அஸ்ஸலாமு அலைக்கும்.அன்பு தோழர்கள் அனைவரையும் என்னுடைய இணைய தளத்திற்கு வரவேற்கிறேன்.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Toll rises in Philippines massacre



Police are finding more bodies as they continue to search the scene of the massacre [EPA]

Police investigating the massacre of a group of journalists and politicians in the southern Philippines have found another six bodies, taking the total death toll from the attack to at least 52.

The bodies were dug out of a shallow pit on Wednesday, close to the scene in southern Maguindanao province where another 46 victims were found following what is believed to be the Philippines' worst politically-linked massacre.

The latest discovery comes after police formally named a local mayor, Andal Ampatuan Jr., as the lead suspect in the killings.

He is head of the municipality of Datu Unsay, and the son of the provincial governor, a powerful local political ally of Gloria Arroyo, the Philippine president.

On Tuesday Arroyo vowed an all out effort to bring those responsible for the killings to justice, saying that no-one would be seen to be above the law.

She has declared a state of emergency in Maguindanao and a neighbouring province, ordering hundreds of extra troops to the area.

Lead suspect

"We will not treat anyone above the law"

Leonardo Espina,
Philippines police spokesman

Military officials had previously named bodyguards hired by the Ampatuan clan as the suspected gunmen in the massacre.

But on Wednesday a Philippine police spokesman singled out Ampatuan Jr. as the lead suspect for the first time.

"According to the initial reports, those who were abducted and murdered… were initially stopped by a group led by the mayor of Datu Unsay," chief superintendent, Leonardo Espina said.

Nonetheless, Espina did not indicate that an arrest was imminent.

Speaking on DZMM radio, he said investigators still needed to speak to witnesses before they can secure a court order for the arrest of suspects, although he insisted that the authorities would remain impartial.

Extrajudicial killings

The killing of political rivals and journalists is common in the Philippines, so much so that the government set up two bodies to investigate the practice.

The police-led task force Usig confirmed 116 cases of political murder between 2001 and 2007. Twelve suspects were arrested but no convictions have been made.

The Melo Commission in 2007 found 136 political murders, with strong evidence implicating the armed forces in the killing of those perceived to be enemies of the state.

"We will not treat anyone above the law," Espina said.

But Al Jazeera's correspondent Marga Ortigas, reporting from Cotabato city, close to the scene of the massacre, said those assurances would likely do little to calm nerves in the region where many locals said they feared retaliatory attacks.

She said many people were upset that the police had not arrested or at least brought in for questioning any of the main suspects.

"There isn't much faith in the government," our correspondent said, " because the family that is believed to be behind it is a very close ally of president Arroyo, and the fear is that if anything they will only help provide cover or whitewash the entire attrocity."

Convoy attacked

Police have said they expect to fine more victims as they continue to excavate the area of the massacre.

Arroyo has ordered a state of emergency in the south following the killings [Reuters]
Officials have said many of the dead are hard to identify because they had been shot at close range with M16 rifles, destroying their facial features.

The victims were abducted on Monday by gunmen as they were travelling in a convoy to nominate Esmael Mangudadatu as the opposition candidate for governor in elections due to be held next year.

The dead include 18 Filipino journalists from regional newspapers, TV and radio stations who were accompanying Mangudadatu's relatives and supporters to file his nomination papers.

Some of the victims had been buried in a mass grave, while others were dumped beside a road.

Mangudadatu, the gubernatorial candidate, was not himself in the convoy because he had received death threats.

On Tuesday he pressed the Philippines defence secretary, national police chief and military commanders to immediately arrest and prosecute those behind the killings.

Mangudadatu said four witnesses in his protection had told him the convoy was stopped by gunmen loyal to Ampatuan Jr., to prevent his family from filing election papers.

"It was really planned because they had already dug a huge hole (for the bodies)," Mangudadatu said.

He said there were reports from the area that the militia had been blocking the road for a few days.

'Moved to tears'

The unprecedented violence has sent shockwaves through the Philippines and around the world.

Media groups have called on the government to bring the killers to justice [Reuters]
On Tuesday evening a group of journalists joined a march in the capital Manila calling on the government to conduct a speedy investigation into the killings.

"We cannot ignore the killings of journalists anymore," said Malou Mangahas of the Philippine Centre for Investigative Journalism.

"I am sure all of us yesterday were really appalled, moved to tears, especially those who know, or who knew those who had fallen."

Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders said the deaths of the 18 reporters was "the largest single massacre of journalists ever".

In New York, Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, condemned what he said was a "heinous crime committed in the context of a local election campaign".

In a statement delivered by a spokeswoman, Ban said he hoped that "no effort will be spared to bring justice and to hold the perpetrators accountable".

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