STILL UNDER WRAPS The much-awaited Mamasapano Report prepared by the board of inquiry has been submitted to Interior Secretary Mar Roxas, but there’s no word yet about its release to the public. MARIANNE BERMUDEZ
Six “American nationals” were at the command center of the Special Act ion Force (SAF) in Shariff Aguak town, Maguindanao province, hours before members of the elite police counterterrorism unit swooped down on the lair of wanted Malaysian terrorist Zulkifli bin Hir, alias “Marwan,” in nearby Mamasapano town on Jan. 25.
Direct involvement of US forces in the SAF operation is
among the findings of a Philippine National Police board of inquiry (BOI) that
investigated the mission that cost the lives of 44 elite police commandos.
The Department of Foreign Affairs has said that it checked
reports of US involvement in
the SAF operation with the US Embassy in Manila
and that the embassy denied the United
States had participation in the mission.
The board of inquiry submitted its report to Deputy Director
General Leonardo Espina, PNP officer in charge, on Thursday.
The board also concluded that resigned PNP Director General
Alan Purisima had “no authority” in involving himself in the implementation of
“Oplan Exodus,” the SAF operation that killed Marwan but ended in a gun battle
between the police commandos and guerrillas from the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom
Fighters (BIFF) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
Besides the 44 SAF commandos, 18 MILF guerrillas and five
civilians were also killed in the gun battle.
The board of inquiry report said Purisima, one of President
Aquino’s closest friends in the government, had no authority since he was
already serving the six-month suspension imposed on him by the Office of the
Ombudsman when Oplan Exodus was discussed with the President in January.
Quoting the sworn statement of Director Getulio Napeñas, the
sacked SAF commander, the board said the PNP’s “US counterparts had been
providing reliable information” about Marwan and his Filipino lieutenant, Basit
Usman.
Napeñas said the information given by the US authorities
“were considered in covert operations against the high-value targets.”
“This technical intelligence support also facilitated the
formulation and execution of the Oplan Exodus,” the report said.
The report said the information about the presence of the
Americans at the SAF command post was provided by Supt. Michael John Mangahis,
a senior SAF official who was also involved in the daring police mission.
Left index finger
“Mangahis revealed that six American nationals were at the
TCP (tactical command post) in Shariff Aguak starting on the eve of the
operations to provide real-time information to the SAF troops,” it said.
“Toward the retrieval operations, US forces also helped in
the medical evacuation of the besieged and wounded SAF commandos. Mangahis
maintained that the ‘pilots of the helicopter who helped in evacuating wounded
personnel to the hospital’ were among the identified American nationals at the
TCP,” it added.
Napeñas also told the board that he handed Marwan’s left
index finger, which the SAF troopers cut off for DNA samples, to two officials
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in General Santos City three days after the disastrous
police operation.
Earlier reports said the SAF commandos cut off Marwan’s
right index finger for DNA testing.
“The pictures of Marwan, taken by the (84th Special Action
Company) Seaborne immediately after he was killed, were also turned over to the
FBI as well as the DILG (Department of the Interior and Local Government) and
the PNP as part of the evidence,” the report said.
The 120-page report noted that Purisima “did not possess any
authority and responsibility to perform the functions of his former position
and office” when he and Napeñas briefed Aquino about Oplan Exodus in Malacañang
on Jan. 9.
The report said Purisima, who was suspended by the Ombudsman
over graft charges involving an irregular contract for the delivery of gun licenses,
was “not part of the chain of command.”
Chain of command broken
“The chain of command was broken as regard to (Purisima),
who could not act with authority by reason of his suspension. Therefore, his
orders and directives in whatever form did not produce any legal effects as far
as Oplan Exodus was concerned,” it said.
The report said Napeñas “took orders and heeded the advice
of (Purisima) in executing Oplan Exodus” and owned “full responsibility and
liability” for following Purisima’s instructions.
It stressed that Purisima’s authority as chief of the
150,000-strong police force “ceased to exist on the day his suspension was
served” as noted by Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago during a Senate hearing.
The report said Purisima set up a “de facto chain of
command” when he “communicated and reported directly” to the President and gave
orders to Napeñas despite his suspension from office.
“There are indications that (Purisima) was not merely acting
in an advisory capacity. For instance, he expressly assumed responsibility for
certain aspects of Oplan Exodus such as when he assumed that AFP support would
be provided,” the report said.
“Even if Purisima was suspended, his actions indicate that
he was asserting and exercising command responsibility in relation to Oplan
Exodus,” it added.
Lackadaisical stance
The board of inquiry also slammed the resigned PNP chief for
giving “inaccurate and ambiguous information from unreliable sources” during
the “crucial stage of the crisis.”
The board’s report said the wrong information fed by
Purisima “resulted in the eventual erroneous decisions.”
It said Purisima’s “lackadaisical stance” was evident when
he sent a text message to Lt. Gen. Rustico Guerrero, commander of the AFP
Western Mindanao Command, at 7:07 a.m. of Jan. 25.
The message read: “Baka puede artillery support sa AFP (We
request artillery support from the AFP).”
The report said Purisima’s message “does not connote a sense
of urgency as its seemingly gave Guerrero a choice to either send support
artillery to the battle zone or not.”
“Prudence would have required (Purisima) to take a quick
action and give clear, decisive instructions. However, the suspended CPNP
(Chief PNP) failed to do the same,” it said.
“Furthermore, the exchanges of text messages between the
suspended CPNP Purisima and President Aquino reveal that the former provided
inaccurate information,” it said.
‘Exhaustive undertaking’
Director Benjamin Magalong, head of the board and chief of
the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG), described the
seven-volume report on the investigation as a “very exhaustive undertaking and
endeavor.”
A smiling Magalong met reporters moments before he and the
two members of the board—Chief Supt. John Sosito and Director Catalino
Rodriguez—handed the report to Espina at the PNP headquarters in Camp Crame,
Quezon City.
The three police officials signed each page of the
spiral-bound report titled “Board of Inquiry: The Mamasapano Report.”
“It’s probably the most challenging investigation I have
ever done,” Magalong told reporters.
Asked if the President’s speech on Monday blaming Napeñas
for the Mamasapano debacle influenced the outcome of the investigation,
Magalong replied, “We did not give attention to it.”
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/119512/police-boi-report-confirms-us-role-in-oplan-exodus/
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