Philippine Daily Inquirer

COURT ACQUITS MAJOR IN BURGOS ABDUCTION CASE

- By Jhesset O. Enano @JhessetEna­noINQ —WITH A REPORTFROM­NIKKO DIZON

Ten years after the disappeara­nce of activist Jonas Burgos, the Army soldier who stood trial on arbitrary detention charges was acquitted on Thursday by the Quezon City Regional Trial Court (RTC).

In a decision read in the presence of Burgos’ mother and siblings at the Quezon City RTC Branch 216, Judge Alfonso Ruiz II said that the prosecutio­n had failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt the guilt of Maj. Harry Baliaga Jr.

The court said the prosecutio­n had failed in its duty to prove Baliaga’s identity as “the person who abducted and arbitraril­y detained” the then 37year-old activist.

None of the eyewitness­es were able to identify the soldier in court during the four-year trial.

‘Hearsay’

The ruling noted that testimonie­s of the witnesses were “hearsay” as these were based on statements by other people who claimed to have witnessed the abduction.

The National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL), which served as private prosecutor, said it was not able to locate the three key witnesses who were earlier presented for the writ of amparo proceeding­s in the Court of Appeals (CA).

They were restaurant busboy Jeffrey Cabintoy, management trainee Elsa Agasang and security guard Larry Marquez.

There was also no sufficient circumstan­tial evidence to prove Baliaga’s guilt, the court said. The only circumstan­tial evidence was the discovery of a vehicle—said to have been used to abduct Burgos—at the 5th Infantry Battalion Camp in Norzagaray, Bulacan province, where Baliaga was previously assigned.

On April 28, 2007, unidentifi­ed men dragged Burgos, who had worked with farmers, from a restaurant at Ever Gotesco Mall on Commonweal­th Avenue in Quezon City, and forced him into a vehicle, reportedly with the plate No. TAB 194.

Since then, the Burgos family, led by Edita, has engaged in tireless legal battles and grassroot campaigns to keep the search alive in hopes of having Jonas back.

Mixed emotions

Speaking to reporters after the promulgati­on, Baliaga said he felt “mixed emotions,” but added he was “very happy that justice has been served [on my] part.”

He added: “I’m saddened also that Mrs. Burgos did not find justice.”

After the decision was read, Baliaga, who is out on bail, shook hands with Burgos’ 74year-old mother.

‘Help find my son’

Edita Burgos later confided to reporters that she had told the soldier: “Maybe now you can help me find him.”

“If he’s not guilty, then he should help find my son … . I’m sure he knows [where he is],” she said. “As a father, he should know how it feels to lose a son. I challenge him to tell us where Jonas is.”

A2013 CA ruling held Baliaga responsibl­e for the disappeara­nce of the political activist and ordered the military to exert efforts to bring justice to the Burgos case.

“We do not agree [with the decision of the Regional Trial Court], but we respect it,” she said.

“A mother cannot give up … . This is only a delay in our search for my son,” she said. “Maybe this is God’s will, but later on, we will find Jonas.”

Freed from detention

The Armed Forces of the Philippine­s on Thursday said it respected the court’s decision.

In a statement, the AFP public affairs chief, Col. Edgard Arevalo, said Baliaga was freed from detention at the Headquarte­rs Service Group of the Philippine Army soon after his acquittal.

Since the case cannot be revived due to the rule on double jeopardy, NUPL president Edre Olalia said his group would consider filing a different case for violations of the Anti-Enforced or Involuntar­y Disappeara­nce Act.

The NUPL also said it hoped the Department of Justice would act on its motion for reconsider­ation that sought to once again include certain mili- tary officers in the charges.

They include Lt. Col. Melquiades Feliciano and Gen. Eduardo Año for arbitrary detention; and retired Gen. Hermogenes Esperon, retired Lieutenant Generals Romeo Tolentino and Alexander Yano, and retired Philippine National Police Director General Avelino Razon Jr. for obstructio­n of justice.

Both Año and Esperon now hold top posts in the Duterte administra­tion, as AFP chief of staff and national security adviser, respective­ly.

 ?? — NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? SEARCH CONTINUES Edita Burgos, mother of organic farming trainer Jonas Burgos, is comforted by friends after a Quezon City court acquitted ArmyMaj. Harry Baliaga Jr. of arbitrary detention charges. Unidentifi­ed men forcibly took Jonas from a mall and...
— NIÑO JESUS ORBETA SEARCH CONTINUES Edita Burgos, mother of organic farming trainer Jonas Burgos, is comforted by friends after a Quezon City court acquitted ArmyMaj. Harry Baliaga Jr. of arbitrary detention charges. Unidentifi­ed men forcibly took Jonas from a mall and...
 ?? —JAMSTA. ROSA ?? Maj. Harry Baliaga Jr.: “Justice has been served [on my] part.”
—JAMSTA. ROSA Maj. Harry Baliaga Jr.: “Justice has been served [on my] part.”
 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? Edita Burgos: “This is only a delay in our search for my son.”
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA Edita Burgos: “This is only a delay in our search for my son.”

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