The Philippine Star

Groups set activities to celebrate EDSA ’86 revolt

- By EMMANUEL TUPAS

Even if the government has excluded the 1986 EDSA people power revolution in its list of holidays this year, it is not preventing groups from celebratin­g the revolt that toppled former president Ferdinand Marcos Sr.

The Buhay ang Edsa Campaign Network – composed of social movement organizati­ons, church leaders, political parties, sectoral groups and non-government organizati­ons – has set several activities for the 38th anniversar­y of the bloodless revolution on Feb. 25. The group also includes artists, businessme­n and individual­s who aim to affirm the revolution’s democratic legacy.

Organizers will hold a freedom ride on Feb. 25 at around 7:30 a.m.

Participan­ts clad in yellow attire will converge at the Ninoy Aquino Monument at the corner of Ayala Avenue and Paseo de Roxas.

The culminatin­g activity is a concert at the People Power Monument where organizers would hold a countdown up to 9:05 p.m. – the hour when Marcos and members of his family, including his son and namesake, President Marcos left Malacañang Palace.

Militant groups are also set to hold separate activities to celebrate the revolution.

Various groups on Wednesday also launched a campaign against efforts to amend the 1987 Constituti­on.

The Koalisyon Laban sa Chacha (Charter change), convened by Bishop Jose Colin Bagaforo of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s, described as selfish the moves to revise the Constituti­on.

“Our constituti­on is robust but not fully implemente­d and completed with the necessary implementi­ng laws. The leaders we entrusted with power do not fully implement the Constituti­on and provide necessary implementi­ng laws because of a selfish agenda,” the coalition said in a statement.

The group also refuted claims of lawmakers campaignin­g for Cha-cha that the Constituti­on is to blame for chronic poverty and that its economic provisions are too restrictiv­e for foreign investment­s.

It vowed to uphold the Constituti­on, particular­ly its social justice provisions, and to protect the sanctity of processes to amend or revise the Charter so that these will not be used to exploit people.

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