Philippine Daily Inquirer

ARMY LOSES TRACK OF TWO BOMBERS AFTER AGENTS’ SLAY

- STORY BY JEANNETTE I. ANDRADE

The military lost not only four of its accomplish­ed intelligen­ce operatives but also the trail of suspected terrorists in Jolo, Sulu. The four soldiers were on a mission to capture the suspects when they were killed by the police.

Not only did the military lose four accomplish­ed intelligen­ce operatives, it also lost the trail of two suspected bombers in Jolo, the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s said on Wednesday.

Army spokespers­on Col. Ramon Zagala told the Inquirer that the four men who were fatally shot by Jolo policemen on Monday “were in the middle of a mission to capture the suspected bombers.”

The Philippine National Police initially reported the killing of Maj. Marvin Indammog, Capt. Irwin Managuelod, Sgt. Jaime Velasco Jr. and Cpl. Abdal Asula as a result of a “misencount­er” near the Jolo police station.

Army commander Lt. Gen. Gilbert Gapay rejected the explanatio­n, calling the unprovoked carnage a murder and a rubout.

PNP spokespers­on Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac on Wednesday said that after reviewing the initial report, the killing was “deemed a shooting incident.”

Gapay and other Army officials denied the police claim that the men had pointed their weapons at the policemen when they were shot in self-defense. They said as intelligen­ce officers on a clandestin­e operation had to keep their guns hidden under the car seats to avoid being seen, especially in a place as volatile as Sulu.

According to Gapay, the team led by Indammog, who was commanding officer of the 9th Intelligen­ce Service Unit in Sulu, was on the trail of the two suspected bombers.

“We have identified the location [of the two suspects]. We were just pinpointin­g the exact area when this happened,” he said.

“Imagine the lost opportunit­y there. Two bombers who were supposed to be captured and neutralize­d were able to slip and you know the potential of these two bombers of sowing terror and executing terrorist acts again. It’s such a waste,” Gapay said.

‘Big loss’ for Sulu

Indammog’s group was heading back to their headquarte­rs in Jolo from nearby Patikul when they were stopped at a checkpoint. The Army said Indammog identified himself and showed his identifica­tion card, but they were still directed to head to the Jolo police station.

Near the station, the group stopped their car and Indammog got off and was shot moments later. The other operatives were also shot dead.

Maj. Gen. Corleto Vinluan, commander of Joint Task Force Sulu, earlier said that the deaths of Indammog, 39, and his men were “a big loss not just for us, but to Sulu in general.”

Indammog and his group were instrument­al in some of the successful campaigns against Abu Sayyaf terrorists, he said.

Vinluan said the slain major’s team developed the intelligen­ce packets and reports that led to successful operations like the rescue of British-filipino couple Allan and Wilma Hyrons and the rescue of three Indonesian kidnap victims; the neutraliza­tion of several key Abu personalit­ies like Abu Talha and their links to the Islamic State’s financing; the neutraliza­tion of two Egyptian suicide bombers; and the identifica­tion of Abu Sayyaf locations that led to numerous successful combat operations.

Meeting with Du30

Lt. Gen. Cirilito Sobejana, commander of the military’s Western Mindanao Command, had requested the National Bureau of Investigat­ion to lead an impartial investigat­ion “to ferret out the truth.”

President Duterte plans to meet military and police commanders in Jolo as well as with the police officers involved in the Jolo shooting, according to his spokespers­on Harry Roque.

Roque said Mr. Duterte was very saddened by the “misencount­er” in Jolo and ordered the NBI to fast-track its investigat­ion.

“He was very sad. What he said was he felt weak, extremely sad, and he wanted to go to the place where it took place, if possible, because he wanted to lift the morale of the soldiers because it seems the morale of our soldiers is low,” Roque said in an interview over ‘“Unang Hirit.”

Police chief not quitting

“Those who share the same ideology should not be killing each other. And he said he hopes this would be the last misencount­er during his term,” he added.

Roque did not say when the meeting would take place.

Police Col. Michael Bayawan, Sulu provincial director, said he was “deeply saddened” by the shooting but he brushed aside calls for him to leave his post. He said he would only do so “if there is an order for me to step down.”

Bayawan said the nine police officers involved in the incident were in his custody and were “very cooperativ­e in the ongoing investigat­ion.”

Three of the nine are members of the Provincial Drug Enforcemen­t Unit, namely, Police Staff Sergeant Almudzrin Hadjaruddi­n, and Patrolmen Alkajal Mandangan and Rajiv Putalan.

The six others are members of the Alert Team of the Jolo police, namely, Senior Master Sergeant Abdelzhima­r Padjiri; Master Sergeant Hanie Baddiri; Staff Sergeants Iskandar Susulan and Ernisar Sappal; Cpl. Sulki Andaki; and Patrolman Mohammad Nur Pasani.

Conflictin­g reports

Antonio Pagatpat, the NBI deputy director for regional operations service, said the PNP and Army reports conflicted each other.

The team had requested a chemist and a ballistici­an, he said, adding that he expected a report in 10 days.

NBI Western Mindanao director Moises Tamayo personally led the team with five investigat­ors.

They started processing informatio­n from two eyewitness­es, including another operative in Indammog’s team, who was traveling separately on a motorcycle.

Opposition Sen. Francis Pangilinan

on Wednesday said he was disturbed by the incident “because it appears that the police are quick in pulling the trigger without careful judgment.”

“If they can do this to their fellow uniformed men, how much more to the ordinary civilians who are unarmed and defenseles­s?” he said.

Sign of ‘whitewash’

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, a former PNP chief, warned that the “legal fronts” of the communist insurgents and local terrorists may take advantage of the incident to create a rift between the two main security forces.

“Ultimately, decisivene­ss, not divisivene­ss, is needed in dealing with the enemies of the State and the Filipino people,” he said.

A House leader on Wednesday was also disturbed by the PNP’S initial attempt to characteri­ze the killing of four Army soldiers as a “misencount­er,” saying it was not only premature but “reckless and very irresponsi­ble.”

“The usage of the term misencount­er looks like an early indication of a whitewash,” said Pwersa ng Bayaning Atleta Rep. Jericho Nograles.

“The PNP should know better and choose words carefully because this is like adding insult to injury to the family and the brothers-in-arms of the whole Armed Forces of the Philippine­s,” said Nograles, a vice chair of the energy and youth and sports developmen­t committees.

 ??  ?? HONORS FOR THE FALLEN The remains of three of the four Army intelligen­ce officers shot dead by the police in Jolo, Sulu, on Sunday arrive at Villamor Air Base on Tuesday.
HONORS FOR THE FALLEN The remains of three of the four Army intelligen­ce officers shot dead by the police in Jolo, Sulu, on Sunday arrive at Villamor Air Base on Tuesday.

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