MEMORIES OF THE YELLOW REGIME
(THE LONG-HIDDEN TRUTH)
(THE LONG-HIDDEN TRUTH)
One can
consider the events that happened after the 1986 EDSA Revolt – when the oligarchic leeches grabbed political power and deposed an elected president, Ferdinand E. Marcos (1917-1989) – to be among the
grimmest in Philippine history. Let’s look at it at the perspectives of
artists, caricaturists and photographers.
Not even a
year after the de facto government of
Corazon “Cory” Cojuangco Aquino (1933-2009) took over, the Mendiola Massacre happened on
January 22, 1987. It will be remembered in Philippine History as the Black
Thursday when unarmed farmers were fired upon by the police, soldiers, and PSGs
killing 17 and injuring several dozens more. Though the media were supressed,
the grim memories and gruesome mementos of that infamous day will not be forgotten.
Most of the photographs and documentations of that darkest of days were either
confiscated and destroyed, or deliberately revised to mislead the public. Only a few remained intact to unveil the stories of horror
and brutalities committed during the so-called Yellow Regime. Very few mainstream journalists during Cory’s
reign – Louie Beltran (1936-1994), Renato Constantino (1919-1999), Melinda Liu, Catherine Manegold, Luis
Teodoro, Rigoberto Tiglao, Luisa Torregosa – had the courage to tell the truth.
Pictures of the grim Mendiola Massacre through the
lens of photojournalist Luis Liwanag. (January 22, 1987) |
A few more surviving memories of the Mendiola Massacre, the legacy of the Yellow Regime. |
Quite unknown
to the general public, Cory Aquino’s regime committed hideous records of human-rights
violations. From March 1986 to December 1991, the number of warrantless arrests
and detention reached nearly 16,000. Extrajudicial executions numbered
1,733 cases, including 189 that occurred in 1990 alone. Only in recent years
that much of the hidden atrocities of the Cory Regime were being uncovered,
together with that of her son, President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III’s deeds of graft and
corruptions. History, indeed, will always correct itself. Tribulation and
karma will in time reach all those who are the real culprits of injustices.
Happy Birthday Cory. Three days after the grim Mendiola Massacre, coffins were laid on the foot bridge leading to Malacañang, as birthday gifts to a yellow fascist leader. |
At the onset
Cory Aquino was branded by both local and foreign media as the “bringer of democracy” in
the Philippines. The color yellow, her color, became the pigment of hope. It didn’t take
long, however, before the masked evil started to show its face. All of her regime’s promises of
reforms never happened. The government did nothing to alleviate the suffering
of the people. The price of commodities skyrocketted to more than sixty times
its value barely a year after. The oligarchy allied to Cory’s regime entrenched
themselves in politics, media and utility businesses. The rich became richer
and the poor became poorer.
Graft and
corruption became the order of the day, as the political leeches imprisoned by
the Marcos administration were released and given political tenure in Cory’s
government. Scalawags in the police and military also freely abused the
citizenry. Cory’s allies were holding the power and the rein in the
tri-media, and because of this very little if any of the abuses were made public.
President
Cory Aquino was for the retention of the US military bases in the Philippines,
despite the abuses committed by the American servicemen. Senator Jovito Salonga
(1920-2016) and several nationalist senators defied the president and pushed for its
removal. Mount Pinatubo erupted on June 12, 1991, as if Mother Nature is declaring
that the Philippines be freed from the “bald eagle’s claws.” It could also be
interpreted as a warning to the incumbent powers-that-be that there are greater
forces watching over the nation.
Glimpses of the destruction brought about by Mt.
Pinatubo’s Wrath. (Philippine Daily Inquirer, June 19, 1991 and Philippines Star, August 1991) |
The US military bases in the
Philippines were established through the Parity Agreement in 1947, which allowed the United States to establish and
operate air and naval bases in the Philippines for a period of 99 years. This agreement also started the Philippines’ so-called
“mendicant foreign policy.” Interesting to note that it was President Manuel Roxas
(1892-1948), one of the founding fathers of the Liberal Party, who initiated this policy. Claro M. Recto (1890-1960) and Jose P.
