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Philippine
rebels surrender after army raid
MANILA—Philippine troops stormed a Manila hotel in a flurry of gunfire
and tear gas Thursday, forcing the surrender of a band of renegade
soldiers who were demanding that President Gloria Arroyo step down.
The rebels, who seized and occupied a luxury hotel to drive home their
criticisms of the Arroyo government, gave themselves up after a dramatic
confrontation broadcast live on television screens around the world.
After the rebels ignored an army deadline to surrender, two armoured
personnel carriers rammed into the building and elite troops poured into
the interior, which was awash in tear gas and the sound of bursts of
gunfire.
“We are going out for the safety of everybody,” said Senator Antonio
Trillanes, one of the rebel leaders, announcing the surrender after the
assault began. “We won’t be able to live with our consciences if some of
you get hit or get killed in the crossfire,” he said to journalists and
others who were inside with the rebels. He said he was ready to face the
consequences of his actions.
Arroyo vowed to prosecute the renegade soldiers over the seizure at the
Peninsula Hotel in the heart of the capital’s financial district. “The
full force of the law will be applied,” Arroyo said on national
television late Thursday as a midnight-to-dawn curfew was slapped on
Manila.
Trillanes, a navy lieutenant who was elected senator in May while still
on trial for a failed 2003 coup against Arroyo, was hauled into a prison
bus along with another of the rebellion’s leaders, Brigadier General
Danilo Lim. Teofisto Guingona, a former Philippine vice president, had
been inside and was also taken away amid a phalanx of police and
security forces massed outside the hotel.
It was a quick conclusion to what had apparently been a well
orchestrated move by Trillanes and Lim, who led about 30 troops and
security guards who barged into the hotel after leaving a court hearing
into a 2003 coup attempt.
As they read their demands inside the hotel, an Internet website was
announced which had statements from the two men and a litany of
complaints against Arroyo, who has survived multiple coup and
impeachment attempts.
The renegades urged the president to resign and called on the military,
a crucial force in this vast Southeast Asian island nation with the
power to make and break its leaders, to turn against her.
The website also urged Filipinos who supported them to gather outside
the hotel, in an echo of the “people power” movement that saw millions
take to the streets to help force the ouster of dictator Ferdinand
Marcos in 1986. “We are joining our people in calling for a change in
leadership,” Lim said.
“We call on the military to withdraw support for Mrs Arroyo in order to
end her unconstitutional and illegal occupation of the presidency,” he
said. “As soldiers, we do not seek political power for ourselves,” says
the website, www.sundalo.bravehost.com. Sundalo is a Tagalog word for
soldier.
The declaration says the country is facing “a crisis of extreme
proportions” and that Arroyo is a “bogus president.” “The economy, the
rule of law and the moral order lie in ruins,” it says.
“Pursuant therefore to our constitutional duty as ‘protector of the
people and the state,’ we have today withdrawn our support from Mrs
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in order to end her unconstitutional and illegal
occupation of the presidency.” There have been at least seven coup
attempts in the Philippines since 1986 as the armed forces have
maintained a central role in the nation’s political life since Marcos
was toppled that year.
But Arroyo has been under particular pressure since a tape recording
emerged of her allegedly conniving with an election commission official
to help orchestrate her 2004 re-election.
She admitted it was a mistake to have called the official when the vote
count had not yet been finished, but denied any wrongdoing. The
Philippines is regularly ranked as one of the most corrupt countries in
the world. The renegade soldiers stormed the hotel Thursday after
walking out of a Manila court hearing into the 2003 coup
attempt.—Agencies
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