Supporters rally for family accused of Philippine massacre
November 29th, 2009 - 3:17 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Shariff Aguak (Philippines), Nov 29 (DPA) Thousands of people Sunday rallied in support of a prominent political family in the southern Philippines accused of masterminding the massacre of 57 people allegedly committed out of political rivalry.
About 3,000 demonstrators gathered outside the residences of the Ampatuan family in Shariff Aguak town in Maguindanao province, 930 km south of Manila.
Dozens of local officials allied with the Ampatuans also converged at the residences of Maguindanao Governor Datu Andal Ampatuan Senior and Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao Governor Zaldy Ampatuan to express their support.
The demonstrators carried placards rejecting the allegations against the family, nine members of which have been accused of being involved in the Nov 23 mass slaughter in nearby Ampatuan town.
“Stop accusing the Ampatuans,” one placard read.
The massacre victims included 30 journalists and relatives, lawyers and supporters of Esmael Mangudadatu, a rival politician contesting the post of Maguindanao governor, which has been held by Ampatuan Senior since 2001.
Datu Andal Ampatuan Junior, son of the incumbent governor and mayor of Datu Unsay town in Maguindanao, has been detained and faces multiple murder charges for allegedly masterminding and taking part in the killings.
His father, elder brother Zaldy, and six other relatives were also being investigated for involvement in the carnage, which has been condemned by the international community.
The ruling Lakas-Kampi political party also expelled Ampatuan Senior, Zaldy Ampatuan and Ampatuan Junior following the massacre.
Lieutenant Colonel Romeo Brawner, a military spokesman, said government troops were closely monitoring the demonstration to ensure that violence does not break out.
“We have received information that supporters of the Mangudadatus are also massing up, but we have yet to verify this,” he said. “We are on top of the situation, the area is under our control.”
Brawner said several armed men had been arrested at various checkpoints set up around Maguindanao as part of efforts to keep peace in the area.
“We are checking if they are allied with any of the warring clans,” he said. “They could also be just residents who are used to carrying firearms, but since they passed by the checkpoints, they were arrested and their weapons confiscated.”
- Martial law declared in Filipino province where 57 were murdered - Dec 05, 2009
- Philippine forces seize ammunition in massacre probe - Dec 04, 2009
- Philippine police identify 161 suspects in massacre of 57 - Dec 09, 2009
- Philippine troops seize more weapons tied to massacre - Dec 06, 2009
- Media groups, activists protest massacre in the Philippines - Nov 30, 2009
- 12 journalists killed in Maguindanao massacre - Nov 23, 2009
- Main suspect in southern Philippine massacre surrenders - Nov 26, 2009
- Philippine massacre suspect fired at victims: witness - Jan 13, 2010
- Philippine leader vows justice for massacre victims - Dec 03, 2009
- Arroyo lifts martial law in Philippine province - Dec 12, 2009
- Philippine massacre suspect blames Muslim rebels for carnage - Nov 27, 2009
- Toll in Philippine political massacre reaches 57 (Lead) - Nov 25, 2009
- Emergency declared in Philippines province after massacre - Nov 24, 2009
- Philippines rules out immediate arrests in political massacre - Nov 25, 2009
- Three killed in bomb blast in the Philippines - Jun 29, 2009
Tags: allegations, autonomous region of muslim mindanao, carnage, demonstrators, dpa, elder brother, government troops, incumbent governor, journalists, killings, lieutenant colonel, maguindanao province, mass slaughter, military spokesman, murder charges, political rivalry, politician, relatives, southern philippines, zaldy