Soldiers using sniffer dogs dug up rifles, machineguns and crates of ammunition at a farm owned by a powerful political clan linked to a massacre of 57 people in the southern Philippines, officials said yesterday.
It was the largest haul in four days of searches in several properties of the Ampatuan family who have ruled for nearly a decade in Muslim-dominated Maguindanao.
Army and combat-trained police units also raided three mansions of the Ampatuan family in Davao City, east of clan-controlled Maguindanao province, yesterday, said Maj-Gen Gaudencio Pangilinan, military operations chief.
“We’re not picking our targets at random,” he told reporters, adding troops were moving swiftly to neutralise the 4,000-member civilian militia force of the Ampatuans. “These forces are not only a threat to the public safety and security of the province, they are also capable of committing terrorism, such as bombings, arson and attacks on our convoys,” he said, adding authorities have disarmed only about 400 of the militia group.
Troops dug around the orchard owned by Maguindanao’s former governor, a close ally of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and father of a local mayor who is the main suspect in the gruesome deaths of members of a rival political clan, lawyers, journalists, and civilians on November 23rd.
The killings – the country’s worst election-related crime – raised fears next year’s elections would be bloody and violent, but the tension is so far confined to some parts of Maguindanao, where the president imposed martial law late on Friday to stymie reported rebellion plans of groups loyal to the Ampatuans.
The martial law order was officially announced on Saturday.
“We’ve been getting a lot of information from people who want to help us in our search for guns that may have been used in the murders,” Col Leo Ferrer, brigade commander, told reporters.
Businesses and marketplaces were closed and streets were empty in Maguindanao province yesterday, while civilians started to flee their homes and farms in fear that violence may erupt soon.
“I advise you to stay put and be calm or go about your daily chores. Should our soldiers commit abuses, they will be relieved, investigated and punished,” said Lieut Gen Raymundo Ferrer, Maguindanao military commander, who took over as governor. He said arrests and house searches would only be done on those suspected of being involved in the massacre.
Leaders of the two chambers of Congress agreed to convene the legislature as one body tomorrow to debate on whether to support or revoke the imposition of martial law in the south. Ms Arroyo’s allies comprise an overwhelmingly majority of Congress.
Nearly 40 assault rifles, three machineguns and hundreds of crates of ammunition were dug up yesterday in tarpaulin-covered pits at the farm near Shariff Aguak town on the southern island of Mindanao, Lieut Gen Ferrer said.
Authorities found 330 boxes of bullets, three rifles, an armoured vehicle, two army vehicles and three police cars at a warehouse owned by the Ampatuans in another part of Shariff Aguak.
Andal Ampatuan jnr, now in custody, is suspected of orchestrating the attack on rival political clan members on their way to file the candidacy of one of their leaders for elections next year. About 30 local journalists and two lawyers in the convoy were among the dead.