armed groups that squabbled for control of patches of arable lands in the area.

The director of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) police, Chief Superintendent Bienvenido Latag, said they will continue monitoring the fragile peace in Rajah Buayan through the Maguindanao provincial police office.

Apparently threatened by a military tactical intervention, two feuding Rajah Buayan barangay chairmen, Duma Ugayan and Jerry Macalay, of Barangays Malipodok and Baital, respectively, swore over the Qur’an last week to end their deep-seated animosity for each other, following a series of encounters between their groups that dislocated more than 3,000 innocent villagers.

Major Gen. Rey Ardo, commander of the Army’s 6th Infantry Division, said officials of a mechanized brigade that has jurisdiction over Rajah Buayan, and the 45th Infantry Battalion will maintain a peacekeeping contingent in the area to prevent any resumption of hostilities between the two groups.

“Soldiers will also help the ARMM’s social welfare department and the Rajah Buayan local government unit in working out the return of the evacuees to their villages,” Ardo said.

Ugayan and Macalay reconciled in a simple rite before Army officials, representatives of the Maguindanao police, and Raja Buayan’s municipal mayor, Yacob Ampatuan, who was at the forefront of negotiating a solution to end hostilities.

The two barangay chairmen and their respective followers clashed repeatedly over control of strategic patches of lands at the border of their respective barangays,  using assault rifles and shoulder-fire grenades as they tried to overcome each other.

Local officials said the reconciliation of Ugayan and Macalay was hastened by the 6th ID’s discovery that neither of them are members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and can be both, thus, be neutralized by the military without even consulting the government-Moro Islamic Liberation Front joint ceasefire committee.

The government and the MILF have a preliminary security pact where domestic conflicts involving members of the rebel group would have to be settled first by the peace keeping committee, under established protocols stated in the 1997 Agreement on General Cessation of Hostilities.

Ardo said the 6th ID is always for the amicable settlement of family feuds in Central Mindanao, but will not hesitate to use force to protect innocent people that can be caught in the crossfire if peaceful means of addressing security constraints turn fruitless.

“When our combatants come into the picture, we can never tell what will happen next. Our men have a sworn duty to protect people, regardless of religion, faith and tribal identities,” said Ardo, who was chairman of the government’s ceasefire committee before he became 6th ID commander in early 2011.
---------------------------------------------------
The Philippine Star
February 21, 2012 01:14 P

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Security stepped up at ARMM compound


COTABATO CITY ,Philippines  – Police and the 7th Marine Battalion will jointly impose starting next week a curfew at the 32-hectare operations center here of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao due to mounting bomb threats, officials said.
Lawyer Anwar Malang, the regional executive secretary, however, said they would see to it that the security measures would not curtail the access of people transacting with offices in the regional government compound.
--------------------------------------
By John Unson The Philippine Star Updated January 21, 2012 12:00 AM

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Explosion mars Shariff Kabunsuan Festival in Cotabato City


COTABATO CITY – A powerful improvised explosive device went off Monday night here as the city celebrated the Shariff Kabunsuan Festival, police and military authorities said.
A police official identified only as Superintendent Reyes said investigators suspected it had something to do with the celebration or the change of leadership of the Autonomous Region of Muslim Miindanao.
In August, two IEDs also went off along a road leading to the ARMM complex where a public forum for aspirants of the OIC post was being held.
The OICs were being chosen then as the term of all elected regional officials had expired but elections were not held as scheduled on August 16 after Congress reset it to 2013.
The law resetting the elections was still being questioned before the Supreme Court.
“We are looking at all the angles in these incidents,” he said.
Former Anakbayan partylist Representative Mujib Hataman, appointed by President Benigno Aquino III as OIC-governor, will assume office on Thursday.
----------------------------
7:50 am | Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

Grenade explodes, three people injured


MANILA, Philippines—Three people were injured when a grenade lobbed by still unidentified suspect exploded in Cotabato City Monday morning, a Philippine National Police spokesman said.
In text advisory to reporters, Chief Superintendent Agrimero Cruz Jr. said that a grenade went off around 10:15 a.m. in front of Old Choakao Warehouse along Quezon Avenue in Cotabao City.
No other information was available as of posting time.
--------------------------
2:46 pm | Monday, December 19th, 2011

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Arms smuggling still a problem between PHL, Indonesia — official

Indonesia’s foreign minister, in Manila for an official visit, has expressed concern over the continuing smuggling of firearms between Indonesia and the Philippines, fearing that some of these weapons may end in the hands of terrorists.