Laurel (1891-1959) opposed it. President Roxas even made a public speech of
loyalty (according to Recto, more like subserviency or sycophancy), “kissing
the American anus,” at the Kelly Theater on April 15, 1948.
After
the abolition of the 1935 Constitution, and the ratification of the 1973
constitution, then First Lady Imelda Marcos’ visited Cuba. She learned from Fidel
Castro (1926-2016) that “after 30 years, any lease agreement between sovereign
nations concerning land occupancy becomes permanent, and may only be abrogated
by mutual consent.” This was based on Cuba’s experience regarding the
Guantanamo Naval Base. That is how the base inside Cuba became US property, since sovereignty was absolute within the premises of the said base, and the
lease agreement cannot be unilaterally terminated. Upon knowing this, she
immediately told President Ferdinand E. Marcos knowing fully its parallel consequence on
Clark Air Base and Subic Naval Base. Thereupon subsequent amendments and provisions
in the Constitution were made and new agreement drafted such that the military bases became renegotiable every five years. In reality,
it is President Marcos that we should thank for the removal
of the US military bases (It was considered as one of the prime reason why Pres. Marcos was deposed).
This made it
possible for the Philippine Senate in 1991 under Jovito Salonga to
vote for the removal of the bases. President Cory Aquino was for the status quo; she doesn’t want her
benefactor to leave. Aquino, in a
vain effort to make the Senate ratify the treaty extending the Military Bases Agreement,
even led a march to the Senate with around a thousand of her
supporters to lobby for the approval of the treaty.
We should also bear in mind that it
was during Cory Aquino’s regime that the American soldiers in the military
bases had their heydays raping Filipino women and children, and she and her
government didn’t lift a finger or say a word in protest of these gruesome
crimes. The same holds true with our oversea domestic helpers raped by their
foreign employers. The words of Aquino’s Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Raul
Manglapus (1918-1999) – “If rape is certain, relax and enjoy it!” – still reverberates to this day from our
country’s darkest moments.
Despite Aquino’s lobbying, however, the Philippine Senate, by a vote of
12-11, rejected the proposed treaty to renew the military bases agreement. The
12 senators, whom the media later dubbed the “Magnificent 12,” were Senate President Jovito Salonga and senators Agapito Aquino (1939-2015), Juan
Ponce Enrile, Joseph Estrada, Teofisto Guingona Jr., Sotero Laurel (1918-2009), Ernesto
Maceda (1935-2016), Orlando Mercado, Aquilino Pimentel Jr (1933-2019), Rene Saguisag, Wigberto Tañada
and Victor Ziga. They signed Resolution 1259 of Non-Concurrence to the proposed
treaty. “The treaty is defeated,” so announced Salonga at the time.
Senator Salonga, who has headed the 23-member Senate for five years and clashed frequently with President Aquino, for his part, paid a price for his defiance of the yellow widow’s wishes. The nationalist senator (though he was also a Liberal Party member just like the Aquinos) was voted out as Senate President and his financial backer in the business community withdrew their support for his presidential bid.
Senator Salonga, who has headed the 23-member Senate for five years and clashed frequently with President Aquino, for his part, paid a price for his defiance of the yellow widow’s wishes. The nationalist senator (though he was also a Liberal Party member just like the Aquinos) was voted out as Senate President and his financial backer in the business community withdrew their support for his presidential bid.
The underground Mitsa
Komiks (1991-1992):
The messages of the illustrations are very clear! |
I remember
submitting a dissertation defending Senator Jovito Salonga’s stand in favor of
the removal of U.S. military bases in the Philippines.
EXCERPTS: “Pres. Marcos was branded by
activists as a U.S. puppet, and these same activists helped put Pres. Aquino in
Malacañang. What would they say now that Cory is for the retention of the U.S.
