From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Oct 26): Major in Jonas case posts bail, gives alibi
BALIAGA photo by MARIANNE BERMUDEZ
On the day Edita Burgos’ son Jonas went missing, the parents of Army Major
Harry Baliaga welcomed home their own son whom they had not seen for more than a
year.
Baliaga had given this alibi before and he stressed it again Friday as he
presented himself to the Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 126, which last
month ordered his arrest in connection with the 2007 abduction of
farmer-activist Jonas Burgos.
Charged with arbitrary detention, Baliaga posted a P40,000 bail after
submitting his mug shots and having his fingerprints taken. He was accompanied
by his civilian lawyer, Bumin Pasiwen.
The court set the arraignment on Nov. 12.
The Department of Justice earlier found probable cause against the officer
based mainly on statements given by a restaurant busboy who claimed he was the
same man who seized Burgos and forced him into a vehicle outside Ever Gotesco
Mall, Quezon City, on April 28, 2007.
Speaking to reporters at the Quezon City Hall of Justice, the 36-year-old
Baliaga maintained his innocence, claiming he was in his home province when
Burgos was abducted.
We came here to show that we believe in the justice system because this is also
the justice system that will exonerate me. One hundred percent, I believe that I
will be exonerated,” said Baliaga, a member of the Philippine Military Academy's Class of 2000.
“I had wanted this to happen sooner because this would hasten efforts to serve
justice for Mrs. Burgos and for myself,” he said. “I have always said, and it’s
in my affidavits, that I had nothing to do with this case."
Baliaga appeared last year in a Court of Appeals hearing on Edita Burgos’s
petition for the writ of amparo. He became teary eyed on the stand particularly
when asked about his whereabouts on the day Jonas was abducted.
On Friday, Baliaga said he had long wanted to explain why
he became emotional before the CA justices—but again his voice cracked and his
eyes welled up.
He paused to take a deep breath, wiped an eye and shook his head. He turned
his back as though to excuse himself, took another deep breath, and asked for a
five-minute lull before he could continue.
Baliaga, a native of Mountain Province, insisted that on April 28, 2007, he
went to see his parents, Harry and Dominga, and his then girlfriend, Rachel, who
is now his wife.
He said he had not been in his hometown for more than a year because he took
a Special Forces training course at Fort Magsaysay in Nueva Ecija province and
later a basic airborne course which ran until April 19, 2007.
“I cried that time (when the justices) asked where I was on April 28 because
I thought about my family right away. I was on my way to see them. But then here
are other people saying: ‘No, you did something wrong that time’,” Baliaga said,
adding:
“It was very painful for me to think that I was in that situation (of being
accused). Basically, I felt self-pity. I couldn’t help myself. I couldn’t take
it, thinking that I was on my way to see the people I love most in my life and
then others would say, ‘you’re lying, you were committing a crime at that time.’
That’s not right.”
Baliaga said the testimonies of his parents, as well as that of an aunt who
joined him on the bus ride home, would prove his innocence.
He was at the PMA, teaching military science and military arts courses to the
cadets, when he learned that the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) had implicated
him in the Burgos case, the officer further recalled.
Soon after, the Armed Forces of the Philippines reassigned him to the Army
Headquarters in Fort Bonifacio to make him available for court proceedings. He
was, in effect, placed on floating status.
“I could no longer follow the career path I wanted to take because of (the
charges) being leveled against me,” he said.
Baliaga said he was already with another military unit, and was no longer
assigned to the Army’s 56th Infantry Battalion, when Burgos was abducted. The
vehicle allegedly used to abduct Burgos was traced to the battalion’s
headquarters in Bulacan province.
He said it dismayed him to hear the CHR’s insinuation that the military had
put together a group of soldiers from different units to commit a crime. “Our
military is not like that. There’s no military operation like that.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/514373/major-in-jonas-case-posts-bail-gives-alibi
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