“Illicit transfer of firearms is certainly one issue that we're keen to address,” Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told reporters, adding that the problem was among the many issues that he raised with Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario in their meeting.

The visiting Indonesian official feared that these loose firearms may end up in the hands of the Abu Sayyaf, an al-Qaeda-linked terrorist organization in southern Philippines that carried out bombing and kidnapping operations in the past.

The Philippines accounts for the proliferation of over 1.1 million small arms and light weapons out of the estimated 640 million illegal firearms worldwide, according to a Geneva-based research center.

The Graduate Institute of International Studies said loose firearms are responsible for over half a million deaths each year, including 300,000 in armed conflicts such as in the Philippines.

Locally, Philippine National Police (PNP) records show that there are 1,110,372 loose firearms all over the country, with the biggest concentration of unlicensed firearms estimated at 315,128 in National Capital Region (NCR), including 263,457 un-renewed licenses.

The second highest number of loose firearms placed at 114,189 is in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

Police said groups in the ARMM have in their possession 5,179 assorted firearms and criminal elements have 1,440 loose firearms. — KBK, GMA News
----------------------------
December 14, 2011 9:34pm

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Rebellion charges vs Ampatuans to be filed Wednesday

12/08/2009 | 11:46 PM

Government prosecutors on Tuesday recommended the filing of rebellion charges against seven members of the powerful Ampatuan clan, including its patriarch, former Maguindanao Governor Andal Ampatuan Sr.

Other clan members who will be charged are Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Governor Zaldy Ampatuan, Akmad Tato Ampatuan, Anwar Ampatuan, Sajid Islam Ampatuan, Goldo Ampatuan, and Abdulla Kaliangat Ampatuan.

Seventeen (17) others are also included in the list, according to Justice Undersecretary Ricardo Blancaflor.

Blancaflor said the prosecution panel led by Senior State Prosecutor Leo Dacera would file the case on Wednesday at the Cotabato Regional Trial Court when government offices there resume operations.

The charges were supposed to be filed Tuesday, but government offices in Cotabato City were closed in celebration of the Holy Feast of the Immaculate Conception, a local holiday.

The case was in connection with the alleged armed uprising being hatched by the Ampatuans to stop government authorities from arresting them in connection with the Nov. 23 massacre of 57 people in Maguindanao province.


Blancaflor said the case would be filed based on the affidavits submitted by the witnesses accusing the Ampatuans of ordering government offices to close down in protest of the crackdown of the military against their family.

Other witnesses also testified on the role of the Ampatuans in allegedly planning and implementing the withdrawal of allegiance from the government.

Ampatuan Sr. and Zaldy Ampatuan are now under government custody, as well as Datu Unsay Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr., who is now facing 40 counts of murder in connection with the Maguindanao massacre after prosecutors added 15 to the earlier 25.

One of the lawyers of the embattled clan, meanwhile, said Ampatuan Sr. should be taken out of government custody.

Lawyer Victor Emmanuel Fontanilla, who stands as the clan's spokesman, said the 72-hour period given to determine if Ampatuan Sr. has to be charged has expired Tuesday without any complaints being lodged.

In his Balitanghali report, GMA News reporter Ian Cruz said no one from the Department of Justice (DOJ) has arrived to subject Andal Sr. to an inquest proceeding as of Tuesday noon.

