Philippine Daily Inquirer

Ampatuan slays: Still no justice

In the absence of a final conviction of principals behind the 2009 massacre of 58 people, including 31 media workers, redress remains elusive for victims and their kin

- —STORY BY RICHEL UMEL AND GERMELINA LACORTE

Thirteen years after the massacre in Ampatuan, Maguindana­o, that left 58 people dead, 31 of them media workers, the quest for justice continues. Relatives and colleagues of the slain journalist­s said they would never get closure until the conviction of the principal suspects, among them members of the Ampatuan political family who have pending appeals, becomes final.

ILIGAN CITY—The memorial site of the 31 media workers waylaid and killed in the town of Ampatuan of the then undivided Maguindana­o province 13 years ago has been overgrown with grass and weeds but media colleagues who visited the site in Sitio Masalay, Barangay Salman, on Sunday assured families and friends of the victims they had not abandoned the quest for justice.

Jonathan de Santos, national chair of National Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s (NUJP), said travel restrictio­ns and the series of lockdowns during the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic might have kept them away for a while but the calls for justice for the slain colleagues would not stop until justice is attained.

“That’s why it is good that all of us are here today to show each other that we have not forgotten the campaign for justice for the relatives and colleagues we lost in the Ampatuan massacre,” said De Santos in a message delivered at the massacre commemorat­ion at the Ampatuan site on Sunday, three days ahead of the anniversar­y of the gruesome event that occurred on Nov. 23, 2009.

The slain journalist­s were among 58 people killed by a group of armed men identified with the powerful Ampatuan clan. They were on their way to a local elections office to file the certificat­e of candidacy of then Buluan Vice Mayor Esmael “Toto” Mangudadat­u, who was running for governor against Datu Andal Ampatuan Jr., then mayor of Datu Unsay and son of the then incumbent governor, Andal Ampatuan Sr.

Little change

De Santos said few things had changed three years after the court handed down the decision on the case in December 2019, convicting 43 of the 48 accused—28 of the principals, among them eight members of the Ampatuan clan including Andal Jr., and 15 accessorie­s.

An appeal by the prosecutio­n led to the conviction of one more accessory to the case, bringing to 44 the total number of people convicted, De Santos said, citing the update from the Office of the Press Secretary and lawyer Nena Santos, legal counsel of the victims’ families.

At least 83 more accused are still at large but Malacañang has promised that the government will not forget the case, De Santos said.

“Some of the Ampatuans who were convicted have filed appeals, and that is why we say that we only got partial justice in 2019,” De Santos said.

“Until there is a final conviction, we cannot say that we have received justice. And part of that justice is the compensati­on for the families who lost their loved ones on Nov. 23, 2009,” he added.

Increased damages

Santos said they were still awaiting the decision of the Court of Appeals on their appeal to increase the damages for each of the slain media worker to at least P500,000 to give dignity for the slain victims.

NUJP vice chair Kath Cortez said journalist­s helped the families clean up the gravesites of their slain colleagues and restore the markers that were destroyed in the last two years when the maintenanc­e of the place seemed to have stopped.

“While we wait for developmen­ts in the case, we can keep calling attention to and calling for justice for the massacre victims,” De Santos said.

“As members of the media, we can continue reporting on the case and the delays as well as check on the convicted mastermind­s while in government custody and continue reminding the public about the Ampatuan massacre and about other attacks on journalist­s. As for NUJP, we reaffirm our commitment to the families that we are with in this fight and that we will continue to work together to call for justice in this case,” he added.

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 ?? —WILLIE LOMIBAO ?? Editor
Robert Jaworski L. Abaño
DIVERSE RESOURCES While the province of Ilocos Norte is known for renewable sources of energy such as this wind farm in Burgos town, Gov. Matthew Manotoc is pushing for mining of nonrenewab­le metallic and nonmetalli­c minerals when he spoke at a mining summit in Baguio City recently, noting the diverse resources that the province has to offer.
—WILLIE LOMIBAO Editor Robert Jaworski L. Abaño DIVERSE RESOURCES While the province of Ilocos Norte is known for renewable sources of energy such as this wind farm in Burgos town, Gov. Matthew Manotoc is pushing for mining of nonrenewab­le metallic and nonmetalli­c minerals when he spoke at a mining summit in Baguio City recently, noting the diverse resources that the province has to offer.
 ?? —JONATHAN DE SANTOS/CONTRIBUTO­R ?? CLEANUP Families and friends of media workers slain in the infamous Nov. 23, 2009, Ampatuan massacre visit their gravesites at Sitio Masalay, Barangay Salman, Ampatuan town, of the now Maguindana­o del Sur province on Sunday, to remember and continue their quest for justice.
—JONATHAN DE SANTOS/CONTRIBUTO­R CLEANUP Families and friends of media workers slain in the infamous Nov. 23, 2009, Ampatuan massacre visit their gravesites at Sitio Masalay, Barangay Salman, Ampatuan town, of the now Maguindana­o del Sur province on Sunday, to remember and continue their quest for justice.

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