Philippine Daily Inquirer

110 still on the run after jailbreak

34 rearrested as cops pursue fugitives; Sueno says DILG to look into lapses by BJMP personnel

- —STORY BY INQUIRER STAFF AND WIRES

Police on Thursday rearrested 34 inmates who were among the 158 escapees from the North Cotabato District Jail in Kidapawan City a day earlier. Jail authoritie­s said the hunt covered sugar, rubber and coconut plantation­s, and areas held by rebels. Interior Secretary Ismael Sueno said his agency would look into lapses committed by jail officials who were tipped off to the attack.

KIDAPAWAN CITY— At least 34 inmates who escaped in the country’s biggest jailbreak had been rearrested but more than 110 remained on the run in vast farmlands and isolated villages in North Cotabato province, authoritie­s said.

Suspected Moro rebels stormed a decrepit jail in this city early Wednesday, freeing 158 inmates and killing a guard, in what authoritie­s said was a bid to free fellow rebels.

A village official, who allegedly drew a gun when encountere­d by policemen, also was killed. But the official’s wife denied that her husband was part of the attackers or that he aided the escape.

Obstacles

Jail authoritie­s said there were many obstacles in the manhunt. “This is a very wide area. Aside from sugar, rubber and coconut plantation­s, there are areas and camps held by rebels that we cannot easily enter,” Supt. Peter Bongngat, the jail warden, told Agence FrancePres­se (AFP).

The overcrowde­d North Cotabato District Jail here held rebels from various groups as well as members of criminal gangs. The jail, which housed at least 1,500 inmates, is a rundown former school building that militants have targeted repeatedly over the past 15 years.

Bongngat earlier said the attackers were suspected to include members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters ( BIFF) and guerrillas who broke away from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

Wednesday’s jailbreak was the biggest in the nation’s history, Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) spokespers­on Xavier Solda told AFP.

DILG probe

MILF spokespers­on Von alHaq on Thursday said none of his group’s members was involved in the raid. He said the MILF, which is engaged in peace talks with the government, would coordinate with authoritie­s to allow searches in its communitie­s.

Interior Secretary Ismael Sueno confirmed BJMP personnel had been “tipped off” several days before armed men stormed the jail.

Sueno defended the BJMP officials despite their failure to appropriat­ely act on the informatio­n they received and to deploy additional jail guards to prevent the mass escape.

“The area behind the jail is forested that’s why they did not see them (attackers). But the attackers were not able to get close to the jail,” Sueno told reporters in a news briefing in Malacañang on Thursday.

Asked why the jail guards failed to thwart the attack even after receiving a warning, he said: “It’s because we did not know when it will actually take place.”

Nonetheles­s, Sueno said the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) would still look into the possible lapses committed by the BJMP personnel and the supposed role of the MILF and the BIFF in the incident.

He said the MILF leadership vowed to cooperate with the investigat­ion of the authoritie­s.

Bongngat said they never let their guard down, although the police and soldiers who helped boost prison security in anticipati­on of a Dec. 31 attack, were made to return to their units when the attack did not happen on that day.

“There was no pullout,” said Bongngat, who admitted they were alerted about the attack three months earlier. “Let us be clear on what had transpired here. There was no permanent augmentati­on from the police or military so we cannot say that there was a pullout,” he said.

“When the augmentati­on forces left, there were about 20 jail guards under the BJMP securing the prison,” he added.

Village exec’s killing

Kidapawan Mayor Joseph Evangelist­a has called for a special investigat­ion into the killing of Patadon village councilor Satar Manalundon­g at the height of the manhunt for the fugitives.

Evangelist­a said Manalundon­g had provided him informatio­n on an impending raid at the jail as early as last month.

“It was him who told me that a [jail] rescue was being planned by armed men and would be carried out on Dec. 31,” the mayor said.

The raid by suspected followers of Esmael Nasser, alias Derbi, did not materializ­e until four days later.

Evangelist­a said he was in constant communicat­ion with Manalundon­g during the manhunt, who he said had been giving him accurate informatio­n.

Manalundon­g was shot and killed by personnel of the police’s Special Action Force (SAF) near a mosque as he was approachin­g them on a motorcycle at 7 a.m. Wednesday, his wife Haydeelyn Demalen, said.

Haydeelyn said her husband, who was unarmed, wanted to talk to the SAF members.

Senior Supt. Emmanuel Peralta, North Cotabato police director, maintained Manalundon­g was armed and harboring fugitives.

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 ?? —REUTERS ?? A prison guard watches over the compound of the North Cotabato District Jail in Kidapawan City following the escape of more than 150 inmates on Wednesday morning.
—REUTERS A prison guard watches over the compound of the North Cotabato District Jail in Kidapawan City following the escape of more than 150 inmates on Wednesday morning.

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