The Philippine Star

The short reach of the law

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As relatives and friends marked a year since gunmen massacred 10 people led by Negros Oriental governor Roel Degamo, the accused mastermind remained free, while his henchmen who had previously implicated him had all retracted their statements.

At mid-morning on March 4 last year, in Degamo’s compound in Pamplona that was home to the governor and his wife the town mayor, armed men barged into an aid-giving event and opened fire, leaving Degamo and nine others dead or dying.

From the start, suspicion focused on the Degamos’ political rivals in the province, the Teves clan. Negros Oriental 3rd District congressma­n Arnolfo Teves Jr., who left for the US purportedl­y for medical treatment shortly before the massacre, refused to return to the country, ignoring orders from the House of Representa­tives as he claimed threats to his life. He was suspended for months before the House voted to expel him.

In September, a Manila court issued arrest warrants for Teves and three of his codefendan­ts in the massacre. Teves faces separate charges for three murders perpetrate­d between March and June 2019 in Negros Oriental. The assets of Teves, whose clan’s wealth sprung from the sugar industry, have been ordered frozen.

His passport has been canceled and the Anti-Terrorism Council has designated him as a terrorist. The Internatio­nal Criminal Police Organizati­on has issued a so-called Red Notice for his arrest in all countries that are members of the Interpol. The internatio­nal warrant, however, is merely a request for arrest pending extraditio­n or surrender, which local authoritie­s may decide not to enforce.

Despite all the efforts to bring him to justice, Teves remains outside the reach of Philippine law, enjoying freedom in Timor-Leste even if his request for asylum has reportedly been rejected. A recent visit in Manila of Timor-Leste President Jose Ramos-Horta did not lead to Teves’ return to the Philippine­s.

Seeing Teves running free, and even posting videos of himself thumbing his nose at Philippine authoritie­s, can only encourage like-minded folks in this country to consider murder as an attractive tool for eliminatin­g political rivals. The massacre in Pamplona is not the first linked to political feuds in this country. Neither is it the worst; the Maguindana­o massacre in November 2009 remains unrivaled in the atrocity scale. And seeing how those behind the Pamplona massacre might get away with murder, it’s guaranteed not to be the last.

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