Private, state lawyers’ row over  Ampatuan massacre case handling worsens
| By Benjamin B. Pulta 06/29/2010 Conflict between private prosecutors and government  lawyers handling the controversial  Maguindanao massacre victims case  continued to unravel yesterday after the two parties continued to  exchange words in public. “You know how we are  defending the massacre victims,” Chief State Prosecutor Claro Arellano  told reporters in an interview,  reacting to the statement of lawyer and  private prosecutor Harry Roque that Suwaib Upham aka “Jessie,” a  witness in the massacre who was killed by still unidentified assailants  last week, does not trust the Department of Justice (DoJ). Upham, supposedly agreed to testify against the   Ampatuan clan, which is being blamed for the kidnap, mutilation, rape  and murder of the victims. Roque, who represents the relatives of some of the massacre  victims, said Upham did not want to go to the DoJ office “because he  heard from his bosses that they (Ampatuans) controlled DoJ.” Arellano said he felt personally insulted by Roque’s  statement. “In the first place, why he would doubt the DoJ? There’s no  proof that we connived with the Ampatuans,” he said. Arellano  in April, walked out of their offices in  protest of the decision of Acting Justice Secretary Alberto Agra  clearing  two members of the Ampatuan clan of involvement in the  incident. “We publicly disagreed with the  resolution of Secretary Agra. We took that risk. We could have lost our  jobs,” Arellano said. Agra  reversed his ruling  in May following widespread indignation. Arellano pointed out that  “Jessie” cannot be considered a witness in the case because he had not  been personally turned over to the DoJ. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20100629hed6.html | 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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