Andal Sr. was initially brought to the Davao Doctors Hospital for health reasons Saturday, but was later transferred to a military hospital at Camp Panacan in Davao City, where he remains under observation due to hypertension.- with Mark MerueƱas/KBK,GMANews.TV
_______________________
http://www.gmanews.tv/story/178858/rebellion-charges-vs-ampatuans-to-be-filed-wednesday

5 of recovered weapons belong to Ampatuan militiamen, military says

12/08/2009 | 08:47 PM

At least five of the weapons unearthed last Monday have been identified to belong to members of the Civilian Volunteers Organization (CVO) who reportedly remain loyal to the Ampatuans accused of masterminding the massacre of 57 people in Maguindanao.

The serial numbers of five M16 assault rifles matched the weapons assigned to five CVO members based on a list signed by CVO leader Mohamad Sangki. The list was obtained by the military from the municipal hall of Ampatuan town in Maguindanao. [See: Third arms cache dug up behind Ampatuan town hall and also Firearms recovered in suspected ranch of Andal Sr. to be subjected to ballistics test]


For the latest Philippine news stories and videos, visit GMANews.TV

The five CVO members with the corresponding serial numbers of the M16s assigned to them are: Brods Daulog (434236); Mahdi Kamsa (120080); Mastura Limba (003401); Gapor Limba (003401); and Rakman Sugadol (245498).

Lt. Col. Edgardo de Leon, commander of the Philippine Army's 73rd Infantry Battalion, said the identification of the CVO members could help solve the November 23 crime.

"Pagka positive ang ballistic examination (If the ballistic examination is positive), then we will have positive identities already of the perpetrators. Kumbaga, yung (It means) firearms have links already to specific persons," said De Leon.

Meanwhile, Chief Supt. Leonardo Espina, spokesman of the Philippine National Police (PNP) said on Tuesday said that more high-powered firearms were found in a septic tank at the back portion of the house owned of CVO chief security Macapagal "Marlboro" Kamendan in Cotabato City.

The weapons recovered include: one M60 machine gun; five M14 rifles, five M203 grenade launchers; and 14 M16 rifles. The firearms were turned over to the PNP's Criminal Investigation and Detection Group in Region 12, according to Espina. - GMANews.TV
______________________________________
http://www.gmanews.tv/story/178846/5-of-recovered-weapons-belong-to-ampatuan-militiamen-military-says

Military launches ‘persuasion flights’ vs. Ampatuan supporters

12/08/2009 | 08:48 PM

Two OV-10 Bronco attack planes hovered on Tuesday over three areas in Maguindanao to urge civilian supporters of the Ampatuans to surrender, following the arrest of key members of the clan either as suspects in the November 23 massacre of 57 people in Ampatuan town.

Col. Leo Ferrer, 601st Infantry Brigade commander and current military governor of Maguindanao, said the military launched “persuasion flights" in the towns of Mamasapano, Rajah Buayan and Datu Piang as part of its crackdown on militiamen reportedly supporting the Ampatuan clan.

“This is to show these groups who still insist not to be disarmed that they will suffer the wrath of these bomber planes if the Armed Forces decides to launch a tactical offensive against them," he told reporters in Filipino.

Ferrer added that two other military helicopters dropped about 6,000 leaflets over the province to urge civilian volunteer organizations (CVOs) still loyal to the Ampatuans to turn themselves in to government forces.


For the latest Philippine news stories and videos, visit GMANews.TV

These leaflets, which where dropped over 15 villages in the province, read: “Sa mga police auxiliaries: Huwag na kayong magtago sa batas. Sumuko na kayo alang-alang sa katahimikan ng Maguindanao. (To police auxiliaries: Stop hiding from the law. Surrender now for the peace and order of Maguindanao.) "

The leaflets likewise contained a contact number where civilians can inform the military of the whereabouts of the CVOs. These numbers were flooded with messages minutes after the military finished dropping the leaflets, Ferrer explained.

“These leaflets urge CVOs to stop hiding to avoid violence and to facilitate the restoration of peace and order in Maguindanao," he said.

The military likewise made rounds in the province with megaphones and called for the immediate surrender of the Ampatuans’ militiamen.

