From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Dec 19): DOJ official bats for review of cases vs Abu Sayyaf
suspects
Justice Undersecretary Francisco Baraan III has cited the need to review the
cases filed against suspected Abu Sayyaf members linked to various crimes.
Baraan told the Philippine Daily Inquirer at the sidelines of the Human
Rights and Legal Assistance forum – which was attended by lawyers and human
rights advocates on Tuesday — that he found this out after having been informed
about a suspect who had been arrested and released thrice. He said the case showed that government prosecutors have been using the same
“old school method in conducting investigation and prosecution.” “Others simply focus on (the aspect of) prosecution by coming up with a
resolution without making sure it is fair and just,” he said.
Baraan said a review of the cases would enable the Department of Justice
(DOJ) to determine which ones were filed using the “bahala na (‘whatever comes
next’ or ‘come what may’)” system. “I see the need to review all the cases of the Abu Sayyaf suspects arrested
and in jail. What struck me is that there is even one case, one person arrested
thrice and he was released thrice,” he said. Baraan said the sheer number of cases lodged in various courts in Western
Mindanao, the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao and even Metro Manila was
overwhelming. “But I have yet to see the databank or profiles of the cases. I am very
interested in getting and gathering all the cases and background of all the
accused, their names, circumstances and the manner how they were arrested and
where these people are now,” he said.
Laisa Alamia of the Commission on Human Rights in the ARMM said he agreed
with Baraan and that the case of 39-year old motorcycle driver Hussein Ahadin of
Zamboanga City should be enough to set off the alarm on how the government’s
anti-terror campaign was being carried out. Ahaddin is the man that Baraan had referred to as the suspect who was thrice
arrested, thrice released. “I don’t think a guilty person would think of going back to his home and be a
subject of repeated arrest,” Alamia said. Ahaddin was initially charged for the Oct. 2, 2002 explosion in Upper
Calarian, Malagutay, where US soldier Sergeant First Class Mark Wayne Jackson
was killed; and the Oct. 17, 2002 twin bombings of the Shoppers Department Store
in Zamboanga, where more 60 people were hurt.
Ahaddin was detained for a month and was released after his family submitted
proof he was arrested on a mistaken identity. But in August 2007, he was again arrested but was released when his human
rights workers and his family secured a writ of habeas corpus. On November 30, 2011, Ahaddin was arrested anew for the October 11, 2011
bombings of the Red Palm Inn in Guiwan, Zamboanga City and the San Roque
cockpit; and the October 26, 2011 explosion in Sangali District, also in the
same city; and the November 27, 2011 explosion at the Atilano Pension House.
He was released again after his family questioned the warrant of arrest. Ahaddin said he could not understand why authorities insisted that he was
Muksin Ajijul Ahaddin, an alleged notorious Abu Sayyaf bomber. Zamboanga City Prosecutor Ricardo Cabaron said Ahaddin’s arrest was backed by
witnesses’ accounts.
Edil Baddiri, a lawyer and a commissioner of the National Commission on
Muslim Filipinos, said countless arrests have been made in Mindanao without the
police giving the suspects the benefit of the doubt and the constitutional
presumption of innocence. Baddiri said this was the same reason human rights forums – such as the one’s
the NCMF hosted – have become important. “It is a disgrace for me if we cannot do something about it. It is the NCMF
mandate to provide legal assistance and it’s a disgrace for us if we cannot even
give attention to all these injustices…,” he said.
Lawyer Galuasch Ballaho, deputy executive director of the Mindanao Human
Rights Action Center, said almost three fourths of those arrested on suspicion
of being Abu Sayyaf members had turned out to be innocent of the charges. He said those who were innocent could not challenge their arrest because they
had nobody to run to. “They don’t have the means (to prove their innocence) and
most of them are not educated,” Ballaho said.
Former Lantawan, Basilan mayor Tahira Ismael said the arrests made in the
aftermath of the July 2011 mass hostage-taking at the Golden Harvest Plantation
in Barangay (village) Tairan in Lantawan, were clear examples of human rights
violations. “Not all of those arrested and brought to Zamboanga City or Manila were
involved. I should know because I knew them from our childhood years,” Ismael
said. But Ismael said officials like her could not do anything because arresting
officers always had witnesses. Ismael suspected that most of the witnesses were “manufactured witnesses for
the love of bounty.”
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/326955/doj-official-bats-for-review-of-cases-vs-abu-sayyaf-suspects
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