Film fails to sway officials
THE Philippines has rejected an appeal to pardon a SpanishFilipino man serving life in jail for murdering two women despite an award-winning documentary showing his innocence, the film-maker said yesterday.
Francisco “Paco” Larranaga filed an appeal to President Benigno Aquino after the 2011 release of Give Up Tomorrow highlighted major flaws in the case and won a series of awards, including one from the Philippine government.
However, the Department of Justice rejected the appeal on behalf of the president without giving an explanation, said Marty Syjuco, the producer of the film, who is also related by marriage to Larranaga.
“Everybody was hoping this film would make a difference,” Syjuco said, adding that the recent award by the Philippines’ arts and culture commission for “bringing honour to the country” had raised false hopes for Larranaga.
“On the one hand, the Philippine government is saying we have brought honour to the country . . . yet on the other, it is continuing to perpetuate the injustice.”
Larranaga, then 19, and six other young men were arrested in 1997 for the rape and murder of two sisters in their early 20s in the central city of Cebu.
The gripping documentary, which won the audience award at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival, makes a compelling case thatthesevenmenwereframed as part of a conspiracy involving corrupt police and judicial figures.
Dozens of witnesses said Larranaga was in Manila, the nation's capital, 550 kilometres away, at the time of the murders. But the judge ignored them, relying instead on one convicted criminal who turned state witness.
The UN Human Rights Commission ruled in 2006 that Larranaga had been denied due process and cited multiple major flaws in the case.
Larranaga remains in jail in Spain, where he was transferred as part of a prisoner exchange treaty in 2009, while his six Filipino co-accused are behind bars in the Philippines.