“These leaflets urge CVOs to stop hiding to avoid violence and to facilitate the restoration of peace and order in Maguindanao," he said.

The province of Maguindanao except certain areas covered by a government agreement with the secessionist Moro Islamic Liberation Front has been under military rule since Friday night after President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, through Proclamation 1959, declared martial law over the area.

In a report to Congress, Arroyo cited the threat of "lawless elements" taking up arms and committed to launch public uprisings as one of the reasons why it placed the province under martial law. [See: 'Lawless elements have taken up arms:' Arroyo report to Congress on martial law declaration in Maguindanao] - Andreo C. Calonzo/JV, GMANews.TV

http://www.gmanews.tv/story/178842/military-launches-persuasion-flights-vs-ampatuan-supporters

Sunday, December 06, 2009

Warehouse serves as Ampatuan arms depot



MARK D. MERUEƑAS, GMANews.TV 12/05/2009 | 05:01 PM

Following a tip from a "concerned citizen," soldiers on Saturday raided a warehouse beside a National Food Authority (NFA) establishment in Shariff Aguak, Maguindanao, where they found stockpiles of weapons believed to be owned by the Ampatuans.

The warehouse was filled with an unusual inventory: at least two armored vehicles, three police mobile patrol cars, and thousands of rounds of ammunition, among others.

Just outside the warehouse, authorities discovered freshly dug soil and unearthed M16 assault rifles and 10 cases of magazines.

"May nagsabi sa amin na concerned citizen na may nakatago dito at iyon na-discover nga natin ito... nung pinasok natin kanina 'to nakakandado," said Lt. Col. Michael Samson, public affairs officer of the Philippine Army in Shariff Aguak, in a radio interview.

(A concerned citizen told us that something is being hidden there and that's when we discovered...when we went in it was locked.)

An expired license and a permit to carry firearms were also recovered. Authorities have yet to determine the owner of the stash of weaponry and armored vehicles, but an ammunition box found inside the warehouse bore the name of Sajid Ampatuan, son of Maguindanao Governor Andal Ampatuan Sr., who briefly took over the post of his father.

Suspicions that the stash of firearms belonged to the local government grew after authorities found a black Suburban SUV with plate number GOV888, which appears to belong to the governor of the province.

At least 60,000 rounds of M16 ammunition were found stored inside an 18-wheel truck. Authorities said the volume of ammunition was more than enough to arm an entire battalion.
A policeman usually carries around 300 rounds of M16 ammunition, according to Samson.

A military-grade Humvee (red plate SJA 336), with armor for a 50-caliber machine gun mounted on top, was also inside the NFA warehouse, as well as a military truck with plate number LFP 195.

The military attributed the success of the raid to the declaration of martial law earlier in the day, which gave powers to the military to conduct warantless search and arrest in the province.

The military said they had been monitoring activities in the warehouse for a long time, but could not get inside the establishment because they could not secure a search warrant. - JHU, ARCS, TJD, GMANews.TV

Ampatuan armory found

By AARON B. RECUENCO and NONOY E. LACSON

December 4, 2009, 6:39pm


The noose further tightened on neck of the embattled Ampatuan clan as authorities discovered on Thursday a cache of high-powered firearms and ammunition near the family residence in Maguindanao which officials said is enough to arm a battalion of security forces.

Director General Jesus Verzosa of the Philippine National Police (PNP) said subsequent raids conducted Friday on the houses of four members of the Ampatuan family, including that of Maguindanao Gov. Andal Ampatuan Sr. and his son Datu Unsay Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr. in Poblacion Tres in Shariff Aguak town also yielded a 60mm mortar which is only issued to special police and military units.

“If it’s a mortar it’s unauthorized; then it’s loose because there are only authorized units or security forces that are allowed to possess these firearms. Civilians or local government executives are not allowed to have them,” said Verzosa.

Verzosa said they are expecting to arrest one of the Ampatuans whose house where the 60mm mortar was recovered.

