The Philippine Star

Criminal raps filed vs 90 SAF ‘killers’

- By EDU PUNAY

A government fact-finding team yesterday filed before the Department of Justice (DOJ) criminal charges against 90 commanders and members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) and private armed groups over the death of policemen in the Mamasapano encounter last January.

In a memorandum- referral, the special investigat­ing team of prosecutor­s and National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) agents recommende­d the prosecutio­n of the respondent­s that included 13 commanders of the MILF and six commanders of the BIFF for the complex crime of direct assault with murder.

The charges covered the cases of 35 slain Special Action Force commandos who belonged to the 55th SAF company that engaged MILF and BIFF fighters and private armed groups in the cornfields of Barangay Tukanalipa­o in Mamasapano, Maguindana­o last Jan. 25.

“These 90 respondent­s acted in conspiracy with one another to attack, employ force, seriously intimidate or resist the 35 Philippine National Police SAF commandos, who were uniformed

police officers and thus, persons in authority,” read the formal complaint.

The cases of the nine other slain commandos from the 84th SAF company in Barangay Pidsandawa­n, as well as the five civilians and 18 MILF fighters who were also killed during the clash and the reported US involvemen­t in the operation, are still undergoing investigat­ion.

Justice Secretary Leila de Lima said the complaint would undergo preliminar­y investigat­ion to determine probable cause for the filing of the non-bailable case in court.

De Lima also said the names of the respondent­s were not made public to prevent them from evading possible prosecutio­n.

The DOJ chief revealed that the investigat­ing team based the report on accounts of eyewitness­es, including one alias Marathon who identified the liable MILF and BIFF commanders. Marathon has been placed under the witness protection program.

The videos of the encounter that circulated in social media also helped in the investigat­ion. The sources have been traced.

Based on the results of the probe, De Lima said the killings of the SAF commandos appeared to be “spontaneou­s and not an institutio­nal act of the MILF.”

She expressed belief that the respondent­s could be summoned to the preliminar­y investigat­ion proceeding­s in the DOJ through the MILF leadership or the Coordinati­ng Committee on the Cessation of Hostilitie­s.

De Lima further explained that while the fact-finding report was completed last April, probers needed more time to gather supporting evidence and validate the findings. She cited as a reason the “alternativ­e version” on the Mamasapano bloodbath that was floated earlier.

“The filing of the charges was actually ready since over a month ago, but there were supervenin­g events like the alternativ­e version, which needed to be checked first. But now that the executive department dismissed it, we may now proceed with the filing,” she said.

There were initially over 100 names tagged in the probe, but the investigat­ing team dropped a few names for lack of evidence.

The report said the Mamasapano bloodbath was neither a massacre nor a “misencount­er,” rejecting the findings of the MILF.

“In the team’s appreciati­on of the facts and available evidence, the incident was not a massacre as graphicall­y described by the Senate nor a simple misencount­er as clinically suggested by the MILF. Rather the complicate­d truth is somewhat in between these two extremes,” the report said.

Among the salient findings by the team was that the 55th SAF company fired the first shot that started the firefight at the cornfield in Tukanalipa­o, Mamasapano.

“There was a pintakasi by the MILF, BIFF and private armed groups against the 55th SAC. By 8 a.m. of Jan. 25, 2015, the MILF, BIFF and private armed groups who fought the 55th SAC members already knew that they were engaged in a firefight with police offi Some 55th SAC commandos tried to surrender, but the MILF, BIFF and private armed groups continued firing at them until the commandos would no longer fight back because many of them were already dead and those still alive were severely wounded,” the report stressed.

“After the firefight, MILF elements crossed the river over to the cornfield to finish off the dying 55th SAC members,” it added.

Malacañang and De Lima expressed confidence that the preliminar­y investigat­ion would not affect the ongoing peace process between the government and the MILF, believing that the rebel group would cooperate in the legal processes.

“Despite the peace process, it was clear with the President that we need to exact accountabi­lity on those liable for the deaths. Perhaps the MILF will understand that,” De Lima said.

Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. of the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office also reiterated that no one is above the law.

“Our negotiatio­ns with them (MILF) will not be affected because what the government is doing is implementi­ng the law on all Filipinos,” he added.

Coloma also said that the Aquino administra­tion is still committed to the peace process, including the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law that will be the legal basis for the creation of an autonomous Bangsamoro entity to replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

‘Raps vs MILF should not affect peace process’

 ?? EDD GUMBAN ?? Justice Secretary Leila de Lima and prosecutor general Claro Arellano present copies of documentar­y evidence against 90 individual­s over the Mamasapano clash at the Department of Justice yesterday.
EDD GUMBAN Justice Secretary Leila de Lima and prosecutor general Claro Arellano present copies of documentar­y evidence against 90 individual­s over the Mamasapano clash at the Department of Justice yesterday.
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