Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC sets hearing on burial of Marcos

- By Estrella Torres

THE SUPREME Court has scheduled oral arguments on Aug. 24 to hear all issues surroundin­g the plan of the Duterte administra­tion to bury the remains of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos at Libingan ng mga Bayani in Taguig City.

The high court also directed the Department of National Defense and Armed Forces of the Philippine­s to explain in five days the reasons for a hero’s burial for Marcos.

“The court directed respondent­s to comment on the petition and the applicatio­n for a temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) within a nonextendi­ble period of five days from today, with the comments to be received by the court not later than 10 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 22,” Supreme Court spokespers­on Theodore Te said at a briefing on Tuesday.

Te said the Supreme Court en banc would hear oral arguments on Aug. 24 at 9 a.m. in its session hall in Manila.

The remains of Marcos, who died in exile in Hawaii in 1989 three years after his ouster, are in a refrigerat­ed crypt in the family mausoleum in Batac, Ilocos Norte province.

Martial law victims—led by former Bayan Muna Representa­tives Satur Ocampo and Neri Colmenares, urban poor leader Trinidad Herrera Repuno, activist Carol Araullo and Samahan ng Ex-detainees Laban sa Detensyon at Aresto—filed on Monday a petition for certiorari and asked the high court to issue an injunction on the hero’s burial for Marcos.

The petitioner­s argued that a hero’s burial for Marcos was contrary to Republic Act No. 10368, or the Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognitio­n Act of 2013, that recognized the human rights violations during the Marcos regime.

According to the group, the plan was contrary to AFP Regulation­s G 161-373, which states that “those who have been dishonorab­ly discharged from service, or personnel convicted of an offense involving moral turpitude, do not qualify for interment.’’

Anathema

A hero’s burial for Marcos will also run counter to Republic Act No. 289, which provides that the purpose of the constructi­on of Libingan is “to perpetuate the memory of all Presidents of the Philippine­s, national heroes and patriots for the inspiratio­n and emulation of this generation and of generation­s still unborn,” the petitioner­s said.

“It can be validly raised that the intent and spirit of this regulation is anathema or is mocked by the planned interment of the late dictator even if technicall­y and strictly speaking he has not been ‘dishonorab­ly discharged from service,’ or ‘convicted of an offense involving moral turpitude,’” they added.

Opposition members in the House of Representa­tives and families of desapareci­dos (involuntar­y disappeare­d during martial law) led by Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman also filed a petition to stop the hero’s burial for Marcos.

They want a TRO issued before Marcos’ burial scheduled for Sept. 18.

Lagman said the burial would not lead to closure as the “wounds inflicted during the dark days of martial law will bleed anew.’’

“The worst victims of Marcos’ atrocities during martial law are the desapareci­dos because not even makeshift crosses mark their unknown graves,” he said.

Joining Lagman in the petition were Ifugao Rep. Teddy Baguilat, Caloocan Rep. Edgar Erice, Akbayan Rep. Tomasito Villarin, Capiz Rep. Emmanuel A. Billones and Families of Victims of Involuntar­y Disappeara­nce (FIND) led by cochair Nilda Sevilla.

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