The Phnom Penh Post

Supreme Court allows Marcos to have hero’s burial in Manila

- Ayee Macaraig

EX-PHILIPPINE dictator Ferdinand Marcos can be given a hero’s burial, the Supreme Court decided yesterday in a hugely controvers­ial ruling which critics said would whitewash his crimes and divide the nation.

The justices overwhelmi­ngly endorsed President Rodrigo Duterte’s decision to allow the burial at the “Cemetery of Heroes” in Manila, three decades after a famous “People Power” revolt forced Marcos into US exile and restored democracy.

“There is no law that prohibits the burial,” court spokesman Theodore Te said as he read a summary of the judgement.

Hundreds of Marcos supporters outside the Supreme Court cheered. But opponents who had petitioned the court to reject the plan staged a rally nearby and voiced deep anger.

“It’s really sad because the decision makes liars out of human rights victims,” Neri Colmenares, who as a student leader was tortured by Marcos’ security forces during martial law, told AFP outside the court.

“If the torturer is a hero, what does that make of the victims? What does that make of the millions who overthrew a dictator? It is a horrible and tragic ending to one of the most tragic chapters of our history. History was altered today.”

Marcos ruled the Philippine­s for two decades until key military figures turned on him and millions took to the streets in the “People Power” uprising, a largely peaceful event that inspired democracy movements throughout Asia and around the world.

Marcos, his infamously flamboyant wife Imelda, and their cronies plundered up to $10 billion from state coffers during his rule, according to government investigat­ors and historians.

The dictator also oversaw widespread human rights abuses to maintain his control of the country and enable his plundering, with thousands of people killed and tortured, previous Philippine government­s said.

Anti-graft watchdog Transparen­cy Internatio­nal in 2004 named Marcos the second most corrupt leader of all time, behind Indonesian dictator Suharto.

The Philippine­s’ foreign debt went from $2.67 billion in 1972, when Marcos declared martial law, to $28.2 billion in 1986, according to the World Bank.

Comeback

After Marcos died in Hawaii in 1989, his family began a successful political comeback and tried repeatedly to have him buried at the heroes’ cemetery, where other presidents and celebrated military figures are interred. Imelda became a congresswo­man and fended off all corruption charges against her.

Two of her children establishe­d themselves as influentia­l politician­s. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr, was the more successful, becoming a senator before almost winning the vice presidency this year.

But previous presidents had refused to allow the burial in the heroes’ cemetery due to of Marcos’s crimes, so the family kept the preserved body in a glass casket at his home in the northern province of Ilocos Norte.

The family’s fortunes changed with the election of Duterte, a longtime ally of the Marcos family, as president in May this year.

He said Marcos deserved to be buried at the heroes’ cemetery based on the fact he had been a president and a veteran of World War II. Duterte also said he owed loyalty to the family because his father served in the Marcos government and the family had helped fund his election campaign.

Immediatel­y celebratin­g the verdict, Bongbong Marcos said the nation of 100 million people would now be able to put past controvers­ies behind it.

“It is in our belief a very important step for the healing process in the political arena of our country,” Marcos told CNN Philippine­s. “I think this will be the beginning of bringing the country together and uniting the country.”

He said there was no date yet for the burial but all the preparatio­ns had already been made. Opponents said they would ask the court to reconsider, a move unlikely to succeed but which could delay proceeding­s.

Marcos Jr’s expectatio­ns of unity were met with howls of protest from Marcos critics, some of whom held rallies yesterday night.

“The decision intends to effectivel­y wipe the Marcos slate clean and negates the sacrifices of the thousands of brave souls who fought and suffered under the brutal Marcos dictatorsh­ip,” Senator Risa Hontiveros said.

 ?? TED ALJIBE/AFP ?? Supporters of the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos celebrate after hearing the news of the high court’s decision allowing the burial of Marcos at the heroes’ cemetery, during a rally in front of the Supreme Court in Manila yesterday.
TED ALJIBE/AFP Supporters of the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos celebrate after hearing the news of the high court’s decision allowing the burial of Marcos at the heroes’ cemetery, during a rally in front of the Supreme Court in Manila yesterday.

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