No images? Click here OPENING SOON Revered in its heyday as the “Grand Old Dame,” the Manila Metropolitan Theater continues to undergo rehabilitation despite the pandemic—for it has a date to keep. The National Commission for Culture and the Arts hopes to have it ready by April 27 for a show commemorating the 500th anniversary of the “Victory of Mactan,” or the 1521 battle between the forces of Mactan chieftain Lapu-Lapu and that of Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan. Efforts to restore the 1931 Art Deco structure have been on and off since it was shuttered in 1996 due to an ownership row between City Hall and the Government Service Insurance System. —RICHARD A. REYES NewsGroup urges release of worker’s bodyThe human rights group Karapatan is calling on the military and the police to release the body of Vilma Salabao, a farmworker who was tagged as a communist rebel and killed along with four others in a raid by security forces on a mango farm in Baras, Rizal, on Dec. 17. The four others were buried after Christmas, but the police in Baras refuse to release Salabao’s body, the group says. —STORY BY KRIXIA SUBINGSUBING WorldHK cops arrest 53 in ‘overthrow’ plotHONG KONG—The police arrested 53 people in dawn raids on 72 venues in what is seen as the biggest crackdown against prodemocracy activists. Those arrested were accused of being part of a plan to “overthrow” the government by selecting opposition candidates for a since-postponed legislative election. Many predict the arrests would further raise alarm that Hong Kong has taken a turn to authoritarianism. —STORY BY REUTERS Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19 and the enhanced community quarantine. Banner story3 in Dacera death freed amid cries for justice By Marlon Ramos State prosecutors on Wednesday ordered the release of three men held for the death of a 23-year-old flight attendant, saying the evidence presented by police investigators was “insufficient” to show that she was raped and killed after attending a New Year’s Eve party in a Makati City hotel. Instead of recommending their outright criminal indictment, the Makati City Prosecutor’s Office opted to start a regular preliminary investigation of the case on Jan. 13 to determine the alleged role of the suspects being linked to the death of Christine Angelica Dacera, which the police had quickly declared “solved.” The office of the city prosecutor ordered the release of John Pascual de la Serna III, Rommel Galido and John Paul Halili, who had been in police custody since their arrest on Jan. 1. Eight others were named respondents in the complaint filed by Dacera’s mother, Sharon Rose Faba Dacera. Contrary to the claim of the Philippine National Police, which announced Dacera’s death as a “rape-slay” incident, the Makati prosecutors said it was still uncertain if she was really sexually abused before she was found unconscious in the bathtub of her rented room in City Garden Grand Hotel. “After a thorough examination of the evidence presented on inquest, this office finds that there are certain matters that need to be clarified to determine the participation and culpability of each respondent for the alleged rape and killing of … Dacera,” the prosecutors said in a three-page resolution. “At this point, the pieces of evidence so far submitted are insufficient to establish that she was sexually assaulted or raped. And if sexual assault/rape was committed, who is/are the person/s responsible?” they added. The Makati police released De la Serna, Galido and Halili around 7 p.m. on Wednesday, after receiving a copy of the resolution. The three suspects maintained their innocence. Still awaiting results The resolution was signed by City Prosecutor Dindo Venturanza, Deputy City Prosecutor Henry Salazar and Assistant City Prosecutor Joan Bolina-Santillan. “It bears stressing that the police officers have yet to submit the results of the DNA analysis, toxicology/chemical analysis and histopath examination. The prosecutors noted that Dacera was last seen alive in a security footage on the 22nd floor of the hotel at 6:23 a.m. of Jan. 1, or about six hours before some of her companions found her unconscious inside the bathroom of Room 2209. Dacera died while being brought to Makati Medical Center. The family is seeking a second, independent autopsy as speculations on what happened to her abound on social media. On Wednesday, the PNP chief, Gen. Debold Sinas, insisted that Dacera was a rape-slay victim, citing medical findings, and that the case was already solved. “In our policy, the case is solved with the arrest of one of the suspects and the filing of a case in court,” he said. The Makati police filed a complaint of rape with homicide before the city prosecutor and later submitted other documentary evidence, including the medicolegal report. Cause of death Dacera’s family disputed the results of the official autopsy conducted by the Southern Police District Crime Laboratory Office (SPD-CLO), which indicated that Dacera died of a natural cause, specifically ruptured aortic aneurysm. That report was signed by Police Maj. Michael Nick Sarmiento, the SPD-CLO medicolegal officer. Dr. Raquel Fortun, a forensic pathologist, said the police autopsy report was “inconclusive” and “there’s not enough evidence to make a conclusion” that Dacera was raped. If the report alone would be the basis, she said the genital examination conducted would mean that “there is no evidence that there was [sexual assault],” she said in an interview with broadcast journalist Raffy Tulfo in his YouTube program “Raffy Tulfo in Action” on Wednesday. Fortun found “unusual” the conclusion of the SPD-CLO that Dacera died of ruptured aortic aneurysm. “This is very unusual for a 23-year-old healthy individual. Aneurysm develops if you have aortic disease, that your arteries become clogged,” she explained. She noted that the aorta, the body’s largest artery, could not rupture easily but could burst because of trauma when one is stabbed or hit by a gunshot. “If the aorta is ruptured, the usual cause of death is excessive bleeding. There should be a lot of hemorrhage around the aorta. But that’s not in the report. You cannot connect intoxication with an aneurysm. I am not convinced,” Fortun said. Toxicology report According to her, a toxicology report would answer more questions of the investigators and the family. “Pathology would rule out a lot of things [that there is sexual assault]. But toxicology can put a finger on what did she drink, what was in it, if there was an interaction and if it was enough to cause death,” she said. Dacera’s family maintained that she was “very healthy” and that as flight attendant, she was required to keep away from vices as it could be a ground for her termination from work. “We don’t believe this loose talk of her using drugs and being a drunkard. They’re not true. They are just trying to put her down because she could not speak for herself now that she’s dead,” lawyer Brick Reyes, the family spokesperson, said on Wednesday. Reyes said the results of the second autopsy would come out “probably by next week.” He did not identify the doctor who would perform the examination or where it would be conducted. The National Bureau of Investigation will assign a forensics team to conduct a second autopsy and provide technical assistance to the PNP, Secretary Menardo Guevarra said on Wednesday. But Guevarra quickly clarified that the NBI team would not carry out a parallel probe. Opposition lawmakers on Wednesday slammed the PNP’s “mishandling” of the case. “It seems the police didn’t rush in gathering forensic evidence,” Bayan Muna Rep. Ferdinand Gaite said in a Twitter post as he called out the police for hastily “publicizing the rape-slay angle.” “We are all now left confused and speculating, and it doesn’t help that their chief prematurely declared the case as solved even amidst all these questions,” Gaite said. —WITH REPORTS FROM DEXTER CABALZA, JEANNETTE I. ANDRADE, NESTOR CORRALES AND KRIXIA SUBINGSUBING Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialJustifying illegalityThe clandestine use of the Sinopharm vaccine in the Philippines even came ahead of the Chinese government’s own approval of that particular vaccine for general use on its citizens, which came only at the end of last year after the company revealed an efficacy rate of 79.34 percent for its vaccine. That still trailed the over 90-percent efficacy rate of rival vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna Inc. So if Sinopharm is still barred for use here, who facilitated its illegal entry, and at such volumes that, according to Chinese-Filipino community leader Teresita Ang-See, over 100,000 Chinese nationals in the country, mostly Pogo workers, have also been inoculated with the vaccine? Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Wednesday, January 6, 2021
3 in Dacera death freed amid cries for justice. Inquirer Newsletter. January 7, 2020
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