The serving of warrants on residents of the four Ampatuan houses was an offshoot of the recovery of high-powered firearms and ammunition that were buried some 300 meters away from the house of the Ampatuan patriarch.

Seized were two 90mm recoilless rifles, one 57mm recoilless Rifle, three 60mm mortar tubes, four M-60 light machineguns, two 81mm mortar tubes, one caliber 50 Barrett sniper rifle, a FAL rifle, an Ultimax automatic rifle, a Bushmaster 5.56mm rifle, two Browning automatic rifles, an AK-47 rifle, and an HK11 rifle.

There was also an M14 rifle, four 9mm pistols, seven .45 pistols, 140 boxes of 5.56mm ammunition, a spare barrel for caliber 50 and assorted gun parts and magazine assemblies. Some military uniforms were also unearthed in the site.


Verzosa said authorities used a bulldozer to dig the site as the firearms and uniforms were buried deep under the ground, an indication that heavy equipment was also used in burying the armory.

“Our estimate is that these seized firearms are enough to arm a battalion,” said Verzosa, adding that they were able to track down the hiding area through information relayed by a civilian.

“It’s interesting to note that the area where these firearms were recovered are near the houses of some suspects (of the massacre) belonging to the Ampatuan family. It’s more or less 300 meters from the house of Andal Ampatuan Sr.,” said Verzosa.

The official said all of the firearms will be subjected to ballistic examinations to determine whether they were used in the massacre of journalists, media workers and civilians in Ampatuan town last November 23.

The victims belonged to a convoy that was supposed to file the certificate of candidacy of Buluan Vice Mayor Esmael Mangudadatu as governor of Maguindanao when heavily armed men intercepted them in Sitio Masalay, Barangay Salman in Ampatuan.

The PNP Crime Laboratory earlier established that there were six M16 rifles, an M14 rifle and an AK-47 used in the gruesome killings – now referred to as the Maguindanao massacre – based on the spent shells recovered from the carnage site.

Five M16 rifles have yet to be accounted for since an M16 rifle confiscated from Civilian Volunteer Organization (CVO) member Esmael Canapia earlier was already established as among those used in the killings.

Canapia and his fellow CVO Takpan Dilon were already recommended to be included among those who will be slapped with multiple murder charges along with six members of the Ampatuan clan.

Asked if the discovery of the firearms near the house of Ampatuan Sr. is enough to pin down the Ampatuan patriarch on the massacre, Verzosa said: “The proximity is an indicator of persons that might be involved in an attempt to hide them.”

“But the distance itself from the person is not sufficient to prove the connection of a person and the armory, but this is a continuing investigation... we will try to get witnesses that might have witnessed the actual burying of the armory and the persons who brought them there," he stressed.

Reports said military troops aided by members of the Scene of the Crime Operatives (SOCO) team of the PNP dug up the arms cache late Thursday.

The report added some residents living near the area tipped the military about the arms cache which prompted government troops to seek a search warrant from a local court.

The military is presently securing all vital government installations in the province and assisting the police in searching for more evidence in connection with the massacre.

Meanwhile, unidentified men reportedly shadowed two Peruvian forensic experts working on the massacre site, prompting the foreign specialists to fly back to Manila Thursday due to security concerns.

Lawyer Romel Bagares of CenterLaw said they had to ask Peruvian forensic expert Dr. Jose Pablo Baraybar and weapons expert Christopher Cobb-Smith to fly to Manila after unidentified men were seen shadowing them at the Pacific Heights Hotel in Cotabato City Wednesday night.

Bagares said the foreigners and their team left the hotel and spent the night elsewhere.

“The foreigners do not want to leave but we prevailed on them. We are concerned with their safety,” Bagares told the Mindanews website.

The foreign experts were tapped by Commission on Human Rights Chairman Leila de Lima to conduct an independent probe of the killing of 57 unarmed civilians, including 30 journalists.

Aside from the foreigners, a team composed of Dr. Ben Molino of the Medical Action Group and lawyers from the CenterLaw went to the crime site in Barangay Salman.

