Atio’s mom wants son’s belongings back

President Rodrigo Roa Duterte expresses his sympathy to Carmina Castillo, mother of the late Horacio Castillo III, during a meeting with the President in Malacañan Palace on October 4, 2017. Horacio Castillo III, a University of Santo Tomas (UST) law freshman, died allegedly in fraternity hazing. Also in the photo is the uncle of the alleged hazing victim, Dr. Gerardo Castillo. KARL NORMAN ALONZO/PRESIDENTIAL PHOTO

MANILA — The mother of University of Santo Tomas (UST) law student Horacio “Atio” Castillo III, on Wednesday faced some members of the Aegis Juris Fraternity for the first time and asked them to give back her son’s belongings as they were important to her.

“You have (Atio’s) phone, eyeglasses, watch. Bring (them) back. Those are important things to us. Those were his last things,” Carmina Castillo told the frat members during the second Senate hearing on her son’s hazing death.

Frat members present in the hearing were Oliver Onofre, Arvin Balag, Mark Ventura, Axel Hipe, and Jose Miguel Salamat, among others.

Castillo was upset that none of the members even bothered to tell Atio’s family about what happened despite her constant effort to reach them.

“I was calling them but nobody was answering. I was looking for my son,” she said.

The Castillos discovered Atio’s death through an anonymous text message on Sept. 18, a day after the incident took place.

Also during the hearing, UST Faculty of Civil Law Dean Nilo Divina admitted failing to immediately contact Atio’s parents because he did not have the victim’s full name and address.

“I did try to reach out but at 6 p.m. Sunday (Sept. 17) I didn’t have the full name and the address but as early as 1:30 p.m., I told the faculty secretary to get the full name and address so I can talk to the parents. The fact that we informed the father regent clearly belies any cover-up,” Divina told reporters in an interview.

Divina maintained that he had no liability and prior knowledge of the incident and was not part of any cover-up.

He added that his call to the frat members since day one was to surrender and face the consequences of their actions.

“Those involved in the cover-up should be meted sanctions. They should be penalized accordingly and we will never condone a cover-up,” Divina said. (Azer Parrocha/PNA)

Popular

VP on trial: What you need to know about the impeachment of Sara Duterte

By Brian Campued About five months since the second series of impeachment complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte was formally initiated, the House prosecution panel...

Impeachment trial: The pursuit of truth, justice, and accountability

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet At its core, every government around the world implements a set of checks and balances enshrined in its respective constitution to...

Canadian firms’ $15.9B investment pledges seen to boost PH mining sector

By Ruth Abbey Gita-Carlos | Philippine News Agency Canadian gold and copper producer OceanaGold Corp. has pledged to invest $1.9 billion for the continued operation...

PBBM positions PH as ‘responsible’ hub for mineral processing

By Ruth Abbey Gita-Carlos | Philippine News Agency President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Friday (Canada time) positioned the Philippines as a “responsible” hub for...