CADRES IN COURT National Democratic Front leaders (from left) Vicente Ladlad, Satur Ocampo, Rafael Baylosis and Randall Echanis confer with their lawyer Rachel Pastores (center, back to the camera) after their arraignment Thursday at the Manila Regional Trial Court, where they face a 2006 charge for 15 counts of murder. Nathaniel Melican
In a packed, sweltering
Satur Ocampo, Randall Echanis, Rafael Baylosis, Vicente
Ladlad and spouses Benito and Wilma Tiamzon did not enter a plea when charges for
15 counts of murder were finally read to them after repeated postponements at
Manila Regional Trial Court-Branch 32.
Judge Thelma Bunyi Medina entered a plea of not guilty on
behalf of the six accused, whose supporters crammed the courtroom where the sole
air-conditioning unit conked out just before the proceedings started.
Their lawyer, Rachel Pastores, made a last-ditch effort to
have the arraignment postponed again, citing their pending petition in the
Court of Appeals to stop the trial on the ground that the complaint was
defective when filed by the government in 2006 during the Arroyo
administration.
But Medina ,
who earlier agreed to reset the proceedings twice this year in view of the CA
petition, denied Pastores’ latest appeal, saying the court had set aside “more
than enough time” to wait for the result of the petition. The judge set the
pretrial hearing for July 30.
Speaking to reporters later, Pastores said “what we have
been saying is that these are trumped-up charges against our clients. So we will
study what we can do and if we have other remedies that we can avail ourselves
of in the pretrial. But we are preparing our defense in case the trial
continues.”
The murder charges stemmed from the respondents’ alleged
orders in 1985 to purge the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) of members
suspected of being government spies, under what the military and the police
then called “Operation Venereal Disease.”
The charges are also anchored on the discovery of a mass
grave in Sitio Sapang Daco, Barangay Kaulisihan, Inopacan, Leyte
province in 2006, where authorities said the skeletons of 15 people killed in
the CPP purge were found.
Pastores said the charges could affect her clients in their
functions as consultants in the stalled peace process between the government
and CPP-NDFP. “How can the consultants work for peace when they are busy
defending themselves from these trumped-up charges?” she said.
Ocampo, Baylosis, Echanis and Ladlad were arrested in 2007
and 2008 based on warrants stemming from the case, but the Supreme Court, in
separate rulings, allowed them to post bail. Ocampo was granted provisional
liberty by the high court after arguing against the validity of the charges,
while Echanis, Baylosis and Ladlad were released in recognition of their role
as the NDF consultants in the peace process.
Currently detained in Camp Crame ,
the Tiamzon couple were arrested last year for this case and other criminal
cases—including murder and illegal possession of firearms and
explosives—pending in other courts.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/689999/red-leaders-arraigned-for-1980s-purge-killings
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