Military Bases? This she did in gratitude for the Americans who helped deposed
Marcos and put her in power. Would they venture to say that she is ‘a puppet in
the making’ or ‘an already-puppet in disguise?’ Poor Senator Salonga took the
brunt of her anger, when the ‘nationalist’ (though he’s a Liberal) lawmaker
insisted that ‘the Americans should go.’ He got booted out of the Senate
leadership..... But Mother Nature decided for herself what is best for the
Philippines when Mount Pinatubo erupted and the Americans quickly scampered out
of Clark and Subic. I don’t think Cory can do anything about that. Thank God!
Hahaha!”
My
dissertation article was never published. Editor Bernie de Leon told me that if
he published it, “mame-memo kami!”
A tribute to Senator Jovito Salonga from the Claire Delfin Media (left), and the banner headline of Philippine Daily Inquirer December 13, 1991 issue (right). |
Another
instance for which I was indirectly a party in interest is that of my friend
Lean Alejandro (1960-1987), Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN) founder. Sometime in July
1987, about two months before he was killed, he invited me to eat pansit malabon to talk about “something.”
July was, incidentally, both our birth month. He told me that he was
disappointed of the outcome of events and was planning a nationwide protest
rally to air these disappointments. I told him to be careful as Cory’s regime
and the leeches around her are very vindictive and the rule of law does not yet
have grounds to stand on after the EDSA Revolt.
I still remember
what he said to me: “Isang kabalintunaan naman na ngayon pa ako papatayin kung
kailan naitatag ang sinasabi nilang demokrasya.” (It’s ironic that they will
try to assassinate me now that they said they have established democracy.) In
answer, I reminded him of what happened to KMU leader Rolando Olalia, who was
assassinated just a few months after Cory’s ascension to power. We both felt
cold shivers ran down our spines that instance.
On September
17, 1987, Lean Alejandro announced that BAYAN will launched a nationawide
protests and demonstrations. Two days later, he was cold-bloodedly assassinated. Some speculated that hitmen from the so-called “Yellow Army” did it. It’s been more than three decades and the case is still unresolved.
BAYAN Founder Lean Alejandro on the cover of PHR Update International Edition (September 1987) |
Much of the
military especially those stationed in Northern Luzon and Mindanao were still
loyal to President Marcos during the Yellow Regime. And those that helped put her in power were disgruntled by her refusal to cause reforms. So, Cory asked for protection from the powerful
Democratic bloc and liberal politicians in the US to protect his presidency
against the expected unrest from the Philippine military. The same people that planned the ouster and caused the abduction of President Marcos to Guam and exiled him to Hawaii. That’s why no coup attempt ever made it to second base. As they say, in imperialistic parlance, “no attempt to grab political power will succeed without blessing from Uncle Sam.”
The
vindictive persecutions of the Marcos Loyalists, common people, who went to the
streets to air their grievances regarding the harassments and discrimination
by the Cory Regime, and their unwavering call for the return of the
American-exiled duly-elected president of the country, were etched in the
street walls and corridors greater than any blasphemous monuments built to
commemorate a “fake” revolution.
Editorial Caricatures of Danny Acuña on the plight of Marcos Loyalists under the Cory Regime. (Tonite, August 7 and 9, 1991)
The
students, the masses, the common tao,
the left, and even the military finally realized that they were used; they were
tricked and duped by the yellow fascist-oligarchy into participating in the
overthrow of the Marcos government. Soon “EDSA,” apart from being a grim reminder of the rule of darkness and symbol of disunity, chaos and hardship, started to have a different
connotation. It became a byword in barbershops, carinderias, talipapas,
in the campus, in the streets, in jeepney talks, that when you say na-EDSA it came to mean naloko (fooled or tricked) or nadenggoy (duped).
|
WALL PHOTO:
A 12-year-old Mangyan boy showing fired bullet shells –
remnants of the Mendiola Massacre, the grim and unforgettable legacy of the
Cory fascist regime. (Photo courtesy of Dennis Sabangan)