Manila Standard - 2019 December 21 - Saturday

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Next battle: Claim for damages Massacre victims’ kin eye Ampatuan assets; move stalled until SC final rule By Rey E. Requejo and Macon Ramos-Araneta

T

HE Department of Justice will study options to protect the claim for damages of the relatives of 58 people killed in the Maguindanao massacre, which they cannot receive pending a final

decision from the Supreme Court.

of the Ampatuan clan who were found The Quezon City Regional Trial Court guilty of perpetrating the mass murder on Thursday ordered several members to pay millions of pesos in damages

to the victims’ families. Senior Deputy State Prosecutor Richard Fadullon said, however, the victims’ families cannot claim this amount until the Supreme Court upholds the verdict, which could take up to 24 months if the verdict is contested by the accused. He also noted that it is typical for Next page

VOL. XXXIII • NO. 310 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com

No automatic rehiring for acquitted cops—PNP SOME of the police officers implicated, and eventually acquitted, in the Maguindanao massacre case would be evaluated whether they are still fit to return to service, Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said on Friday. The officers acquitted of the multiple

murder charges will not be automatically reinstated in the police force, the Philippine National Police added. “Acquittal does not necessarily translate to reinstatement to the police service,” PNP spokesperson Police Brig.

Gen. Bernard Banac said in a text message to GMA News Online. “Their dismissal from the PNP stemmed from preponderance of evidence, which is entirely different from Next page

ROLLING JUSTICE WHEEL. Forensic expert Dr. Raquel Fortun (top photo) discusses the bloody Ampatuan massacre while Free Legal Assistance Group lawyer Chel Diokno (left) listens during the public forum on post verdict assessment at the Annabels Restaurant in Quezon City. A day earlier, (below) Rep. Esmael ‘Toto’ Mangudadatu, vice mayor of Buluan town in Maguindanao in 2009, when the Maguindanao massacre happened, meets with some of the family members at the National Press Club before the promulgation of the court sentence where 28 were convicted and sentenced to 40 years. Manny Palmero and Norman Cruz

DOH uncovers fixing/selling of endorsements By Macon Ramos-Araneta THE Health department has condemned the alleged fixing or selling of guarantee letters by unscrupulous people at the expense of poor and indigent patients. The department anticipated the recent arrest of a Hubert Lotino, the alleged fixer of some guarantee letters it had issued. Lotino was one of those named by whistleblowers who had earlier volunteered information about a scheme using the Medical Assistance to Indigent Patient program fund. Acting on the reports of informants, the department enlisted the help of the National Bureau of Investigation Next page

CHRISTMAS COSTUMES. Members of the Pio del Pilar Senior Citizens Dance Troupe do a happy swing and sway in the streets of the posh city of Makati Friday morning, spreading cheers of Yuletide, only two days to the 4th Sunday of Advent in the Catholic calendar. Diana Noche

Pinoys see better prospects in 2020

Reds debunk ‘hit list,’ say it blocks peace

By MJ Blancaflor MANY Filipinos were optimistic about their prospects in 2020, a Pulse Asia survey revealed Friday. The polling firm said 93 percent of the respondents it polled said they will welcome the new year with hope, and their number is slightly higher than the 91 percent recorded last year. Meanwhile, some 0.2 percent were pessimistic about the coming year

By MJ Blancaflor THE Communist Party of the Philippines on Friday denied the allegations of security officials that there is a “hit list” that includes President Rodrigo Duterte, saying the claim only aims to hamper the planned resumption of peace talks. In a statement, the group said the allegation of National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. that the communist group wants President Duterte and other officials killed only seeks “to sow intrigue” and block the impending negotiations between the Next page

while 7 percent were undecided. The positive sentiment was recorded among all geographic areas and socioeconomic classes, the survey showed. Metro Manila recorded 95 percent, Luzon had 90 percent, Visayas had 98 percent and Mindanao had 95 percent. Majority figures were also recorded in all socio-economic classes with 97 percent in Class ABC, 93 percent in Class D and 91 percent in Class E. Next page

P5k pay for ‘kasambahay’ in NCR up ‘GUINNESS’ ATTEMPT. Performers dressed as Joseph, Mary, shepherds and other elements of the Nativity line up to be counted as the City of San Jose del Monte in Bulacan officially attempted to break the Guinness Book of World Record mark for the most number of living participants in a Nativity scene on Friday at the Altaraza Spine Road in the city’s Barangay Tungkong Mangga.

Christmas storm heading for Davao Sur

DOMESTIC workers or “kasambahay” in Metro Manila may see their monthly pay rate go up from P3,500 to P5,000. This is after the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board for the National Capital Region on Friday approved a P1,500 increase in their

Coding for buses suspended by Dec. 23

monthly minimum wage. Domestic workers had their last wage increase in December 2017, as the National Wages and Productivity Commission raised their monthly pay to ₱3,500 from ₱2,500. Next page

Winter solstice leads to longest night in PH

A BREWING storm, also known as low pressure area, could head for Davao del Sur on Wednesday as the province continues to wobble from the powerful earthquake on Sunday, the state weather bureau said Friday. This, as another weather system started dampening the holiday merriment in parts of the predominantly Christian country of 106 million people. The LPA was about 2,500 km east of Mindanao at 3 a.m. Friday and was expected to enter the Philippine area at the earliest on Sunday, said PAGASA weather forecaster Raymond Ordinario.

By Joel E. Zurbano THE Metropolitan Manila Development Authority says it is suspending the number coding scheme for provincial buses for six days starting Dec. 23 to accommodate

TOMORROW, the Philippines will experience this year’s longest night, with pitch darkness at round midnight, according to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration or PAGASA. This means the nights during the start of winter solstice will be longer than the daytime, but countries that do not have the winter season, like the Philippines, will only experience cooler temperatures and longer nights. This is the time, according to weather experts, when the sun lies at its farthest point south of the equator, signaling “the onset of

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