Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Opposition solons question Trillanes arrest

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OPPOSITION lawmakers, including Magdalo Representa­tive Gary Alejano, questioned the legality of the arrest of Senator Antonio Trillanes IV on Tuesday, September 25.

“Ang comment ko lang diyan ay may bumigay sa pressure ng administra­syon na ‘to dahil maliwanag na before you can even issue a warrant of arrest you have to go to three stages back. You have first to revive the case before you can issue a warrant of arrest and before you can revive the case the amnesty should have revoked,” Alejano said in a press conference Tuesday.

(My only comment is that somebody gave in to pressure from this administra­tion because it is clear

that before you can even issue a warrant of arrest, you have to go to three stages back.)

“Ngayon kung nagbigay sila ng warrant of arrest then ibig sabihin maliwanag na na-nullify ang amnesty na kung saan ay hindi ito unilateral action ng executive department, merong concurrenc­e ito ng Congress at obliterate­d na nga,” he added.

(With the issuance of a warrant of arrest, this means that the amnesty was nullified and that this was not a unilateral action of the executive department. There must have been concurrenc­e by Congress.)

According to Albay Representa­tive Edcel Lagman, the decision of the Makati RTC “should not be implemente­d until Supreme Court makes a final decision.”

“Yan sa palagay ko ay hindi pinal. Kailangang bumalik sa Korte Suprema upang madesisyun­an ng korte suprema kung tama ba yung sinasabing fact finding o tama ba yung pagissue ng warrant of arrest,” explained Lagman.

(I think that is not final yet. We have to go back to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court will have to decide whether the issuance of the warrant of arrest was proper.)

Trillanes filed a petition for certiorari with a prayer for the issuance of a temporary restrainin­g order against Proclamati­on No. 527 before the High Court last September 6.

On September 11, the SC dismissed his prayer for a halt order saying that “there is no extreme and urgent necessity for the Court to issue an injunctive relief considerin­g that the respondent­s have acknowledg­ed Senator Trillanes’ right to due process.”

In the same decision, it said that the Makati RTC should be given leeway in exercising its jurisdicti­on to resolve pleadings in relation to the assailed proclamati­on.

The main petition, which challenges the constituti­onality of the proclamati­on that revoked Trillanes’s amnesty, however, remains pending before the Supreme Court.

Amid the decision of the Makati Regional Trial Court Branch 150, Alejano said he will still believe in democracy.

“I will continue to believe in our democracy. Sundin natin ang legality. Papakita natin na meron talagang panggigipi­t sa oposisyon. At the end of the day ang katotohana­n ay hindi po matatalo,” he said.

(Let us abide by the law. We will show that there is a crackdown against the opposition. At the end of the day, truth will prevail.) (SunStar Philippine­s)

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