The justice department forms the panel of prosecutors that will conduct the preliminary probe into criminal complaints filed against members of the MILF, BIFF and private armed groups
FALLEN. An injured police commando (on stretcher) waits to be loaded onto a waiting US military helicopter in the town of Mamasapano, on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao on January 26, 2015, following clashes with Muslim rebels. Thirty police commandoes were feared dead. Photo by Mark Navales / AFP
The justice department on Tuesday, October 6, formed the panel of prosecutors that will conduct the preliminary probe into criminal complaints filed against members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) and private armed groups
In a one-page resolution,
Prosecutor General Claro Arellano directed 5 prosecutors to look into the
case of 90 persons charged with theft and the “complex crimes of direct
assault with murder” leading to the deaths of 35 police commandos in a
firefight in Tukanalipao, Mamasapano, Maguindanao on January 25, 2015.
The National
Bureau of Investigation has charged Abdul Wahab and 89 others with the murder
of 35 of 36 members of the 55th Special Action Company of the
Philippine National Police.
The 55th
SAC, under Operation Exodus, had been ordered to serve as the blocking force
for the main force of the 84th Seaborne. The failed plan sought to
neutralize high-value terrorists thought to be hiding deep in Mamasapano.
One of the wanted
men, bombmaker Zulkifli bin Hir, alias Marwan, was said to have been shot and
killed by the main effort inside his hut in the village of Pidsandawan in
Mamasapano.
Arellano also
instructed the panel to “file the appropriate information with the court of
competent jurisdiction” if proven necessary by the investigation.
The panel, to be
led by Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Rosanne Balauag, includes Assistant
State Prosecutors Aldrin Villanueva, Benito Oliver Sales III, Rassendell Rex
Gingoyon and Alexander Suarez.
Authorities earlier
included theft to the charges, claiming that non-government forces stripped the
commandos of equipment including firearms, communication and navigation
devices, night vision goggles, as well as cellular phones and wallets.
No
implications
Eyewitness
testimony added to the weight of evidence against the 90 respondents. One
witness, codenamed “Marathon ” and now under
the DOJ’s Witness Protection Program, identified a number of the accused.
Secretary of
Justice Leila de Lima also attributed earlier findings to a number of online
videos of the actual encounter, adding that the DOJ had already traced the
sources of the amateur footage.
De Lima also brushed off the
possibility the investigation would affect the already derailed peace process
between the MILF and the national government. She instead emphasized her belief
that the rebel group would cooperate with authorities during the legal process,
adding that the accused could be summoned to proceedings in the DOJ.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/108346-mamasapano-doj-panel-initial-probe-milf-biff
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