Bagares said the other reason they decided to go back to Manila was the non-cooperation of local government agencies.

“We’ve been trying to borrow a back hoe for several days but none of the agencies here would lend us one,” Bagares said.

He said they even approached several construction firms but all declined to help.

“It seems nobody wanted to be involved,” Bagares said.

Bagares said they need the back hoe to search for Reynaldo “Bebot” Momay, photographer of Midland Review of Tacurong City, whose body is believed still buried somewhere in Barangay Salman.

The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), meanwhile, said there was no inconsistency with the findings of PNP medical experts who found semen in private parts of five female victims of the massacre with the bureau’s earlier statement that the victims were not raped.

Deputy Director for Intelligence Services lawyer Reynaldo Esmeralda said the bodies which the bureau processed were different with that of the PNP.

“There is no inconsistency because they were different bodies. Iba iyon sa PNP at iba rin sa NBI,” he said.

Police medical experts found semen in private parts of five female victims of the Maguindanao massacre, an indication, they said, that they could have been sexually abused before they were brutally killed.

The NBI said on Tuesday that there were no signs that the 15 female victims of the massacre, including the wife of Mangudadatu, were sexually abused.
________________________________
(With reports from Ali Macabalang and Jeamma Sabate)

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Military takes over Maguindanao capitol

abs-cbnNEWS.com | 11/26/2009 7:11 AM

MANILA - The military on Thursday morning took control of the provincial capitol and two municipal halls in Maguindanao as authorities prepare to take into custody a member of a powerful political clan suspected of leading an election-related massacre of 57 people.

Armed Forces' spokesman Lt. Col. Romeo Brawner said the military took control of the provincial capitol of Maguindanao and the municipal buildings of Shariff Aguak and Ampatuan towns around 4:30 a.m.

Brawner said the military already has physical control of the local government compounds.

He said the military has started disarming militia members that are loyal to the powerful clan of the Ampatuans.

The military leadership on Wednesday announced that it has deactivated two Special Cafgu Active Auxillary (SCAA) companies in Maguindanao. It said all firearms, ammunitions, equipment and uniforms of the members of the two Cafgu companies will be turned over to the Army's 6th Infantry Division.

National Police chief Director General Jesus Verzosa announced that as of 7 a.m., they have already disarmed and taken into custody 20 Cafgu members allegedly involved in the massacre.

"We are hoping that by this action we will bring in peaceful resolution of this problem in Maguindanao," Brawner told ABS-CBN's Umagang Kay Ganda.

The military spokesman, meanwhile, clarified that there was no "martial rule" in the province and that the three local government units will "still function as government units."

Brawner said they are expecting the Ampatuan clan to surrender Datu Unsay town Mayor Andal "Unsay" Ampatuan Jr. to Presidential Adviser on Mindanao Affairs Jesus Dureza on Thursday morning.

"Today we are expecting Mayor Unsay Ampatuan to be turned over peacefully to the authorities," he said.

The mayor is being tagged as the mastermind in the massacre of 57 people in Ampatuan town on Monday. Among those killed were the wife of Buluan town Vice-Mayor Esmael Mangudadatu and his two sisters.

Mangudadatu's wife, escorted by supporters and journalists, was on her way to file a certificate of candidacy for governor on behalf of her husband when they were stopped and massacred by 100 armed men in Barangay Saniag, Ampatuan town.

Ampatuan Jr. allegedly wanted to stop the wife from filing the COC. He was being groomed by the Ampatuan family to succeed the gubernatorial post.

Police spokesman Chief Superintendent Leonardo Espina said Ampatuan Jr. will be investigated upon his surrender and may be arrested "if warranted."

"There is a process being observed. Through his surrender he will be investigated and the process will go on until the warrant of arrest comes out," he said.

Pursuing killers

Espina said the Philippine National Police has relieved the whole police force, including the chief of police, of Ampatuan town as they intensify pursuit operations against the suspects involved in the massacre.

