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The carnage drew international condemnation and prompted then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to impose martial law for a week as troops cracked down on the Ampatuans
-- her political allies. A prominent senator, Joker Arroyo, has recently warned that the sheer volume of the case
-- at least 227 witnesses are listed by the prosecution and another 373 by the defense
-- means it could drag on for "200 years." Officials wouldn't comment on how long the trial will last but cautioned it will take time. An average criminal case takes about seven years to complete due to lack of prosecutors and judges and a huge backlog of cases. The Maguindanao massacre is considered to be the largest criminal prosecution since the country's World War II war crime trials. "It's hard to fight the devil," said Monette Salaysay, mother of Napoleon Salaysay, one of the slain journalists. "So many were killed and yet the justice is exceedingly slow for helpless people like us." The New York-based Human Rights Watch urged the government Wednesday to protect witnesses and round up more than 100 suspects still at large, most of them linked to the Ampatuans' private army. The watchdog said five people with knowledge of abuses by the Ampatuans have been gunned down. "With fewer than half of the suspects in custody, witnesses, investigators, and others who might be deemed to be a threat to the Ampatuan family are at risk," the group said in a statement.
[Associated
Press;
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