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Suspect in Philippine massacre pleads not guilty

January 05, 2010 10:35 am | Updated 10:37 am IST - MANILA, Philippines

Andal Ampatuan Jr., centre, the prime suspect in the massacre of 57 people, including 30 journalists and staff, in Maguindanao in southern Philippines last Nov. 23, 2009, is escorted into the courtroom at the heavily-guarded Philippine National Police headquarters at Manila's Quezon city for his first trial on Tuesday. Photo: AP

The scion of a powerful political clan accused of leading last year's massacre of 57 journalists and members of a rival's family pleaded not guilty on Tuesday on the first day of his trial.

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Andal Ampatuan Jr., a town mayor in southern Maguindanao province, has been initially charged with 41 counts of murder in the Nov. 23 attack on an election caravan, the worst political violence in the country.

He entered a plea of not guilty as his trial got under way under tight security in the national police headquarters.

Prosecutors said they have witnesses who will testify that Ampatuan led more than 100 government-armed militiamen and police in stopping the caravan at a security checkpoint outside Ampatuan township then forcing the victims at gunpoint to a hilltop clearing

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where they were gunned down, hacked and buried in mass graves.

Among those killed were at least 30 journalists and their staff in what is considered the world's deadliest single attack on media workers. The carnage has sparked international outrage, prompting President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to briefly impose martial law in

Maguindanao to crack down on the powerful Ampatuan clan, a key political ally, and its private army.

Ampatuan's father, the former provincial governor who heads the clan, and several other close relatives also have been accused of involvement in the killings but have yet to be indicted. They too have denied any role in the massacre.

The victims included the family and supporters of the Ampatuans' election rival, Esmael Mangudadatu, who sent his wife, sisters and other female relatives to file his candidacy papers hoping they would not be harmed. Mangudadatu said Ampatuan had threatened to

kill him if he ran for governor in national elections in May.

Arroyo's political backing of the warlord clan, which helped her win crucial votes during the 2004 elections, has allowed the Ampatuans to flourish dangerously for years in Maguindanao, a predominantly Muslim province about 560 miles (900 kilometers) south

of Manila, the International Crisis Group, a prominent think tank, said last month.

Arroyo's aides have acknowledged her close alliance with the Ampatuans but said that did not authorise them to commit the crime. The Ampatuans were expelled from Arroyo's ruling party after the killings.

The hearing was adjourned until Jan. 13, when Ampatuan's lawyer Sigfrid Fortun said he would ask for his client to be released on bail. Although murder is a non-bailable offense, Fortun said the evidence against Ampatuan was fabricated by his political rivals.

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