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Prosecutor got death threats after rejecting P300-m bribe By Rio N. Araja A PRIVATE prosecutor in the Maguindanao massacre case on Tuesday said she was bribed to stay away from the case in exchange for P300 million. In an interview over ANC’s “Headstart,” lawyer Nena Santos said she was offered P300 million for her not to handle the multiple counts of murder filed against the Ampatuan clan “about a year after” the massacre on Nov. 23, 2009. When she rejected the offer, she said she started to get death threats. She said even the kin of those who died were also offered money to retract their statements and withdraw the charges. Next page
NEW COINS. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has released the new P20 coin and the enhanced P5 coin featuring nine-sides to
make it more distinct from other coins. The new P20 coin will be the highest denomination in the BSP’s New Generation Currency series launched in 2018. The BSP earlier said it would release the new P20 in circulation by 2020.
VOL. XXXIII • NO. 307 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
ZALDY AMPATUAN
Verdict due on Ampatuans ‘Judgment on massacre of 32 journalists a test of PH justice system’ By Rey E. Requejo and MJ Blancaflor
T
HE alleged masterminds of the Philippines’ worst political massacre will learn their fate Thursday when a Quezon City court issues its verdict, in a test of the justice system for a nation with a deep-seated culture of impunity.
A decade ago, 58 people, including 32 media workers, were slaughtered and dumped into roadside pits during an attack that was also one of the world’s worst mass killings of journalists. Amid international outrage, the slaughter cast a harsh spotlight on the Philippines’ deep-seated problems of all-powerful political dynasties, easy access to guns and official impunity. Victims’ families have endured a trial of 101 defendants marred by allegations of bribery, defense delays, the murder of several witnesses and a fear that the still powerful accused could be acquitted. A guilty verdict “will be a strong signal to human rights abusers that they can’t always get away with murder,” researcher Carlos Conde of New Yorkbased Human Rights Watch said. “A not guilty verdict would be catastrophic for the cause of human rights and justice,” he said, adding acquittal would signal to warlords “that it’s business as usual, that they can continue using violence, intimidation and corruption to rule their communities.” Leaders of the powerful Ampatuan family, who ruled the impoverished southern province of Maguindanao, are charged with organizing the Nov. 23, 2009 mass killing in a bid to quash an election challenge from a rival clan. Next page
A DECADE BACK. These file photos taken on Nov 25, 2009 (left) show a backhoe lifting a dead body from a shallow grace, a victim of a massacre after gunmen shot at least 22 people in Ampatuan town in Maguindanao while a police investigator (right) gathers evidence next to the bodies of victims of the massacre. A decade after the country’s worst political massacre—where 58 people were slain—none of the alleged masterminds have been convicted thus far, leaving surviving families fearful that justice may never walk in. AFP
Quake toll rises Congress OKs New Year salary hike for state employees Ramos-Araneta to 7; aftershocks ByandMacon Maricel V. Cruz hamper rescue GOVERNMENT employees and officials will receive increases in their salaries on Jan. 1 next year once Congress approves the final version of the Salary Standard-
By Maricel V. Cruz AS MINDANAO braces for “The Big One” in the far south, the death toll from the latest major shock which rumbled underneath Davao del Sur last Sunday has reached seven, authorities confirmed Tuesday. The magnitude 6.9 quake struck south of President Rodrigo Duterte’s hometown Davao City, cracking thousands of concrete structures across the region, with rescuers using sniffer dogs and heartbeat detectors sifting through rubble for the second day to find survivors. While Davao del Sur Rep. Mercedes Cagas appealed to the public to help her province, the mayor of one of the worst-hit areas Padada town executive Pedro Caminero Jr. said the collapsed
ization Law 5 within the week, said Senator Juan Edgardo Angara. The Senate approved Monday night on third and final reading Senate Bill 1219 with a vote of 21-0-1, shortly after the House of Representatives passed its own version of the SSL-5. Minority
Leader Franklin Drilon was the lone senator who abstained from voting on the measure. Angara, who defended the bill on behalf of its sponsor Senator Ramon Revilla Jr., said the fifth round of salary increases will be implemented in four tranches,
Bloody Tuesday: Smashups kill 11 A TOTAL of 11 persons died and scores were hurt in separate vehicular crashes in Rizal and Cavite provinces on Tuesday— a day after four persons were killed and five others were injured in a nine-vehicle smashup in Bulacan. Nine persons, mostly pedestrians, died in Cardona, Rizal when a cargo truck rammed a passenger jeepney, which then hit a truck filled with sand, around 5 a.m. Tuesday, police investigators said. In Mendez, Cavite, another 18-wheeler sand hauler lost control and careened into at least a dozen vehicles along the national highway, killing two persons and sending 15 others to the hospital. This followed the multi-vehicle smashup along MacArthur Highway in Barangay
starting Jan. 1 next year. The succeeding rounds will be implemented in 2021, 2022 and 2023. A total of P130.45 billion would be needed to implement the four tranches of the SSL-5, with P33.16 billion as the funding requirement for 2020. Next page
Reds out to sow terror, gov’t warns By MJ Blancaflor
WEARING nothing but a lacy bra and matching panties, Brazilian grandmother Helena Schargel strikes a seductive pose during a photo shoot featuring her latest lingerie designs for women over 60. “Wonderful, marvelous,” the photographer
THE final film in the epic “Star Wars” trilogy of trilogies brought Hollywood to a standstill Monday, as a galaxy of VIPs from the space saga that began four decades ago descended on a glittering world premiere.
THE government on Tuesday warned the public to be vigilant amid reports that communist rebels will begin a terror campaign in the urban areas to take advantage of the Christmas season. National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. said the Communist Party of the Philippines and its armed wing, the New People’s Army, would launch operations to assassinate people who do not submit to their will as they mark their 51st year on Dec. 26. “The National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict has received reports that the communistterrorist CPP-NPA have operationalized their Special Partisan Units to conduct assassinations and terrorist activities in the urban areas to take advantage of the Yuletide season,” Esperon said in a statement. He said security forces had been advised to take appropriate counter measures against the “sinister threat.” The rebels, he said, were growing “more desperate to stem the tide and cling to whatever dwindling influence they have left.” “We advise the public to remain
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Granny shines light on older women
VEHICULAR CRASHES. The days are turning bitter on the road as separate vehicular crashes in Rizal and Cavite have claimed 11 lives, only 24 hours after four persons were killed and five more injured in a nine-vehicle rear-ender in Bulacan.
Galaxy of VIPs at ‘Star Wars’ saga