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Freeze order on Ampatuan assets expires

Joint statement of the Freedom Fund for Filipino Journalists Inc. and the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines on the Expiry of the Freeze Order on the Assets of the Ampatuans
2 December 2011


Today, December 2, 2011, the six-month freeze order the Court of Appeals issued – on petition of the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) – on the 597 bank accounts, 142 firearms, 132 motor vehicles, and 113 houses and lots in the names of 27 members of the Ampatuan clan and their associates expired.

We have also learned that it was only yesterday, December 1, when the AMLC filed through the Office of the Solicitor General, a petition for civil forfeiture with a prayer for a new freeze order with the Manila regional trial court. As of the close of office hours, we have not received confirmation from the OSG, the AMLC, or the trial court if the freeze order, or provisional asset protection order (PAPO), had been issued.

We view with great alarm the unwarranted delay and apparent lack of attention and negligence that the AMLC and the OSG had accorded this case.

A week ahead of today’s expiry of the appellate court’s freeze order, we called government attention to this grave matter – the possibility that the Ampatuans could take advantage of the delay to retake control of their enormous unexplained wealth to put pressure to bear on their trial for the Maguindanao massacre of Nov. 23, 2009, which claimed the lives of 58 persons, including 32 media workers.

The Freedom Fund for Filipino Journalists, Inc. (FFFJ) and the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) urge all concerned government agencies, but especially AMLC, to take whatever steps are necessary to correct this anomaly.

President Benigno Aquino III earlier said his administration would do everything to expedite the Massacre case and assure the victims justice at the soonest. AMLC’s apparent lack of urgency in extending the freezing of the Ampatuan assets will be interpreted as reflective of the Aquino government’s own lack of enthusiasm.

Twenty-eight Ampatuans are among the accused in the Maguindanao Massacre. The outcome of the trial is crucial to the Philippine press and media. Unless credibly concluded, it will encourage further killings by demonstrating that the culture of impunity that has encouraged the killing of political activists, environmental advocates, members of the clergy, human rights workers, journalists and others who have antagonized local power groups, criminal syndicates and state security forces will continue.

The return of their bank accounts, firearms and other resources constitutes a formidable advantage for the Ampatuans. It is imperative that this advantage be denied them to level the legal playing field and to help credibly conclude the trial of the accused in the Ampatuan Massacre.

With the edge that the lapse of the freeze order has restored to the Ampatuans, the trial will send all the wrong messages to the would-be killers of journalists, political activists, etc., as well as to society as a whole: that the killings can continue and that it is impossible to obtain justice in a society whose government institutions are unable to perform their mandated tasks, in this case the AMLC entrusted with the task of enforcing banking laws, which among others require banks to report “suspicious transactions” to the AMLC.

The AMLC filed its request for the freezing of the multibillion assets and hundreds of bank accounts of the Ampatuans only last May—a full 18 months after the Massacre, during the investigation of which the existence of these billions and other assets was discovered, and in fact amply reported in the media. But the freeze order it eventually obtained from the Court of Appeals has been allowed to lapse on December 2, 2011.

The FFFJ and the NUJP are appalled by this default, and demands that the AMLC explain why it failed, in the first place, to note the money trail evident in the number of Ampatuan bank accounts, and why it allowed the freeze order to lapse. Is this the result of sheer inefficiency and incompetence, or a deliberate attempt to ignore the hundreds of Ampatuan bank accounts whose existence alone should have aroused suspicion? Or it is not so much a case of incompetence and inefficiency as a case of sheer partisanship, in which case the AMLC must be subjected to the closest public and legislative scrutiny.

SIGNATORIES:

Freedom Fund for Filipino Journalists:
Center for Community Journalism and Development
Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility
Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng PIlipinas
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism
Philippine Press Institute

and the

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines

Published inHuman RightsMaguindanao massacreMedia

6 Comments

  1. Star 1542 Star 1542

    The Penoy administration is 1,000% focused on Gloria’s case and 0% on other cases. No effort is exerted on the part of Malacanang to serve justice to the victims of this gruesome and most barbaric crime of all times in the history of the Philippines. If Penoy and his turncoat avid supporters in the Senate persistently question the function of the Supreme Court,are they powerless against the AMLC? Or is it because the Ampatuans did not offend Penoy as Gloria did. Or the Ampatuans are not the subject of vendetta of Penoy. Or are the Ampatuans also the friends of Penoy?… Let’s just hope the Philippines will elect a competent president in 2016 and also hope justice will then be served to those poor victims.

  2. Golberg Golberg

    Baka ito yung deal?

    Mag lapse yung freezing ng mga assets nila pero ilantad nila ang nalalaman nila laban kay pandak. Lalo na dun sa 2004 at 2007 elections.

  3. baycas2 baycas2

    OT…

    re: Transparency International result of 2011.

    Can country/territory scores in the 2011 CPI be compared to those in past indices?

    The CPI is not designed to allow for country scores to be compared over time. This is because the index draws on a country’s rank in the original data sources, rather than its score. A rank will always deliver only relative information – and therefore a ranking is a ONE OFF ASSESSMENT. A country’s rank in a given data source can change a) if perceptions of corruption in other countries included in that source change or b) if countries are added or removed from that data source.

    (Emphasis mine. This was copied from cpidottransparencydotorg.)

    please be careful in analyzing the difference from the CPI score of 2.4 in 2010 (rank 134) and the CPI score of 2.6 in 2011 (rank 129).

    the 2010 and 2011 scores are simply incomparable.

    kahit naman siguro puedeng ihambing ang dalawa, mukha naman walang rin silang diperensiya sa kakatiting na 0.2.

  4. Mahirap kalabanin ang mga ampatuan kasi maimpluwensya. Isipin niyo na lang ang administrasyon ni Pnoy halos walang pagkilos laban sa mga ampatuan.

  5. parasabayan parasabayan

    Di kaya ito ang kapalit ng testimony ni Zaldy Ampatuan sa poll sabotage case?

  6. Chi Chi

    psb, ganyan din ang isip ko kasi walang mas mabigat na magdidiin kay Gloria kundi ang ex-bff na Ampatuans. Pero hindi dapat isakripisyo ang hustisya sa Maguindanao murder victims to satisfy the end of jailing the pandak for election sabotage. Pasukahin nila si Garci, nasaan na ba ang ungas na yan?!

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