Bangkok Post

US to hand back war booty church bells

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MANILA: The United States will return to the Philippine­s church bells seized by American forces in a bloody campaign more than a century ago, its embassy said yesterday, following a demand by President Rodrigo Duterte.

American forces took three bells from the Catholic church of Balangiga town on the eastern island of Samar in 1901 as war booty in what historians said was a particular­ly brutal military operation in the new US colony.

Mr Duterte and previous Philippine government­s had urged Washington to return the bells, with the president often raising the issue in his anti-American tirades as he builds closer ties with China and Russia.

The US had initially given a non-committal response to Mr Duterte’s demands but on Sunday said it would return the bells.

“The Secretary of Defence has notified Congress that the Department [of Defence] intends to return the Bells of Balangiga to the Philippine­s,” said Molly Koscina, spokeswoma­n for the US embassy in Manila.

“We’ve received assurances that the Bells will be returned to the Catholic Church and treated with the respect and honour they deserve,” she added, saying there was no date scheduled for the move.

Two of the bells are installed at a memorial for US war dead in the state of Wyoming, while the third is with US forces in South Korea.

Some US politician­s oppose the dismantlin­g of the memorial, and the issue had sparked an emotional response from the descendant­s of American soldiers who served in the Philippine campaign.

The Philippine­s, a Spanish colony for centuries, was ceded to the United States in 1898 at the end of the Spanish-American War.

The brutal Samar campaign was launched about a month after Filipino rebels killed 34 US troops in Balangiga on September 28, 1901, according to a US Army War College research paper.

Seven other American soldiers perished during the escape from Balangiga, and US reinforcem­ents razed the town the day after, it added.

Mr Duterte, who took office in mid-2016, demanded the return of the bells during his State of the Nation address last year: “Give us back those Balangiga bells. They are not yours. They are ours. They belong to the Philippine­s. They are part of our national heritage.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A view of the Roman Catholic church and belfry in the coastal Philippine town of Balangiga.
REUTERS A view of the Roman Catholic church and belfry in the coastal Philippine town of Balangiga.

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