RDX is Ayala's
'smoking gun'
in Glorietta blast
AYALA Land Inc. (ALI), operator of
Glorietta Mall, said it is keeping the RDX material found at
the explosion site at Glorietta 2 as their "smoking gun" to
prove that the October 19 blast that killed 11 people and
injured hundreds of mall goers was caused by a bomb.
RDX is a chemical component used in making
C-4 bombs, which could only be normally accessed by the
military.
Jaime Ayala, ALI president, stood pat on
their assertion that it was a bomb that destroyed the mall while
the police stuck to their assessment that it was an accumulation
of methane gas that triggered the explosion.
Ayala said they are not capitulating to the
police findings just to end the controversy surrounding the
blast. He said it was important for ALI to out its own findings
for the sake of "public safety."
Senators and the police conducted a joint
ocular inspection of the blast site yesterday. Senators said
they will consult their own explosives experts but would rather
focus on legislative interventions like amending, repealing or
upgrading the Building Code, the Fire Code, the Human Security
Act and the rules on disaster preparedness.
Sen. Gregorio Honasan, chair of the public
order panel, said at least two more technical working group
meetings would be held to consolidate the conflicting findings
of the PNP and ALI.
Chief Supt. Luizo Ticman of the Southern
Police District insisted that all evidence - scientific,
physical, forensic, and documentary - point to a methane-gas
explosion followed by a diesel-vapor-gas blast.
But biogas expert from the United Kingdom Dr.
Stephen Etheridge maintained that biogas accumulation could not
have caused the explosion, and forensics expert from Malaysia
Aini Ling said traces of the explosive RDX were found at the
explosion site.
Ticman said if RDX had really caused the explosion, traces of
the explosive would be found everywhere, not in selected areas.
- Dennis Gadil