From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jan 16): Army denies ‘overkill,’ it was ‘justified’
Members of the Army’s Special Forces in Quezon province served as backup for
policemen involved in the supposed encounter in Atimonan town after the
Calabarzon regional police command sought the unit’s help in going after a group
of guns-for-hire and drug lords, the military said Tuesday. “The name of Vic Siman was not mentioned until after the encounter,” Col.
Generoso Bolina, Armed Forces Southern Luzon Command (SolCom) spokesperson, told
reporters in Camp Aguinaldo in a phone interview. Bolina said the military conducted its own fact-finding investigation to
determine the participation of Army soldiers led by Lt. Col. Monico Abang in the
Jan. 6 incident that left Siman and 12 other people dead.
In a phone interview in Lucena City, Abang, commander of the 1st Special
Forces Battalion, described the operation as a “calibrated use of force,” not an
“overkill” as viewed by a National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) official. The
NBI is conducting an investigation into the supposed encounter. “It was justified because we were provoked by a group of armed aggressors who
fired at us first,” Abang said.
Bolina said the police request for Army assistance was made through Supt.
Ramon Balauag, head of the Quezon police intelligence unit. “He was the one who
called up Colonel Abang to ask for augmentation. The 1st Battalion sent one
platoon to conduct the joint operation.” The policemen were to set up a checkpoint because the “group of drug lords …
are armed with high-caliber guns,” Bolina said.
Restricted
Abang and his 24 men are now restricted to quarters at their battalion
headquarters in Candelaria town and have been directed to cooperate with the NBI
probe. Bolina stressed, however, that they were not relieved. Abang said reasonable use of firepower was made to subdue the threat from
armed aggressors. He insisted that after the first exchange of gun shots that
lasted two minutes, the government forces had stopped firing. “But we were fired at again so some of us resumed firing. The firing only
stopped after several shouts of ceasefire were heard,” he said. The exchange of
shots lasted more than 10 minutes, he added.
Supt. Hansel Marantan, deputy intelligence chief of the regional police
office based in Canlubang, Laguna, called up Balauag in the morning of Jan. 6
and “had asked for help and security for a still unspecified operation on the
same day somewhere in the province,” according to a police source, who spoke on
condition of anonymity. The source said Balauag had informed Senior Supt. Valeriano de Leon, Quezon
police chief, on the planned operation. But De Leon was still on vacation in
Manila, he said.
Call for assistance
In a phone interview on Monday, Abang said Balauag called him at around 11:10
a.m. on the same day, requesting “Army assistance in the conduct of a checkpoint
operation against a group of fully armed elements coming from Bicol.” Abang said he immediately contacted Capt. Erwin Macalinao, head of the Army’s
3rd Special Forces Battalion based in Unisan town and ordered him and his men to
meet him in Atimonan. Abang said he and his 10 soldiers arrived in the town from Candelaria at
around noontime aboard a military truck. Together with Macalinao and his men,
they proceeded to Barangay Lumutan to join Marantan and the police force who
were already setting up checkpoints in the area, he said.
The police source said Marantan conducted his briefing about the operation
along the roadside. “He told us that what we’re after is the private armed group
of a certain Vic Siman whom he said is also involved in gun-for-hire, illegal
drugs and illegal gambling.”
Abang clarified that only 15 Army soldiers in full uniform and armed with
rifles were at the encounter site. Ten others were left at the Atimonan police
station at the town proper, nine kilometers away. He said he only learned that three of those killed were policemen after the
victims were identified by Scene of the Crime Operatives.
Purely police matter
“We knew nothing of the circumstances behind the police operation. It was
purely a police matter. We only provided assistance and security. As a matter of
fact, the Army soldiers were positioned some distance away from the checkpoint
where the police were placed as frontliners,” Abang said. He said the Army contingent left the site shortly before midnight after the
police investigators finished their documentation.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/341195/army-denies-overkill-it-was-justified
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