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21 Filipinos Killed On Way To File Election Papers

HRVOJE HRANJSKI   11/23/09 07:36 PM ET   AP

Phillipines

MANILA, Philippines — Gunmen ambushed a caravan of political supporters and journalists on their way to file election papers, killing at least 24 people in a massacre considered shocking even for a region notorious for violence between rival clans.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines said at least 10 local reporters were part of Monday's convoy, but police spokesman Leonardo Espina said Tuesday that authorities had identified the remains of only one so far.

Their newspapers and radio stations have not been able to reach any of the journalists, raising fears that they were killed. If confirmed, it would be the "largest single massacre of journalists ever," according to Paris-based Reporters Without Borders.

"Covering the news has always been dangerous in the Philippines, but the wanton killing of so many people makes this an assault on the very fabric of the country's democracy," said Bob Dietz, Asia program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists in New York.

The president's office termed Monday's attack the worst political violence in recent history. Many among the 24 dead were women, including two lawyers, Espina said.

Police said the convoy of 40 people was going to register Ismael Mangudadatu to run for provincial governor when they were stopped by some 100 gunmen and taken to a remote mountainous area.

Soldiers and police later found 21 bodies, including those of Mangudadatu's wife, Genalyn, and his two sisters, sprawled on the ground or shot in their vehicles about three miles (five kilometers) from where they were ambushed, military spokesman Lt. Col. Romeo Brawner said.

Mangudadatu, deputy mayor of the town of Buluan and a fierce political rival of the current governor of Maguindanao province, said his wife called him by mobile phone shortly before she and her entourage were abducted.

"She said ... they were stopped by 100 uniformed armed men ... then her line got cut off," he said.

The five vans being used by the group were found abandoned. The army and police were searching for the 16 people who were missing, Brawner said, adding that troops were looking for more bodies in areas that appeared to have been recently dug up.

A backhoe was apparently used to bury the bodies, said army commander Lt. Col. Rolando Nerona.

While candidates are typically part of the festive caravans that travel to file election papers, Mangudadatu had sent his family and supporters because he had received death threats. Most of those on the caravan were women because it was thought they would be safer than men.

The identity of the attackers was unclear, but the military said it believed the motive for the attack was political. National police chief Jesus Verzosa placed a police chief in the area under investigation and relieved him of his duties.

The Mangudadatus blamed their rivals, the powerful Ampatuan family, which has ruled since 2001.

"They don't want us to file our candidacy in Maguindanao. It's like they hold a franchise, they want everything," said Mangudadatu's brother, Jong, the mayor of Buluan.

The Ampatuans were unreachable for comment.

The region, among the nation's poorest and awash with weapons, has been intermittently ruled by the Ampatuan family.

Andal Ampatuan, the family's patriarch and governor of the province, has survived half a dozen attacks on his life. He has blamed those assaults, one of which claimed a son, on Muslim rivals from the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which has been fighting for a greater autonomy in the southern Philippines for decades.

Government officials called Monday's attack political and said it was not thought to involve the front.

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ordered her defense chief, Norberto Gonzales, to fly to the south Tuesday to oversee military action against the attackers and secure the area.

The coastal province of Maguindanao is part of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which was created as part of a 1996 peace agreement with a large Muslim rebel group.

Philippine elections are particularly violent in the south because of the presence of armed groups, including Muslim rebels fighting for self-rule in the predominantly Roman Catholic nation, and political warlords who maintain private armies.

The last elections in 2007 were considered peaceful, even though about 130 people were killed.

The decades-long Muslim insurgency has killed about 120,000 people since the 1970s. But a presidential adviser, Jesus Dureza, said Monday's massacre was "unequaled in recent history."

"There must be a total stop to this senseless violence," he said, recommending a state of emergency be imposed in the area to disarm all gunmen. "Anything else will not work."

Rebel spokesman Eid Kabalu said the guerrillas had nothing to do with Monday's massacre, which he described as election-related.

