Philippines victim files candidacy

A politician whose wife, sisters and relatives were among 57 people killed in the southern Philippines because he wanted to contest…

A politician whose wife, sisters and relatives were among 57 people killed in the southern Philippines because he wanted to contest elections next year, registered his candidacy today.

Esmael "Toto" Mangudadatu said the massacre had not altered his plans to run for the post of governor of Maguindanao province in the May 2010 polls.

"Only death can stop me from running for governor," he told reporters after submitting nomination papers at a local election commission office.

Mr Mangudadatu's 50-vehicle convoy to the office was escorted by soldiers and combat-trained police units, passing along the same highway where his wife's caravan, which included dozens of journalists, was stopped by about 100 armed men on Monday.

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They were on the way to the election office to file Mangudadatu's candidacy papers. Fifty seven were shot and hacked to death and most of them buried in three shallow graves on a hillside off the highway. The victims included 27 journalists and seven people who were not part of the convoy. Those seven were killed because they witnessed the crime.

Andal Ampatuan Jr, a local mayor in Maguindanao and the main suspect in the murders, was arrested after he gave himself up yesterday. He has denied any role in the murders but has been imprisoned in Manila.

The Ampatuan clan has long feuded with the Mangudadatu family.

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, a key political ally of the Ampatuans, has given the interior secretary permission to suspend all local officials in Maguindanao who may have a role in the crime, her the press secretary, told reporters.

Reuters