Habitan
unveils partnership, calls Marantan ‘enemy’
By JUAN
ESCANDOR JR
JOSE
PANGANIBAN, CamNorte: Gold miner Ronnie Basar Habitan on Saturday denied that
he called Supt Hansel Marantan to inform him about the visit of Victor Siman
and his group hours before they were killed by a joint police-military team at
a checkpoint in Atimonan, Quezon province, on Jan 6.
Habitan also
said Siman was not carrying P5 million that reportedly came from him when Siman
and his companions were killed at the checkpoint.
He said
there were only 12 men in the group, including Siman. So who was the 13th man
who was slain in Atimonan?
Habitan, 37,
told the Inquirer in an interview in his home here that he could not have
called Marantan, the ground commander of the Atimonan operation, because he
could never be friends with someone whom he claimed had extorted P1.5 million from
him, and because he did not know the phone number of the police officer.
In an
interview with the Inquirer in his room at St Luke’s Medical Center in Taguig
City on Jan 15, Marantan said he did not know that Siman was in the group of
armed men whose movement police were monitoring until the last few hours before
the clash in Atimonan.
Marantan
said an informant tipped him off to the movement of the group, but “there was
no mention of Vic Siman.”
He said it
was only three hours before the clash that Habitan gave him the information
that Siman was traveling with the group.
Business
partners
But Habitan
said he had no reason to “betray” Siman because they, together with Supt.
Alfredo Consemino, were putting up a new security agency that was supposed to
start operating this month.
Siman and 12
others were killed by police and Army soldiers at a checkpoint along Maharlika
Highway in Barangay Lumutan in Atimonan in a supposed fire fight that lasted
about 20 minutes.
Police
reported the clash as a shootout, but families of the slain men claimed the
victims were summarily executed.
President
Aquino ordered the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) to investigate and
find out what really happened.
Habitan
admitted that he knew Siman ran an illegal gambling operation, and said that
Siman had offered him a stake in his illegal business.
Habitan said
he refused and told Siman that he was not interested in any illegal business,
as he wanted to stay clean and work hard to make a fortune.
He said he
had nothing until he hit the jackpot in small-scale gold mining two years ago.
Wearing a
large gold necklace around his neck and tucking a pistol with a golden grip,
which he stressed was licensed, Habitan said he worked as bagger in a bakery
and household helper before becoming a “high-grade” miner.
‘He’s my enemy’
As for
Marantan, Habitan said in Filipino: “I met him only once, when he held us up.
He is my enemy.”
He said the
incident happened in Candelaria, Quezon, on Oct. 4, 2011.
Policemen
flagged down his car and he said he and his companions were detained after the
cops found his licensed gun, a Jericho 9mm pistol.
Habitan said
they were taken to the office of Marantan where he saw on a blackboard a sketch
of his route, with the places where he might pass marked. Somebody hastily
erased the blackboard when they came in.
He said
Marantan asked for money and he did not hesitate to come across because he
feared for his life.
He said two
of Marantan’s men accompanied him to withdraw P1.5 million from his Banco de
Oro account.
Habitan said
he was angered because Marantan, after taking his money, brought illegal
firearm charges against him in the provincial prosecutor’s office in Lucena
City.
Case
dismissed
The case was
dismissed for lack of probable cause, he said, citing a resolution dated Dec
13, 2011, written by Assistant Provincial Prosecutor Ma. Nalyn C Jabat-Mesa and
approved by Provincial Prosecutor Dione V. Bustonera.
Habitan said
he was planning to bring charges against Marantan for what the policeman did to
him in Candelaria.
Habitan said
he met Siman, whom he called “Boss Vic,” three months ago through common
acquaintances in the military.
They became
friends and decided to become business partners in a security agency, named New
Marc Security Agency, which he (Habitan) bought in November from a Capt. Mario
S Braza for P3.3 million.
Friends and
partners
Habitan said
he got to know Siman’s family over the last three months. He said he had
visited Siman in his home in Laguna.
When Siman
came to see him here on Jan 6, he said, he gave him a gift, a gold lighter that
he himself crafted. It was worth P500,000.
To prove his
partnership with Siman, Habitan showed to the Inquirer the organizational chart
of New Marc Security Agency.
The chart
showed Habitan as the company’s president, with Siman as vice president.
Consemino was general manager; Maximo M Pelayo, finance manager; Melanie Boral,
corporate secretary; and lawyer Michael Pajarillo, legal consultant.
In the new
profile and proposal for the security agency that would be named Golden Nor
Security Agency Inc, Habitan was president and Siman, vice-president.
Consultants
for operations directly under Siman were Mario S Braza and Consemino. Paul A.
Quiohilag was the general manager directly under Habitan and Siman.
Of those
listed on the two charts, Siman, Consemino, Pelayo and Quiohilag were among those
killed in Atimonan.
Habitan said
that during their meeting on Jan 6, Siman submitted a budget proposal of P4.6
million for the operation of the new security agency from January to March this
year.
No P5
million
He said he
told Siman that he would have his lawyer go over the proposal and he would
bring the money to Laguna when the budget was approved.
“I did not
give them money,” Habitan said, belying reports that Siman was carrying P5
million when his group was halted at the security checkpoint in Atimonan.
Habitan said
he left the running of the security agency to Siman because “that was his
expertise, while mine is mining”.
He said that
before Jan. 6, Siman visited him twice
in his house in Barangay Plaridel here and that Siman bought from him a kilo of
gold worth P2.5 million.
Except for a
security guard at the gate, Habitan’s two-story house does not stand out among
the houses along a narrow street near the town center.
Habitan, who
operates a gold processing plant and finances small-scale mining operations,
brushed off speculation that the shooting of Siman had something to do with a
double cross involving gold trading.
“That’s not
true. Boss Vic was very good to me and his family, too,” he said.
Habitan said
Siman and his companions arrived at his place in two vehicles, both of which
were later raked with gunfire in Atimonan.
Only 12
According to
Habitan, only 12 people were in the group, including Siman.
He said he
shook hands with all the 12 before they left at about 12 noon on Jan 6 so he
was puzzled at reports that 13 were killed in the Atimonan incident.
Habitan said
he did not know where Siman and his companions had been before they came to see
him.
But Siman
called him the day before to say that he would arrive at 8 in the morning the
next day.
But Siman’s
group arrived early, at around 6.30am, Habitan said.
His guests
left after lunch. - Inquirer
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