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Southeast Asia
Manila arrests two alleged coup leaders
2006-06-20
Philippine soldiers and police have arrested two of the alleged masterminds of a failed 2003 coup in separate raids in Manila, an army spokesman official said yesterday. Colonel Tristan Kison said retired Colonels Romeo Lazo and Virgilio Briones, leaders of the right-wing group Guardians Brotherhood, were caught in the suburb of Quezon City on Saturday.

"They did not resist arrest," Kison said, adding that they were taken to a central Manila police camp for questioning. Lazo and Briones had a 500,000-peso ($9,600) bounty on their heads after the justice department filed rebellion charges in February against them and five other retired soldiers, including ex-colonel Gregorio Honasan, a former senator. They were accused of inciting 300 soldiers to take over high-rise apartments in Manila's financial district in an attempt to force President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to step down.
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Southeast Asia
Arroyo’s Estranged Ally Arrested as Philippine Crackdown Continues
2006-03-18
Police yesterday arrested an ally-turned-critic of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo for illegal assembly as the crackdown on the president's foes continued two weeks after she lifted the state of emergency she imposed on the country to quell an alleged coup attempt. Two suspected followers of former Sen. Gregorio Honasan, wanted for his alleged role in last month’s thwarted coup, were also arrested, officials said.

Former Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman was taken to a police station along with activist Vicente Romano as the two were leading a silent protest at Manila’s popular Baywalk promenade. The two were with about 30 people wearing T-shirts bearing the slogan “Oust Now,” apparently calling for President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to resign. Police said they were arrested for holding a rally without a permit. “We are not holding a rally, we are just strolling. We are not disturbing anyone, we don’t even have placards,” said Soliman, one of 10 key Arroyo officials who resigned their positions in mid-2005 at the height of a crisis sparked by allegations that Arroyo cheated in the May 2004 elections.
"We wudn't doin' nuttin'! We wuz just walkin' down the street, mindin' our own bidniz..."
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Southeast Asia
Alleged plotters charged in Philippines crackdown
2006-02-28
Four senior police officers have been detained and 16 leading opposition figures charged with rebellion, in a crackdown against those allegedly plotting to topple the Philippines President. Chief Superintendent Marcelino Franco, who was sacked on Friday from his post as commander of the police Special Action Force, and three of his men "were placed under restrictive custody", amid reports they were recruiting people to destabilise Gloria Arroyo's government, national police chief Arturo Lomibao says. Chief Superintendent Franco was sacked when Mrs Arroyo declared a state of emergency to counter an alleged coup plot.

