Saturday, February 19, 2011

Philippine military probes Facebook abuse video

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this file photo shows Philippine soldiers during a
patrol in the southern province of Maguindanao.
The Philippine military said they are investigating
a purported torture video posted on Facebook
that appears to show uniformed soldiers abusing
defenceless prisoners.


Investigators are checking the identities of the
uniformed men shown repeatedly hitting and
kicking a group of at least three people in civilian
clothes, said military spokesman Brigadier
General Jose Mabanta. "We are the first to be concerned about this. We
have said we will not do these (abuses), then we
see it right in our faces," Mabanta told AFP on
Saturday. Officials also want to know when and where it
happened, if indeed it actually happened,
Mabanta said. The poor-quality footage shows the men lying on
the ground of a coconut plantation. The captives'
hands are tied behind their backs and hoods
placed over their heads while men in military-
style uniforms shout at and swear at them. Colonel Domingo Tutaan, head of the military's
human rights office, said the military would also
try to find out what happened to the supposed
victims. "The intent of the investigation is to determine
the culpability of soldiers and if there is
culpability, we will file immediately a case in
accordance with the military justice system," he
said. The video is on the public Facebook site of
"Bautista Peter John" and includes statements
against the Philippine and United States armed
forces. The site owner acknowledged AFP's requests to
provide more information on the footage but
then did not immediately provide them. Although US troops are helping train local forces
to battle Islamic extremists, there are no
American troops seen in the video. The supposed abusers were apparently wearing
a uniform that was issued to the Philippine
Marines some three or four years ago, said Navy
spokesman Captain Giovanni Carlo Bacordo. "Whether it happened five years ago or
yesterday, the armed forces does not tolerate
human rights violations," he told AFP. Human rights groups have complained of a
"culture of impunity" in the Philippines that
allows powerful figures to kill or abuse political
rivals, journalists, lawyers and others who get in
their way. President Benigno Aquino, who took office in
June last year, has vowed to improve the
government's human rights record and cracked
down on reported cases of police torture.

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