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Gibo dares Ampatuan lawyer: Sue me over weapons fiasco
AIE BALAGTAS SEE, GMANews.TV
Administration presidential bet Gilberto Teodoro Jr. on Monday dared the lawyer of the Ampatuan family to charge him in court over his alleged involvement in the proliferation of loose firearms in Maguindanao province.
“I am daring him to file charges against me in court. And he better present strong documentary and physical evidence to back up his allegations," said Teodoro, a former Defense secretary.
Teodoro reiterated that the accusation hurled against him by lawyer Philip Pantojan was baseless.
Pantojan had earlier said that Teodoro should be charged for allegedly having a hand in the arming of the Ampatuan political dynasty.
The Ampatuans, some of whom occupy key local government positions in Maguindanao, are implicated in the Nov. 23 massacre of at least 57 people in the town named after them.
Pantojan said it was under Teodoro’s watch as Defense chief that the Civilian Volunteers Organization (CVOs), which reportedly comprised the Ampatuans’ private army, was armed by the national government.
GMANews.TV sought Pantojan's side on Teodoro's challenge but the lawyer declined to comment on the issue.
During the eight-day imposition of martial law in Maguindanao early December, security forces seized around 1,500 pieces of high-powered rifles, machine guns, mortars, and assorted weaponry near and inside some of the Amptuans’ properties.
In a vacant lot in Barangay Poblacion Tres in Shariff Aguak, the recovered weapons bore the markings “Department of Defense (DND) Arsenal" and “Arms Corporation of the Philippines."
Teodoro said the Defense Department has no policy for the issuance of weapons to civilian armed groups.
“It is clear that the Defense Department has no operational control over the distribution of firearms and ammunition to the units of the Armed Forces of the Philippines," Teodoro stressed.
The military is currently conducting an investigation on the alleged pilferage of firearms and ammunition. - KBK, GMANews.TV
Monday, December 21, 2009
Ampatuans entrust arsenal to MILF leader
SHARIFF AGUAK, Maguindanao, Philippines — The Ampatuans have entrusted their arsenal for safekeeping to a Moro Islamic Liberation Front commander related to patriarch Maguindanao Gov. Andal Ampatuan Sr. after the military seized more than 800 of the clan’s firearms, according to relatives.
A relative of Ampatuan Sr. said many of his firearms were brought out of Shariff Aguak immediately after the Nov. 26 arrest of his son, Datu Unsay Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr.
“The old man (Ampatuan Sr.) has very strong connections with the police and the military before the incident so there was really no problem for him building a very strong private militia,” said an Ampatuan who is a hadji, one that has gone on pilgrimage to Mecca.
A source who asked not to be named said the firearms seized by soldiers and policemen in Shariff Aguak and nearby towns are not even half of the Ampatuan arsenal.
“Talks have been circulating that they have turned over hundreds to certain rebel groups whose leaders are related to them,” the source said.
Ampatuan Sr. is a relative of Adan Abdullah, commander of the MILF 106th Base Command.Local sectors in Maguin-danao are convinced the Ampatuans’ acquisition of a huge ammunition supply was connected with the mysterious fire that razed a military ammunition depot inside Camp Siongco in Maguindanao almost two years ago.
At the time, the Army 6th Infantry Division Headquarters Service Battalion commanding officer prevented radio reporter Loreto Rosario of Catholic station dxND from covering the dawn fire that destroyed the military ammunition storage facility atop a hill inside Camp Siongco.
About a year before the fire, the ammunition depot’s caretaker, an Army major, was relieved from his post due to pilferage of ammunition under his custody.
The officer’s subordinates found dozens of ammunition and empty bullet boxes scattered along a trail leading to an open window in one of the warehouses to a fence at the rear of the building.
Col. Julieto Ando, who was 6th ID spokesman when the fire hit the ammunition depot, told reporters then military investigators believe that rodents or a snake could have cause the fire.
Just months after a big fire destroyed the ammunition depot, a fire razed the armory of the Maguindanao police in Shariff Aguak.
Police officials told investigators dozens of firearms and thousands of ammunition for assault rifles were destroyed in the fire.
However, an official of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao said not a single burnt metal gun part was found at the scene.
“It also appeared that there seemed a premeditated arson there,” said the source.
_____________________________
http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=534578&publicationSubCategoryId=63
Sunday, December 06, 2009
Warehouse serves as Ampatuan arms depot
MARK D. MERUEĆAS, 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
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)
Friday, December 04, 2009
Guns, explosives, ammo unearthed near Ampatuan mansion
http://www.gmanews.tv/story/178476/guns-explosives-ammo-unearthed-near-ampatuan-mansion
Government troops have unearthed a big weapons cache of light artillery and heavy infantry weapons, including commando weapons, explosives, ammunition, and military uniforms from a vacant lot near the mansion of the Maguindanao-based Ampatuan clan in Shariff Aguak, the provincial capitol.
Col. Leo Ferrer, new commander of the Army’s 601st Brigade who replaced Col. Medardo Geslani, said it was likely that the items unearthed in Poblacion Tres, Sharif Aguak belonged to the perpetrators of the grisly mass murder on November 23.
"We believe that these were used during the massacre," Ferrer said, adding that the discovery of the weapons cache could point to the perpetrators of the crime.
The inventory was still going on as of posting time, but the Army provided an initial list of seized weaponry as of 7 p.m. Thursday, which included the following:
Two 90-mm recoilless rifles (RR),
One 57-mm RR,
Three 60-mm mortars,
Four M60 machine gun,
Two 81-mm mortars,
One cal. .50 Barrett machine gun,
One Ultimax light machine gun,
One Bushmaster 5.56-mm automatic gun,
Two Browning Automatic rifles (BAR),
One Belgian-made light automatic rifle (FAL),
One AK 47 automatic rifle,
One HK 11 light machine gun,
One 5.56-mm M4 carbine,
Four 9-mm pistols,
Seven ammo for cal. .45 pistol,
140 boxes of 5.56-mm ammo,
One extra barrel, cal. .50,
14 magazines, cal .45 ammo
Six bolt carriers for M16
Ferrer said the items were unearthed about 4 p.m. by the joint military and police personnel after they received a tip from residents that some weapons have been buried in the area.
Philippine National Police chief Director General Jesus Verzosa, for his part, said law enforcers even needed a bulldozer to recover the weapons.
In a separate report, Chino Gaston of GMA News said some of the firearms were stamped with markings that read, “Department of Defense (DND) Arsenal" and “Arms Corporation of the Philippines."
Gaston also quoted military officials stationed in the area as saying that the recovered weapons were enough to arm two Army brigades, with each brigade composed of an estimated 1,200 soldiers.
Gaston said the arsenal would be preserved as evidence in an undisclosed area.
Witnesses have pointed to the six members of the powerful Ampatuan clan, including its patriarch Maguindanao Gov. Andal Ampatuan Jr., as the ones who masterminded the grisly murder of 57 people, including 31 journalists.
So far only Datu Unsay town mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr. has been apprehended and indicted with 25 counts of murder. He is currently under the custody of the National Bureau of Investigation.
The Ampatuans have denied involvement in the crime.
- Aie Balagtas See/JV, GMANews.TV
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