By CHERYLL D. FIEL
Davao Today
DAVAO CITY—Election violence erupted this early right at the heart of Maguindanao, a province long wrought by political killings.
Forty persons including lawyers and journalists on their way to Maguindanao’s capital town of Shariff Aguak were reportedly taken by armed men at around 9:30 am on Monday, November 23.
Combined military and police search team recovered 21 bodies in Barangay Salman, Ampatuan town later in the afternoon, according to Colonel Jonathan Ponce, 6th Infantry Division spokesperson.
Ponce said the bodies were believed to be part of the convoy led by Genalyn Mangudadatu, on her way to Shariff Aguak town to file the certificate of candidacy of her husband, Buluan town Vice Mayor Ismael Mangudadatu.
The Buluan vice mayor is running for governor in Maguindanao, a post currently held by incumbent governor Andal Ampatuan, Sr. a close ally of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Maguindanao map courtesy of Wikipedia
Maguindanao, one of the provinces of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, is about 160 kilometers from this city.
Ponce, however, said the bodies have not yet been positively identified. He also believed there could still be more.
Buluan Mayor Ibrahim “Jong” Mangudadatu, brother of the Buluan vice mayor, earlier told the media that among those killed were his relatives, two women lawyers and some media persons. The Buluan mayor earlier went on air over a Cotabato City station to report that six members of the party led by his wife, Genalyn, had been beheaded.
Among the persons initially identified in media reports as missing are Genalyn Tiamzon-Mangudadatu, wife of Buluan vice-mayor, Bai Eden Mangudadatu, vice mayor of Mangudadatu town and sister of the Buluan vice mayor and Lawyers Connie Brizuela and Cynthia Oquindo. NUJP confirmed 12 of their colleagues to have died but did not yet identify the names.
Reports from the NUJP local chapters in Mindanao named the journalists abducted to include a certain Ian Subang, president of a broadcasters’ association in General Santos City; Leah Dalmacio, Gina dela Cruz from General Santos City; Marites Cabutas, print reporter from General Santos City; Bart Maravilla, Bombo Radyo Koronadal chief reporter; Joy Duhay; Henry Araneta of DZRH Cotabato; Andy Teodoro, publisher of a local paper based in Tacurong, Sultan Kudarat; Bong Reblando, reporter of Manila Bulletin; Mac-Mac Areola, Jimmy Cabillo and Neneng Montano of radio station DXCP.
“There are still persons who have not been identified, so we are not sure yet if this is the complete list of journalists abducted and beheaded,” the NUJP said.
The Mangudadatus are also a powerful political family in Sultan Kudarat and Maguindanao provinces while the Ampatuans have closely been identified with Arroyo.
Governor Datu Zaldy Ampatuan of ARMM has recently been appointed as regional chairman of Arroyo’s newly-merged Lakas-Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino-Christian Muslim Democrat (Lakas-Kampi-CMD) political party.
He is the son of Andal Ampatuan, the Maguindanao governor.
The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) condemned the abduction and killing, calling it “a brazen challenge” to efforts in strengthening the country’s fragile democracy.
“Running for office and voting are as much exercises of free will and expression as covering and reporting the news,” the NUJP statement said.
NUJP’s statement said the military confirmed the involvement of a mayor and a police officer in the abduction.
“The Ampatuan massacre goes beyond the issue of freedom of the press and of expression and strikes at the very foundations of democracy,” the NUJP statement said. “This incident not only erases all doubts about the Philippines being the most dangerous country for journalists in the world, outside of Iraq, it could very well place the country on the map as a candidate for a failed democracy.”
Buluan mayor Mangudadatu confirmed in a radio interview with the Notre Dame Broadcasting Corporation that 12 journalists were killed. He also said that six of those abducted were beheaded.
“If it is true that a local government official and a police officer are involved, then it says a lot about how far government has gone to eradicate the warlord politics that continues to reign over many of our provinces,” the NUJP statement said.
The media group called the hostaging of journalists an “assault to the Constitution” and demanded swift action from the government to resolve the crisis.
“We expect nothing less from this government than the swift apprehension and punishment of everyone involved in this gruesome assault on the national body politic, including the masterminds, regardless of who they might be,” the statement said.
“Anything less would mean that the impunity that has emboldened those who would silence the press has spread to embolden those who would subvert our democracy for their own selfish interests.”
The NUJP demands that the abductors release the hostages, including the journalists, unconditionally.
“Should any harm befall our colleagues, we will hold accountable the civil and security officials of Maguindanao, the ARMM and the national government for their failure to end the culture of violence and warlordism,” the NUJP said. (Cheryll D. Fiel, davaotoday.com)
Na-unsa na man intawon ning atong nasod nga puros na man lang patay, mga muslim nag-unay nag pinatyanay, mao ra gihapon sa mga kristyano. Grabe na gyod kahugaw ang politika sa Pinas no?. Bisan pilay pusta makalusot gihapon ning mga tawhana sa hustisya, bisan kapila pa moingon si Pres. Arroyo, AFP ug Police nga gukoron ning mga tawhana kay dili gyod na mahitabo tungod sa influence ug bribery. The most brutal crime here was the killing of those innocent journalists and any other innocent civilians that does not know what’s going on between these two rival politicians.
What the Ampatuans did was a savage and a heinous mass killings and therefore a crime of humanity. Whoever the architect of these crime deserved to have a lethal injection or sentence to life in jail.
I want to see the members of the Congress make a emergency session and legislate a law that would bring the DEATH PENALY/CAPITAL PUNISHMENT back to our constitution as it used to be. It is also nice to see the judiciary reformed and the prosecutors prosecute the criminals with the full force of the law. (Right now our three main branches of the government is completely disaster and not reliable, and there is no gainsay the fact that I would say still a “CORRUPT SYSTEM”.
Now, this is another test to our administration, Armed Forces and Prosecutors if they are really serious about resolving this savage crime.
Good luck, and lock-up these DEMONS and let them rot in jail for the rest of their lives.
Jerry Singkoy Jr.
Malacanang distances itself from Maguindanao mass murder saying it was just “an incident between two families in Mindanao”.
“We cannot be affected by that…This has nothing to do with President Macapagal-Arroyo or the administration,” Malacanang mouthpiece Lorelie Fajardo says.
@*%&* Mga hinayupak kayo! Incident between two families, my ass! What about those journalists just doing their job and ordinary civilians who were very unfortunate to be at the wrong place at the wrong time?
Malacanang’s doing a Pontius Pilate of seeing no evil and hearing no evil indicates that the Palace will disassociate itself from seeking justice for the victims too.
All indications point to this gruesome reality: WARLORDS CAN GET AWAY WITH MASS MURDER especially if they are Malacanang henchmen who have done their part in keeping the administration in power.