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Arroyo promises due process for Senator linked to mutiny
Manila, Aug 05: President Gloria Arroyo today promised `due process` will be given to an Opposition Senator that her government is prosecuting for involvement in last week`s military uprising.
Manila, Aug 05: President Gloria Arroyo today promised "due process" will be given to an Opposition Senator that her government is prosecuting for involvement in last week's military uprising.
Senator Gregorio Honasan, the highest political figure
publicly implicated in the July 27 mutiny, should welcome the
charges against him "as an opportunity to prove his claimed
innocence," Arroyo said in a statement.
"The battle is now between evidence and conjecture, between fact and fiction. Due process shall be faithfully observed," Arroyo said. "Our only aim is to help in bringing forth the truth in clear light."
Honasan has denied allegations he instigated the mutiny by more than 300 soldiers who took over an upscale residential and shopping complex in the Makati Financial Centre.
The rebel soldiers had demanded the resignations of Arroyo and other top defense officials, whom they accused of corruption.
The allegations include the sale of firearms to rebel groups and of plotting bomb attacks as a prelude for Arroyo to declare martial law.
The mutiny ended without bloodshed after a tense 22-hour standoff, with the rebels agreeing to face court martial and Arroyo promising to probe their allegations.
The government maintains Honasan helped plot what it calls a coup attempt, an incident which analysts blame for dampened investor confidence in the financial markets.
Bureau Report
"The battle is now between evidence and conjecture, between fact and fiction. Due process shall be faithfully observed," Arroyo said. "Our only aim is to help in bringing forth the truth in clear light."
Honasan has denied allegations he instigated the mutiny by more than 300 soldiers who took over an upscale residential and shopping complex in the Makati Financial Centre.
The rebel soldiers had demanded the resignations of Arroyo and other top defense officials, whom they accused of corruption.
The allegations include the sale of firearms to rebel groups and of plotting bomb attacks as a prelude for Arroyo to declare martial law.
The mutiny ended without bloodshed after a tense 22-hour standoff, with the rebels agreeing to face court martial and Arroyo promising to probe their allegations.
The government maintains Honasan helped plot what it calls a coup attempt, an incident which analysts blame for dampened investor confidence in the financial markets.
Bureau Report