Arab Times

Marcos to get hero’s burial: Duterte

Incoming president says would pardon Arroyo

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DAVAO, Philippine­s, May 24, (Agencies): Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos will finally be allowed a hero’s burial, the nation’s controvers­ial incoming president said Monday, in what would be a huge win for the late strongman’s family as it pursues a return to power.

Rodrigo Duterte also said he would pardon ex-president Gloria Arroyo, who is being detained at a military hospital while on trial for graft and vote fraud.

The announceme­nts by Duterte, who takes office on June 30, are sure to enrage critics who warned ahead of his landslide election win on May 9 that he was a dictator in the making with no regard for the rule of law.

Speaking in his hometown of Davao, Duterte said he was prepared to risk nationwide unrest on the flashpoint issues surroundin­g two of the nation’s most controvers­ial figures.

“I will allow protests,” Duterte said when asked about the expected reaction.

Duterte said he would grant the long-standing wish of the Marcos family to have the patriarch buried at a Manila cemetery for some of the nation’s most revered war heroes.

“I will allow the burial of Marcos in the Heroes’ Cemetery, not because he was a hero but because he was a Filipino soldier,” Duterte told reporters.

Marcos and his family fled to US exile in 1986 after millions took to the streets in a famous “People Power” revolution.

Marcos, who was accused of overseeing massive widespread human rights abuses and plundering $10 billion from state coffers, died three years later in Hawaii.

His embalmed body is now stored in a crypt at the family home in the northern Philippine­s.

His son and namesake has led a remarkable political comeback for the family, rising to become a senator in 2010 and running for the vice presidency in the latest elections.

Marcos Jnr is currently in second place in the tally count and is likely to lose narrowly to Leni Robredo.

However, at 58, he is still young enough to achieve his goal of becoming president.

The Marcos clan has insisted the late ruler deserves to be buried at the cemetery, arguing he was a World War II hero for resisting the Japa- nese occupiers.

However American and local historians have disputed his military credential­s.

Duterte said allowing Marcos to be buried at the cemetery did not necessaril­y make him a hero, pointing out other soldiers without gloried reputation­s were also there.

Democracy

But current President Benigno Aquino, whose parents led the democracy movement against Marcos, did not allow the burial, arguing it would be the “height of injustice”.

Duterte also said on Monday that he believed Arroyo, who has been detained since 2011, should be free.

“I’m ready to grant a pardon to Arroyo. Arroyo to my mind should already be released,” Duterte said of the president from 2001 to 2010.

“Burying him at the (cemetery) will whitewash all crimes he committed against the people and will send the wrong message to the world: that in the Philippine­s, crime pays,” Bonifacio Ilagan, who was detained and tortured by Marcos forces, told AFP.

Ilagan, who heads a group trying to stop the Marcos family from returning to power, said the highly emotional and symbolic burial of the dictator at the cemetery — where the nation’s most revered war heroes have been laid to rest — would trigger street protests.

However Nilda Lagman-Sevilla, chairwoman of a group of families whose relatives vanished under Marcos’s rule, said healing would only come from discoverin­g what happened to their loved ones and bringing the perpetrato­rs to justice.

Her brother, a human rights lawyer who vanished in 1977, is among 882 people who disappeare­d under Marcos’s rule, according to the group.

“They (the families of people who vanished) are still in pain because of the absence of closure,” LagmanSevi­lla said.

Marcos’ followers in northern Ilocos Norte province, where his preserved body is displayed in a glass coffin, have been angered by his fate, Duterte said. By allowing him to be buried at the heroes’ cemetery in metropolit­an Manila, “I would erase from amongst our people one hatred,” he said.

Aquino and other Marcos opponents have cited massive graft and human-rights violations during Marcos’ administra­tion as reasons for refusing such a burial. Marcos was ousted in a 1986 “people power” revolt.

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on July 2, 2014 shows former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos kissing the glass case bearing her late husband and former president Ferdinand Marcos during a visit to the mausoleum on her 85th birthday in Batac town, Ilocos...
This file photo taken on July 2, 2014 shows former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos kissing the glass case bearing her late husband and former president Ferdinand Marcos during a visit to the mausoleum on her 85th birthday in Batac town, Ilocos...

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