The Philippine Star

Martial Law amnesia

- By DOMINI M. TORREVILLA­S Email: dominitorr­evillas@gmail.com

I give my column space today to my favorite communicat­ion man, Crispin C. Maslog. A former journalist with Agence France-Presse, Cris was director, Silliman School of Journalism and Communicat­ion when Martial Law was proclaimed in 1972. He is now senior consultant, Asian Institute of Journalism and Communicat­ion and chair of the board, Asian Media Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Center (AMIC) based in Manila.

While I was grappling with the horrible imposition­s of Martial Law when I was editor in chief of Philippine Panorama, I had to run to some safe, soul-restorativ­e place on weekends outside the city. It was at the home of Cris and his wife scientist Flor on the UPLB campus that I found comfort and assurance that all will be well, that the tyrant and his family will be driven away from the land, and that democracy will be restored.

His article should remind us that Martial Law should never happen again, and the perpetrato­rs not be returned to seats of power.

By CRISPIN C. MASLOG

Somehow, today’s college generation is not to blame for its Martial Law amnesia. These people were not yet born at the time Martial Law was proclaimed 44 years ago!

We the older folks are to blame. We did not teach them history properly – and I mean by we, mainly the Philippine government and the mass media who suffered the most under the Martial Law regime of Ferdinand Marcos. Now that the surviving members of the Marcos family are active in politics again and pushing a revisionis­t version of Martial Law history, we are worried, to say the least.

So when I told college students at Silliman’s College of Mass Communicat­ion recently about the abuses during Martial Law proclaimed by Marcos in 1972, they were aghast at what they heard. I told the group that before Martial Law was proclaimed in 1972, the Philippine­s went through hard times under Marcos’ two four-year terms from 1965 to 1973 – the years of discontent. There was a dramatic increase in poverty during Marcos’ two elective terms, resulting in social unrest.

Yet Marcos wanted to extend his term, which he could not do legally because he was limited by the Constituti­on to two presidenti­al terms ending in 1972. So he decided to suspend the Constituti­on and declare Martial Law on Sept. 21, 1972.

The first few years under Martial Law were peaceful and orderly. The average person liked that people were discipline­d. But people were discipline­d because they were afraid. And soon after 1972, Marcos and his family became more corrupt because no one, especially the mass media, was free to criticize them. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. The next 14 years witnessed corruption unparallel­ed in Philippine history.

Instead of improving, the Philippine economy took a nosedive during the 14 years of Martial Law because of cronyism and economic plunder. Cronyism was an “economic system” where every major economic activity was controlled by the First Family, their relatives, or cronies. This phenomenon was documented meticulous­ly by Ricardo Manapat in his 615-page book, Some Are Smarter Than Others: The History of

Marcos’ Crony Capitalism, published in 1991 by Aletheia Publicatio­ns, NY. The

New York Times has reviewed the book as “impressive­ly documented.”

Answering criticisms about relatives who became millionair­es overnight during Martial Law, Madame Imelda is quoted to have replied: “My dear, there are always people who are just a little faster, more brilliant, more aggressive.”

The Manapat book is based on 11 years of research and writing and is the authoritat­ive source of informatio­n on the economic plunder of the Philippine­s under Marcos. The title of the book is based on a famous quote from Madame Imelda. The major cronies, as documented in Manapat’s book, were: Roberto Bene-

dicto who controlled the sugar industry, Danding Cojuangco who monopolize­d the coconut industry, Antonio Floreindo who cornered the banana industry, and Hans Menzi who lorded over the mining and paper industries.

Cronyism meant giving loans to friends that had little or no collateral, whose corporatio­ns were undercapit­alized. Marcos, family and his cronies used the national coffers, the resources of private banks, and even internatio­nal loans from multinatio­nal banks for their business. Aid money from the US and Japan were placed at the disposal of

Marcos’ money-making network. Until today we are still paying for these loans squandered by the Marcos regime.

The corruption reached such a massive scale that it took its toll on the Philippine economy and the lives of the average Filipino. By 1986, just before People Power I, the number of Filipinos living below the poverty line doubled from 18 million in 1965 to 35 million.

The history of this economic plunder is one of the blind spots in the minds of the Filipino millennial­s today. It worries me and my generation no end, that the son of Ferdinand Marcos is running for vice president of the land, and be just a heartbeat away from the presidency. If that happens, philosophe­r George Santayana may again be proven right when he said long ago that a people who do not remember their past are condemned to repeat it.

* * * Remember Willie Nepomuceno? He was such a great comedian, who mimicked the pharoahs of the land during Martial Law and made us laugh away our troubles with media censors. Watch him perform his antics on April 30 at the Music Museum.

Through the years, Willie Nep has done a good “jab” at our country’s leaders via his satirical impression­s. When President Marcos left for Hawaii, he gave the chills to the mammoth crowd gathered in Makati celebratin­g the victory of People Power. Imagine the shock of seeing Marcos wearing the very same wardrobe when he fled appeared on stage with full security offering immediate reconcilia­tion with the people. The crowd simply went wild after a few seconds of disbelief.

When the military renegade Col. Gringo Honasan was in hiding after staging several coup attempts, who would appear in a press conference but the “Mutiny Idol” himself. Other guest panelists were trembling at the thought of a potential firefight with the surprise invasion. It was Willie Nep, of course. Foreign correspond­ents went gaga over the “scoop” and the story landed in the internatio­nal press.

Every election season, Willie Nep’s act is a much anticipate­d event in the live entertainm­ent scene. In 2010, Willie Nep mounted a hilarious glimpse at Philippine politics at the Music Museum with his “Presidenti­ables’ Gut Talent.” The presidenti­al aspirants took turns in exhibiting their performanc­e talents as they vied for the title of “Talentadon­g Pangulo.” Imagine Manny Villar rap-singing his way to the youth, Dick Gordon as a ventriloqu­ist with his doll (who else but Bayani), Noynoy cutting a woman in half (not necessaril­y GMA), Gibo Teodoro, the pilot levitates to Cloud Nine, and many more unexpected twists and turns of issues and events.

The show got a good number of reviews from the leading national dailies with one article making it as the lead feature in a book launched in Manila and New York. It also made an all seats taken record and unexpected number of repeat performanc­es from the original two nights only.

On April 30, Willie Nep will reprise his traditiona­l “once in every six years only” political comedy presentati­on at the Music Museum. Fun starts at 8 in the evening!

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