He said all members of Civilian Volunteers Organizations (CVOs) and SCAA in Maguindanao and in the two municipalities will be disarmed and investigated for their alleged involvement in the gruesome killing.

Fingerprint samples will be taken from all militia members and their firearms will be subjected to ballistics examinations, the police spokesman said.

He added that all CVO and SCAA members who will be taken into custody will be brought to the crisis management committee's headquarters in Sultan Kudarat.

He said the police will also recommend the suspension of supervision of local chief executives over all police forces in all the areas where the operations are being conducted.

Espina said that a total gun ban is also being implemented in the whole province of Maguindanao and in the towns of Shariff Aguak and Ampatuan.
_____________________________
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/11/25/09/military-takes-over-maguindanao-capitol

The untouchable: PNP won't touch Mayor Ampatuan

By Cecile Suerte Felipe (The Philippine Star) Updated November 26, 2009 12:00 AM

MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine National Police (PNP) yesterday refused to categorically name Datu Unsay Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr., a political ally of President Arroyo, as the prime suspect in an election-linked massacre in Maguindanao in the absence of concrete evidence against the Ampatuan family.

This came amid speculations that Ampatuan Jr. had already fled the country. Other sources, however, said that he is still in Maguindanao.

National police spokesman Chief Super intendent Leonardo Espina earlier said that “according to initial reports, those who were abducted and murdered at Saniag were stopped by a group led by the mayor of Datu Unsay.”

But Espina later backtracked and told reporters “to verify first the report” because the word suspect is a technical term.

“Let’s evaluate first if he will be implicated in the statements. After it is done and concluded, if he is included then his status will change. That’s the time we call him suspect,” the PNP spokesman said.


Ampatuan is a member of the ruling Lakas-Kampi-CMD coalition and a son of an extremely powerful politician in the region who has ensured local support for President Arroyo in previous elections.

The military and the relatives of the victims had previously named the bodyguards of the Ampatuans as the suspects in Monday’s massacre in which relatives and supporters of a rival politician, and a group of journalists who went with them to cover the filing of his Certificte of Candidacy, were abducted and brutally killed in a village on the outskirts of a town that bears the clan’s name.

Espina’s comments were the first time Ampatuan Jr. was specifically mentioned in connection with the gruesome massacre.

He was being groomed to succeed his father, who is on his third and last term as Maguindanao governor.

Espina said he is hopeful that charges against the perpetrators will be filed within the week.
Complicity of men in uniform?

Espina also said it will question Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) police director Chief Superintendent Paisal Umpa on why he did not grant the request of Buluan Mayor Mangudadatu for a security detail on the convoy.

It was earlier reported that Umpa rejected Mangudadatu’s request for police protection.

“He will be investigated for that. He has also yet to make and submit a report on the incident,” Espina said.

The PNP earlier relieved and placed under investigation Maguindanao police director Senior Superintendent Abdusana Maguid and his deputy, Chief inspector Zukarno Dicay.

Central Mindanao’s Muslim and Christian communities have also asked for a probe on Col. Medardo Jeslani, commander of the Army’s 601st Brigade, who they said ignored the presence of armed men along Barangay Salman, Ampatuan days before the incident.

The 601st Brigade has jurisdiction over Ampatuan and surrounding towns in the second district of Maguindanao, the known political bailiwicks of former Gov. Andal Ampatuan Sr.

Even lowly Army intelligence operatives of battalions under the 601st Brigade said they had informed their superiors, all under Jeslani, of the presence of the suspects on Friday.

“I was told by my superiors that we can’t do anything because it’s a political thing and that we should not interfere,” an Army agent told reporters.

The suspects, according to farmers residing near Barangay Salman, even erected an Army squad tent in a spot not far from the highway where they kept their firearms, some of them M-60 machineguns.

Witnesses said the gunmen were even seen mingling with policemen from the Maguindanao provincial police while in the area.

Featured Posts

AFP Modernization 2017: Highlights and Review

The modernization of the Armed Forces of the Philippines was on a roll this year, as we've seen a few big ticket items having completely...

Popular Posts