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Philippines
Philippine police crush jail rebellion
By Dragan Stankovic and Peter Symonds
30 March 2005
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Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo reacted with undisguised
triumph on March 15 to the news that police paramilitary units
had stormed the Camp Bagong Diwa prison and killed 22 prisoners
involved in a jail uprising. Among the dead were three jailed
leaders of the Islamist militia group Abu Sayyaf, who were awaiting
trial on charges of terrorist bombings and kidnappings.
Arroyo seized on the bloody end to the prison siege to posture
as tough on law-and-order and terrorism. In a radio address, she
praised the police, claiming that all peaceful means
to end the standoff had been exhausted. [W]e will prevail
in every battle for peace and freedom, she declared, adding:
[T]errorism will never win in the Philippines. Her
press secretary Ignacio Bunye bluntly declared: Thank God
it is over ... the terrorists got what was coming to them.
Interior Secretary Angelo Reyes, who personally directed the
police operation, made similar remarks. I hope this delivers
a strong message that anybody who tries to do something like this
in the future will be dealt with in the same fashion, he
warned. Clearly, the overriding consideration was not a peaceful
end to the siege, but making an example out of the rebels.
The jail uprising began on the morning of March 14, reportedly
when an inmate seized a guards gun. At least two guards
and several prisoners were killed as inmates took control of sections
of the prison. Authorities branded the rebellion a failed jailbreak,
but there was little chance of escape. Police, including snipers
and Special Action Force (SAF) units, surrounded the jail. It
is not clear how many of the 425 inmates actively supported the
rebellion.
While Arroyo and Reyes insisted that attempts were made to
resolve the situation peacefully, the negotiations lasted just
over 24 hours. Grievances included lengthy delays in bringing
court cases, including those of the Abu Sayyaf leaders, and allegations
of physical mistreatment. At one point, a resolution appeared
likely. The negotiators, who included Muslim parliamentarian Mujib
Hataman, reached a deal for the surrender of the rebels in return
for guarantees for their safety, speedy trials and a chance to
put their case in the media.
The negotiations broke down, however, with the police claiming
that the prisoners were stalling by asking for food. While discussions
continued through the night, it appears that Reyes had already
taken the decision to retake the jail. An article in the Philippine
Daily Inquirer reported that by 8 p.m. an assault plan was
being prepared and the media were asked to clear the road leading
to the main entrance.
The following morning, after a 15-minute ultimatum to surrender,
several hundred heavily-armed police stormed into the compound,
using tear gas and flash grenades. At least 22 inmates and one
police officer died in the operation. All three Abu Sayyaf leadersGalib
Andang, alias Commander Robot; Alhamser Limbong, alias Commander
Kosovo; and Nadjmi Sabdulla, alias Commander Globalwere
killed.
The dead prisoners were buried in a mass grave the following
day at a nearby Muslim village. Several hundred relatives and
supporters took part in the funeral, angrily shouting slogans
and raising fists in the air. Speaking to Agence France Presse,
one woman accused the police and guards of torturing prisoners.
They are still beating the survivors back in the prison,
she said.
Muslim leaders questioned the hasty decision to storm the jail.
[The crisis] should have been settled through peaceful dialogue.
The police should have given it time, four days maybe, but it
seemed they were in haste. If they waited, the [rebels] could
have been weakened and eventually surrendered, Bong Alonto,
president of the Alliance of Metro Manila Muslim Communities,
commented.
Although we have never approved of the Abu Sayyafs
way of dealing with the situation, we are extremely saddened because
the government attack resulted in the death of many innocent lives.
The police should be able to account for the unidentified victims
who were unfortunately killed, Datu Amerol Gulam Ambiong,
chairman of the Alliance of the Metro Manila Peace and Order Coordinating
Council, told the Philippine Daily Inquirer.
Abu Sayyaf is one of several armed separatist militia operating
in southern Mindanao, where poverty and repression of the regions
Muslim majority have spawned a bitter and protracted civil war
that has claimed over 100,000 lives. Abu Sayyafs founder,
Abdurajak Abubakar Janjalani, was one of a number of Filipinos
who fought in the CIA-sponsored war against the Soviet-backed
regime in Afghanistan in the 1980s and was critical of other groups
for failing to take a more explicitly Islamist orientation.
Following the September 2001 attacks in the US, the Bush administration
aggressively pushed for greater American military involvement
in the Philippines. US military trainers were sent
to southern Mindanao to work alongside Filipino military units
hunting down Abu Sayyaf guerrillas holding two US citizens and
a Filipino nurse hostage. While Arroyo enthusiastically backed
the global war on terrorism as a means of gaining
US financial and military assistance, her administration was forced
to scale back plans for a large American military presence as
a result of political opposition.
Like her predecessors, Arroyo is incapable of addressing the
poverty and economic backwardness that afflicts millions of Filipinos
either in southern Mindanao or elsewhere in the country. The rebellion
at the Camp Bagong Diwa prison provided an opportunity to divert
attention away her administrations failures, to stir up
anti-Muslim sentiment and to justify repressive police measures.
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