Army troops went on full alert in Maguindanao to prevent retaliatory killings, regional military commander Maj. Gen. Alfredo Cayton said.

According to information provided by the Committee to Protect Journalists, there have been attacks on media buildings that resulted in more deaths, but not all of those killed were journalists. For example, five journalists and six other employees of satellite TV channel Al-Shaabiya were killed in attack on their offices in Baghdad in 2006.

___

Associated Press writers Jim Gomez and Teresa Cerojano contributed to this report.

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12:42 PM on 11/23/2009
On related events

Partial list of daily offerings for AllaAkbars of Peace.

2009.11.22 (Afmadow, Somalia) - At least two civilians lose their lives in AlAkbar groups crossf.ire.
2009.11.22 (Spin Boldak, Afghanistan) - 5 Afghans lose their lives due to AlAkbar peace offering attached under the their car.
2009.11.21 (Jebel Rumayh, Saudi Arabia) - AllaAkbars take out three Saudis.
2009.11.21 (Mosul, Iraq) - A school teacher loses his live becuase some AllaAkbar upset about education.
2009.11.21 (North Waziristan, Pakistan) - Four security officers lose their lives taken out by AllaAkbar T.al.ibs.
12:41 PM on 11/23/2009
Another bar.ba.rian peace offering from the re-ligion of of pieces.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snapshot1940
"We have met the enemy and he is us"
12:01 PM on 11/23/2009
Since the moderators scrapped my original remarks, I'll just say that this is the result of a collapsing government, full of corruption and torn apart by religious fanaticism.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dennissinned
Progressive but not a Democrat.
12:00 PM on 11/23/2009
Just another brazen-flouting-of-the-law day in a country that overdoes EVERYTHING that all her colonizers taught her - from religion to politics.
02:10 PM on 11/23/2009
You're, of course, referring to the Muslim colonizers. Yes?
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
11:18 AM on 11/23/2009
Some "democracy" we installed in the Philippines, a century ago! This is shocking ...
11:47 AM on 11/23/2009
The Republic of the Philippines is a sovereign nation and is not under the influence of America. They have their problems, we have ours.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snapshot1940
"We have met the enemy and he is us"
11:58 AM on 11/23/2009
While Japan may have as much influence as the USA, the nation is still the biggest American influenced in Asia. The culture is pretty much Western, English is spoken in grade schools and most business is conducted in English. Until we closed the bases at Subic Bay and Andrews AFB, the USA was their largest source of income. Now the country has resorted to human trafficing with the consent and aid of the Govt. as their main source of income.
10:45 AM on 11/23/2009
I am glad that the West is super vigilant about not wanting to pick on a particular group or cause innocent members of that group to be painted with a broad brush unfairly.

But until it is understood that there is an organizing principle behind the vast majority of the world's separatist movements, terror, land disputes, there is no chance for their resolution.

People blame the West for 9/11 with no knowledge that America's first foreign military adventure, two hundred years ago, was to put down Jihad as well.

The answer is for the West to recommit to its own principles of gender equality, tolerance, gay-rights and to be ,mature enough to recognize that non-western societies are not perpetual victims and despite multicultural fantasies can often hold values quite repellent from a modern humanist perspective.
09:54 AM on 11/23/2009
everywhere that hijackings and massacres can be found the peaceful religion of Islam can be found as well.
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soisay
Angry? Scared? Thank a Republican.
11:29 AM on 11/23/2009
I certainly do not support Islamoterrsm, but I do not support you spouting half truths either. Everywhere that these same massacres occurred can be found the peaceful religions of Christianity & Judaism as well. Try to imagine this issue at a higher level if you are looking for a solution, a root cause, or even a universal pattern. Statements like the one here are as black/white as the ones made by participants. Repeat: your STATEMENTS, not you personally.
02:18 PM on 11/23/2009
While you're correct in stating that violence does occur throughout the world and involves every religion and/or political philosophy, there is something to be said for proportion. I think it would be disingenuous to deny the fact that the vast majority of politically-motivated violence in the world disproportionately involves one particular religion.