Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Protests erupt in Philippine­s as Marcos’ return to power

- AGENCIES

HUNDREDS of human rights activists and students demonstrat­ed yesterday in front of the offices of the Philippine­s’ elections body to reject an unofficial tally showing that the son of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos could be the next president of the country.

Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. was 28 years old when a helicopter whisked his family from the Philippine­s’ presidenti­al palace as millions of protesters demanded the ouster of his dictator father in a historic “people power” revolution.

Just over 36 years later, the son is celebratin­g a landslide victory in a presidenti­al election, an extraordin­ary comeback for a family once best known for widespread human rights abuses and the plunder of an estimated $10 billion.

Marcos’ share of the vote from Monday’s election was double that of his nearest rival according to an unofficial election commission tally. The results – largely deemed legitimate, unlike the last election held during his father’s martial law rule – left some of the original “People Power” activists dejected and confused. “We said in 1986, ‘Never again,’” said Florencio Abad, who was among the millions of protesters who swarmed the streets of Manila back then and later became a member of the Cabinet.

“How did they manage to come back?” The Marcos family has waged a decadeslon­g campaign to resurrect its reputation. That, plus the shortcomin­gs of successive government­s and a political masterstro­ke in aligning with the daughter of current President Rodrigo Duterte, helped fuel their once-unthinkabl­e return to the presidency.

Sara Duterte-Carpio has an insurmount­able lead in the election for vice president, which is run separately, according to the unofficial count.

Since the late 1990s, the Philippine­s has seen a succession of ineffectiv­e and corrupt government­s, Kurlantzic­k said, which led to the rule of Duterte, who he described as “a semi-autocrat.”

The Marcos family was allowed to return to the Philippine­s in 1991 by then-President Corazon Aquino, whose husband’s assassinat­ion in 1983 helped trigger the People Power movement that eventually ousted the elder Marcos after 20 years in power.

Allowing the family to return from exile after the senior Marcos died was an act of “extraordin­ary generosity,” according to David Chaikin, a researcher at the University of Sydney.

“This was the beginning of the Marcos family clawing their way to power,” he said.

The Philippine­s recorded strong growth during much of the 1970s but its fortunes plummeted in the early 1980s as debt and global interest rates soared, economists have said. The economy contracted almost 15% in the last two years of the Marcos administra­tion, according to World Bank data.

With half of voters aged between 18 and 40, the social media campaign found a receptive audience.

“This is also a new generation of voters,” said Patricio Abinales, a Filipino and professor of Asian studies at the University of Hawaii-Manoa. “None lived through the Marcos and post-Marcos eras.”

Voter support for Marcos doubled in November when Duterte-Carpio announced she would be his running mate, according to pollster Pulse Asia.

The people power protester Abad – who served in cabinet positions under President Corazon Aquino and also her son, President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino – said post-1986 government­s were unable to reverse the injustices of the Marcos era.

Alongside Marcos Jr., other clan members have also won elections, by unofficial count. His son Sandro looks set to be a member of the House of Representa­tives, his sister Imee’s son Matthew Manotoc is likely to be reinstated as governor of Ilocos Norte province, another relative as vice-governor, and another as mayor of Laoag City, the provincial capital.

 ?? ?? People display placards during a protest, Manila, the Philippine­s, May 10, 2022.
People display placards during a protest, Manila, the Philippine­s, May 10, 2022.

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