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Wednesday, 25 April, 2001, 13:36 GMT 14:36 UK
Estrada in custody
![]() Police pushed through Mr Estrada's supporters to get to him
Police in the Philippines have arrested former President Joseph Estrada and taken him to prison where he will await trial for economic plunder, a crime punishable by death.
A convoy of police vehicles drove Mr Estrada away from his home in a suburb of the capital, Manila, after a tense standoff with thousands of his supporters who had gathered there.
The government says he illegally amassed more than $80m during his two-and-a-half years in office. Mr Estrada was forced from power in January after the army backed mass street protests sparked by the collapse of a spectacular six-week impeachment trial.
There were scuffles between the two sides but eventually Mr Estrada was seen being driven out of his residence. Later, in an interview with the BBC described the government as being "anti-constitutional" and the case against him as being "very weak". Mr Estrada said the former aides who had testified against him had been "intimidated, harassed and threatened" with charges of economic plunder and the death penalty it can carry. He said he did not believe the case against him would lead to a death sentence. Good conditions
Analysts say it is unlikely that the death sentence will be imposed in this case. Mr Estrada is being held in the police training headquarters 15km (nine miles) outside Manila. Describing his cell as small, he told the BBC, via telephone that it was "just an ordinary room with a bed." "It is air-conditioned though. So it is good enough. I can bear with it," he said. "I will have to make that supreme sacrifice for defending our people and our constitution." The court also ordered the arrest of eight other defendants, including Mr Estrada's son Jose Ejercito, lawyer Edward Serapio, friend Charlie Ang, and five others. The indictment came after the Supreme Court unanimously rejected his appeals of a ruling that stripped away his presidential immunity.
The BBC's Simon Ingram in Manila says that for the tens of thousands of Filipinos whose mass protests drove the former president from power in January, his arrest could not have come soon enough.
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Estrada arrestFormer president talks to the BBC from custody
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