At the same time, police filed charges of rebellion and coup d'etat against four leftist legislators and 12 other opposition figures who have called on Mrs Arroyo to step down. The head of police criminal investigations, Chief Superintendent Jesus Versoza, said his office submitted the names of the 16 to the Justice Department. Among those charged were leftist members of the House of Representatives Crispin Beltran, who was arrested Friday, Satur Ocampo, Liza Maza and Teodoro Casino, Chief Superintendent Versoza said. Also in the charge sheet was former senator Gregorio Honasan, who as an army colonel in the 1980s led several bloody coup attempts against the government. He remains at large.
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Southeast Asia
Gloria wants to throw the book at 'em
2003-08-08
Philippine President Gloria Arroyo said she would push for the maximum penalty for rebel soldiers who carried out an alleged coup attempt against her government. Arroyo said she was for "total justice based on due process" as officials said dozens more rebel soldiers and civilian conspirators involved in the plot would be prosecuted. "The secondary aim of the mutineers if they did not succeed in toppling the government is to weaken national leadership," Arroyo said in a statement. "We shall prove them wrong. We shall seek the maximum penalty for those who planned, led and executed this misadventure." Senior figures in the alleged plot could face life imprisonment if found guilty.
Shooting them would work better. Ask al-Ghozi.
Thirty-eight more soldiers would be charged with rebellion in civilian courts, in addition to 321 colleagues indicted earlier for their brief takeover of a section of the Makati financial district on July 27, National Bureau of Investigation chief Reynaldo Wycoco said. "Apparently when they (military authorities) conducted a headcount and processing of the soldiers, there were 38 others who were missed out," Wycoco said on ABS-CBN television. The mutiny swiftly fizzled out after failing to rally wider support, but the government maintains it was part of a larger plot allegedly led by opposition Senator Gregorio Honasan to unseat and possibly assassinate President Arroyo and replace her with a 15-member junta. It brought the total of soldiers detained for the mutiny to 359. The military's inspector general on Wednesday recommended separate court-martial proceedings against 45 military officers involved in the siege. Prosecutors have also filed criminal complaints for rebellion against Honasan, who has gone into hiding, as well as a former member of cabinet of detained former president Joseph Estrada.
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Southeast Asia
Philippines to prosecute senator over leading failed coup
2003-08-04
President Gloria Arroyo's government on Monday filed a criminal complaint against Gregorio Honasan, accusing the opposition senator of leading an alleged coup attempt against her. Interior Secretary Jose Lina lodged the complaint before the Justice Department against Honasan and six others belonging to a civilian group that had allegedly helped rogue soldiers carry out the July 27 mutiny at the Makati financial district.
Can't say much for their tactics. If I was staging a coup, I wouldn't worry about the financial district first...
``Definitely, he is one of the leaders. There are other politicians and some other financiers whom we are gathering evidence against,'' Lina said of Honasan, a former army colonel who led several coup attempts in the 1980s.
Oh, it used to be a habit, did it?
Honasan, who was pardoned in 1995, was the first senior political figure publicly implicated by the government in the coup attempt. He denies the allegation.
"Wudn't me."
If they shoot him this time, he won't be able to deny it next time, will he?
The government last week also arrested Ramon Cardenas, a member of the cabinet of deposed Filipino leader Joseph Estrada, for his alleged role in the coup. The complaint included a deposition by a military intelligence officer, Major Perfecto Ragil, who alleged that he met with Honasan and the other plotters at a suburban Manila house on June 4 where the senator allegedly discussed the power grab. ``The discussion concluded that we must use force, violence and armed struggle™ to achieve the vision'' of Honasan's political platform, called the National Recovery Programme, the sworn statement said. Ragil alleged that Honasan vowed that ``colleagues who would be traitors'' to the cause would be killed. The senator also presided over a bizarre ceremony wherein he and the other conspirators cut themselves with a knife and then used their own blood to imprint their thumbmarks on documents and flags used by the group, Ragil said. In a telephone interview on Monday Honasan, who has not been seen in public for a week, told reporters: ``I was never in any secret meeting where there was a blood pact where the plot to launch the Makati incident took place. I categorically deny that.''
All you need's a bloody thumbprint...
Ragil also said that one of the detained mutiny leaders, Captain Gary Alejano, went to see him early last month and asked him to shut down the telephone system of Malacanang presidential palace ``when the D-Day arrives''. Lina asked the justice department to put the officer under its witness protection programme.
Yeah. If the witnesses are dead, there's no case, is there? Funny how that works. And how often.
At least 355 soldiers — 108 junior officers and 247 enlisted men — took part in the July 27 siege, nearly double the original estimate, military chief of staff General Narciso Abaya said. Arroyo said an official inquiry into the rebellion was ``now in an advanced stage and will soon account for all those involved. The evidence is mounting and is substantial and solid,'' she said without elaborating. At the height of the mutiny, the authorities had estimated the number of military participants to between 150 and 200. Abaya said 348 have been detained, while two officers and five enlisted men are at large. ``As early as 2001'', the cabal began recruiting elite units to carry it out, Abaya told reporters.
The definition of "elite" appears to have some flexibility to it...
The rebels wanted to ``institute totalitarian rule'' through a 15-member junta, Defense Secretary Angelo Reyes told the same forum.
So the PI could be as successful a state at Burma...
Abaya said he deployed a battalion of infantry, comprising about 500 men, in Manila last weekend ``just in case there are again some happenings as in the other weekend.''
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