'From the very beginning, the [Moro Islamic Liberation Front] knew they were fighting government troops'
Philippine police commandoes load body bags containing the remains of their comrades killed in a clash with Muslim rebels, onto a truck in the town of Mamasapano, on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao on January 26, 2015. Photo by Mark Navales/AFP
They are loyal to
the chain of command and will fight for the country until their death.
But for the troopers of the Philippine National Police (PNP)’s Special
Action Force (SAF), there is something terribly amiss when government officials
call one of the police force’s bloodiest days a “misencounter.”
“Misencounters happen when you don’t know who the other fighter is and end
up shooting each other. From the very beginning, the [Moro Islamic Liberation
Front] knew they were fighting government troops,” a senior police official
told Rappler.
It was Interior
Secretary Manuel Roxas II – who also supervises the PNP – who said SAF
commandos had a “misencounter” with the MILF when one
unit mistakenly entered MILF area in an attempt to avoid the BIFF.
“The troops are
hurt when people say it’s a misencounter,” the official said.
Forty-four of the
PNP SAF’s young men died during the bloody January 25 battle against MILF
and Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) members in Mamasapano town,
Maguindanao.
Mamasapano is a
known bailiwick of the MILF, where fighters and families from both sides both
live.
SAF personnel,
the PNP’s elite force, were on a mission to neutralize bomb makers Zulkifli
Abdhir, better known as "Marwan,” and Abdulbasit Usman.
Everything went
well at the beginning for the SAF troopers, and they were reportedly able to
kill Marwan. The trouble began during their extraction operation:
commandos from the 5th special action battalion, the “blockade,” were
reportedly assaulted by the BIFF in the wee hours of the morning.
The events in
Mamasapano are threatening an ongoing peace talks between the Philippine
government and the MILF. Hearings for the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law
have stalled, and two senators have since withdrawn their support for the
measure.
On Friday,
January 30, the two parties signed in Malaysia
a protocol for the decommissioning of rebel firearms.
But where
was the AFP?
As details of the
doomed operation slowly become clearer, more questions arose. Despite several
news conferences on the clash, the chain of command for the operation remains
unclear. (READ: Maguindanao bloodbath: 3 unanswered
questions)
Both Roxas and
PNP OIC Deputy Dir Gen Leonardo Espina said they did not know of “Oplan Exodus” beforehand.
President Benigno
Aquino III said he directly coordinated with relieved Police
Director Getulio Napeñas Jr before the operation, but did not say if he
gave the operation the go-signal himself.
Rappler sources
indicated it was Napeñas who told Roxas it was suspended PNP chief Director General Alan
Purisima who called the shots. The PNP has denied this, however, but
Purisima himself has yet to address the reports.
One thing is clear: the SAF, either because of its former chief Napeñas or
any other official, did not coordinate with local forces prior to the
Mamasapano clash. (READ: Inside story: SAF
kept military out of the loop)
As dawn was
breaking, elements from the 55th company of the 5th battalion – the blockade
for the mission – realized they were already surrounded by fighters from
Mamasapano.
It was Senior
Inspector Ryan Pabalinas, the radio man of the 55th company, who called for
help and support.
“The support
elements could not get in because the 55th SAF was practically surrounded. We
sent reinforcements from different approaches, but we could not penetrate the
bulk of enemies until 1 pm,” Chief Superintendent Noli Taliño, acting chief of
the PNP SAF, said during his eulogy for the 44 slain cops.
Military sources
told Rappler the same thing. They wanted to offer fire support, but cops already
trapped in firefight could not give them exact grid coordinates.
Radio
silence
By the time help
came, there was "radio silence" on the other end. Many of the SAF
troopers deep in battle – members of the 5th special action battalion and the
84th seaborne battalion – were dead.
But for a PNP
official, the military did not do enough to help the SAF troopers. An emotional
police general told Rappler that top officials could have directly communicated
with MILF leaders to stop the carnage, provide air assets, or hold
"persuasion fights" to intimidate the MILF and BIFF.
"They say
heads will roll. But how come nobody in the military is being relieved pending
investigation? How come it's only General Napeñas' head on the chopping
block?" the police official said.
The PNP is in the
process of investigating the incident through its Board of Inquiry, while the MILF announced it was going to hold its
own probe.
It remains
unclear if the Armed Forces of the Philippines
will also hold a separate probe.
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