Sun.Star Cebu

Mass and a movie on 21st year since Chiong girls’ deaths

“Jacqueline Comes Home (The Chiong Story)” focuses on the ordeal of the Chiong family after the abduction, rape and murder of sisters Marijoy and Jacqueline in 1997

- GEROME M. DALIPE / Reporter @GeromeMDal­ipe

Had they lived, Jacqueline and Marijoy Chiong would have turned 42 and 40 this year.

To mark the 21st anniversar­y of their death, their family went to mass in the Cathedral, visited the columbary where one sister’s ashes are kept, and later attended the premiere showing of a movie about their ordeal.

Thelma Chiong, their mother, said she hopes the release of the film will answer doubts about what happened to Jacqueline, whose body was never found.

Jacqueline and Marijoy were abducted outside a mall last July 16, 1997. Nearly two years later, Judge Martin Ocampo found seven men guilty of the kidnapping and illegal detention of the Chiong sisters.

With the release of “Jacqueline Comes Home,” interest has also been renewed in an earlier project, “Give Up Tomorrow.”

That documentar­y, released in 2012, tells the story from the perspectiv­e of one of the seven convicts, Juan Francisco “Paco” Larrañaga, who is serving the rest of his sentence in Spain.

“I have long forgiven them (Chiong Seven), but they must suffer the consequenc­e of their sins.”

So said Thelma Chiong as her family commemorat­ed the 21st death anniversar­y of her daughters Marijoy and Jacqueline.

Thelma also wanted to quell rumors that Jacqueline is still alive.

“That’s actually the reason I am allowing the showing of this film (“Jacqueline Comes Home”). At first, I was mad, but I want to give everyone the benefit of the doubt,” Thelma told Sun.Star Cebu.

The Chiong family attended a mass in the Cebu Metropolit­an Cathedral and visited the sisters’ columbary at the Alliance of Two Hearts in Barangay Banawa, Cebu City.

Thelma said she hopes the film will clear any doubts about the disappeara­nce of Jacqueline.

“If she is still alive, the perpetrato­rs would be afraid since she can pinpoint to them (as the ones who abducted and raped them),” said Thelma.

The Chiong family also attended the premiere showing of “Jacqueline Comes Home (The Chiong Story)” at SM Cebu City Cinema 1.

The story focuses on the ordeal of the Chiong family after the abduction, rape and murder of the sisters in 1997 in Cebu.

Actress Meg Imperial, who played the role of Jacqueline in the movie, and Filipino YouTube sensation Donnalyn Bartolome, who portrayed the character of Marijoy, also attended the premiere.

Also in attendance were Ysabelle Peach Caparas, who directed the film, and her father, veteran director Carlo J. Caparas, who co-directed.

Carlo wished to dedicate the film in memory of his late wife Donna Villa, who was known for producing real-life crime films, such as “The Vizconde Massacre (God Help Us),” “The Annabelle Huggins Story–Ruben Ablaza Tragedy (Mea Culpa),” and “The Cecilia Masagca Story: Antipolo Massacre ( Jesus Save Us!).”

Jacqueline and Marijoy were 21 and 19, respective­ly, when they disappeare­d outside Ayala Center Cebu on July 16, 1997.

The incident resulted in the most-publicized criminal case in recent Cebu history.

Two days later, the body of a young woman was found at the bottom of a ravine in Carcar City. The Chiong family said that it was Marijoy.

I have long forgiven them (Chiong Seven) but they must suffer the consequenc­es of their sins

THELMA CHIONG Marijoy and Jacqueline’s mother

On May 5, 1999, Cebu Regional Trial Court Judge Martin Ocampo convicted Juan Francisco “Paco” Larrañaga and his six co-accused of kidnapping and illegal detention. They were dubbed the “Chiong Seven.”

The six other convicts are Josman Aznar, Rowen Adlawan, van driver Alberto Caño, van conductor Ariel Balansag, and brothers James Andrew and James Anthony Uy.

David Rusia, a co-accused who turned state witness, testified that Aznar and Adlawan grabbed Jacqueline and Marijoy while the sisters were waiting for a ride home outside the mall.

Paco and the other accused allegedly dumped the bodies in the ravine in Carcar.

Judge Ocampo sentenced them to two life terms, instead of death.

The Supreme Court upheld Ocampo’s ruling, and imposed the death penalty on convicts Larrañaga, Aznar, Adlawan, Caño and Balansag on Feb. 3, 2004.

During his arrest, Larrañaga was 19 and studying culinary arts in Quezon City.

In 2009, the Department of Justice later allowed Larrañaga, now 41, to serve the remainder of his sentence in a Spanish jail as the latter is half-Spanish.

The transfer was in line with a Treaty of Sentenced Persons signed between the Philippine­s and Spain.

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO / ARNI ACLAO ?? COMMEMORAT­ION. Thelma and Dionisio Chiong leave the Cebu Metropolit­an Cathedral after attending a mass commemorat­ing the 21st death anniversar­y of their daughters.
SUNSTAR FOTO / ARNI ACLAO COMMEMORAT­ION. Thelma and Dionisio Chiong leave the Cebu Metropolit­an Cathedral after attending a mass commemorat­ing the 21st death anniversar­y of their daughters.

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