MANILA — On the eve of elections that look
set to return the son of late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos to the
presidential palace, the regime’s victims are hurt and dismayed — but
determined to renew their struggle.
اضافة اعلان
“In other countries, dictators were lined up against
the wall. That never happened to them,” said 70-year-old Bonifacio Ilagan.
A former political prisoner, Ilagan was captured
during a raid on a dissident safe house in 1974.
As chairman of the communist youth organization
Kabataang Makabayan, he was a significant catch.
He was held for two years in the elder Marcos’s
jails and tortured repeatedly to give up fellow opponents of the regime.
Ilagan remembers the long nightmare clearly.
He recalls the beatings, his screams as hot irons
seared the soles of his feet, and when captors tried to force a stick into his
penis to force him to talk.
Through tears, he remembers when “they inserted
bullets between the fingers of both hands and squeezed my hand so tightly that
I was screaming.”
“I felt that my bones would crack,” the playwright
and filmmaker told AFP at a memorial museum in the capital Manila.
He remembers too the aching loss brought by his
sister Rizalina’s abduction and her presumed extrajudicial execution by
Marcos’s agents. Her remains have never been found.
But for a large number of Ilagan’s 110 million
fellow citizens, memories of Marcos’s power-crazed era of brutality have faded
or blurred.
Ferdinand Marcos ruled the Philippines for two decades,
becoming increasingly dictatorial and kleptocratic as his rule came under
threat.
Amnesty International estimates his security forces
either killed, tortured, sexually abused, mutilated, or arbitrarily detained
about 70,000 opponents.
Marcos and his wife Imelda would eventually become
international bywords for dictatorial excess.
While cracking down on dissent and dishing out
contracts to cronies, they looted an estimated $10 billion from the state,
created an island reserve for African wildlife and — infamously — amassed a
collection of 3,000 shoes.
In Manila, people still recall audacious palace
parties that raged into the early morning, and when Imelda decided to
requisition a plane and fly guests to Hong Kong for an impromptu shopping trip.
The party finally
ended in 1986 when they were ousted in a “People Power” revolution and sent
into exile.
But three decades after Marcos died disgraced in
Hawaii, his image and political dynasty are being resurrected.
On Monday, his only son, Ferdinand Marcos Junior,
popularly known as “Bongbong”, is expected to win the presidential election in
a landslide.
‘What has become of us?’
For Ilagan, the Marcos
renaissance is as painful as it is unfathomable.
“What has become of us?” he asked, his eyes looking
around for answers among relics of the dictatorship in the now COVID-shuttered
museum.
“Our culture, our psyche has been perverted, to the
point where many of us do not see reality, even when faced with fact.”
“The son of the dictator becoming president, 50 years
after Marcos senior declared martial law, it is really unthinkable,” he said.
“The (polling) figures say he’s going to be
president, but I cannot for the life of me grasp how real that could be.”
But in some ways, he and other victims admit, the
Marcos revival is explainable.
After the regime was ousted, trials for tax fraud
and corruption dragged on for decades. No one in the family was jailed.
There were no Argentine-style junta trials for
rights abuses or even a South African-style Truth and Reconciliation
Commission.
Efforts to recover plundered state assets are
incomplete, leaving the family a vast war chest to restore their networks of
patronage.
Today, Imelda is on bail for a 2018 conviction over
embezzled funds and lives freely in Manila, her husband’s remains have been
moved to the national heroes’ cemetery, and several family members hold
political office.
“They were welcomed back as if nothing has
happened,” said Judy Taguiwalo, another anti-Marcos activist who was twice
arrested and tortured.
Taguiwalo believes impunity following the revolution
and the failures of successive post-Marcos governments to improve Filipinos’
lives provided fertile ground for a rewriting of history.
“There’s a lot of reflection going on right now,”
she said. “It is not enough to change the person in the presidential palace.
The important thing is to have substantive changes for the majority of the
people.”
The current election campaign has seen innumerable
misleading Facebook posts that convinced millions — many too young to remember
the regime directly — that the Marcoses presided over a “golden age” of peace
and economic growth.
“The time when his father was president was a very
successful era,” first-time voter Alma Lisa Ecat, 20, told AFP.
“The Philippines was on top, not like today,” she
said, adding that well-documented instances of extrajudicial killings, torture,
and disappearances were, at minimum, exaggerated.
“I think those stories are made up by some people
who don’t like the Marcos family” she claimed.
Sins of the father
Ferdinand Marcos Jr’s unwillingness to admit to his
family’s controversial history has left many fearing he may repeat it.
“Marcos junior
has not publicly acknowledged the crimes of his father and his family’s role as
direct beneficiaries of such crime,” said Cristina Palabay, secretary-general
of the human rights group Karapatan.
His campaign spread “countless historical lies”
about what happened in the Philippines between 1965 and 1986, she alleged.
For Bonifacio Ilagan, the swirl of misinformation
and the Marcos resurgence mean a reluctant return to the activism that already
consumed the best years of his life.
“I think there’s no other path for me. I’ve spent
the best years of my life in this movement for a meaningful transformation of
our society.”
“There’s no way I could go back, if only for the
memory of my sister, in memory of my friends who have sacrificed their lives.”
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