Senator Grace Poe on Tuesday released a committee report
which found the Mamasapano incident as a clear ‘massacre’ that left 44 Special
Action Force (SAF) commandos dead last Jan. 25 in Mamasapano, Maguindanao.
” The Mamasapano incident is clearly a “massacre,” not
simply a so-called “encounter” or “misencounter,” Poe said in a press briefing
where she showed to the media a 120-page report of 5 public hearings, 5
executive sessions and 73 hours of full discussion attended by 37 resource
persons in the Senate.
Poe, chairperson of the public order, said ‘concerned
members’ of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), Bangsamoro Islamic
Freedom Fighters (BIFF), and other armed groups have murdered and robbed the 44
SAF commandos.
”Survivors recount how their companies were surrounded and
decimated – even wounded SAF soldiers were fired upon,” Poe said in the
executive summary of the report.
Poe said the assailants cannot validly claim that its
fighters acted in self-defense because of the absence of the element of
unlawful aggression on the part of the SAF troopers.
”The MILF’s claim of self-defense is, therefore,
unavailing,” Poe said.
Although the Senate leaves the responsibility of identifying
the particular assailants to the Department of Justice (DOJ), Poe said the
murder and frustrated murder chargers ‘may be instituted against the MILF
fighters as well as the BIFF and other armed groups involved in the massacre of
the SAF 44.
Poe said former Philippine National Police (PNP) Chief Alan
Purisima committed “usurpation of authority or official functions,” violating
Article 177 of the Revised Penal Code when he involved himself in the Oplan
Exodus despite his preventive suspension by the Ombudsman.
”In addition, an administrative complaint may be filed with
the Ombudsman against Purisima for grave misconduct and conduct prejudicial to
the best interest of the service,” Poe said.
As for former SAF Chief Getulio Napenas, Poe said the
relieved SAF official committed “grave misconduct, inefficiency and
incompetence in the performance of official duties and for conduct prejudicial
to the best interest of service” under the Revised Rules on Administrative
Cases in Civil Service.”
Poe said President Benigno Aquino III “must bear
responsibility for giving assent to and failing to prevent the unlawful
exercise of the official functions by Purisima.
”As to the President, he is ultimately responsible for the
outcome of the Mamasapano mission,” Poe said.
”He assented to Purisima’s unlawful exercise of official
functions, particularly the latter’s “usurpation of authority or official
functions,” she added.
Under the committee report, Poe said the President must
“display unquestionable leadership, be forthright and candid with our people,
accept the responsibility for decisions made, and mistakes perhaps, along the
way. Nobody is infallible.”
” The President and other high-ranking government officials,
could have done more under the circumstances to prevent or minimize the number
of deaths that jolted the nation,” Poe said.
Poe said had the President and key security officials who
were with him in Zamboanga City, discussed the incident and shared information
clearly and openly in the early stages of the tragic day, coordination between
the Army and the PNP might have been hastened and fewer lives could have been
lost.
The President was with Department of Interior and Local
Government (DILG) Secretary Mar Roxas, National Defense Secretary Voltaire
Gazmin, acting PNP Chief Leonardo Espina, and Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP) General Pio Catapang in Zamboanga in the morning of January 25.
”Since he was familiar with the plan, the President might
have stepped in and displayed stronger positioning leadership regarding the
rescue operations if he was given the proper information,” Poe said.
”As Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, the President
wields great power and has vast resources at his disposal. The decision of the
President and his men not to use those resources immediately to prevent the
carnage must be explained,” Poe added.
The lady lawmaker said there were indications that the
planning and execution of the botched mission “were not 100-percent Filipino-planned
and implemented.”
”US personnel played a role in the training for and
monitoring of the said operation,” Poe said.
”The Committees found that the United States substantially
invested in the entirety of Oplan Exodus. They provided equipment, training and
intelligence. However, this raises the question of whether the PNP leadership
would have entered into such a risky and hazardous operation without the
support of the United States and the million reward offered for Marwan’s
capture,” Poe said.
The Senate panel also recommended that the Office of the
Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) should pursue peace with
justice.
”The peace that we seek must be based on justice, where the
rule of law reigns supreme, and where violators are brought before the bar of
justice. The blood and heroism of the SAF 44 must not be dis-honored. Our
people will accept no less,” Poe said.
Poe said the 120-page committee report has yet to be signed
by the other senators.
”Other senators may introduce amendments,” she said.
Senator Ralph Recto commended Poe’s report, saying the lady
lawmaker ‘correctly pointed out when the command structure fractured.”
”My first impression is that it, the report , is FPJ – fair
perceptive and judicious,” Recto said, adopting the monicker of Poe’s father,
the late movie actor FPJ or Fernando Poe Jr.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=745213
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