Kris Aquino was on the headlines when
in a Twitter post he tahnked president Rodrigo Roa Duterte for acknowledging
that former President Ferdinand Marcos was the one responsible for her father's death.
“Thank you for acknowledging our
family’s loss, and who was behind it. Salamat, Mr. President,” Aquino wrote on
Twitter.”
The Aquino family just celebrated the
10th Death Anniversary of the former president whom they have tagged
as “freedom fighter.”
(photo credit to owner) |
She even tried to put into spotlight
the late mother of the President – Nanay Soling for being a supporter of her
late mother former President Corazon Aquino.
"I still admire your authenticity
President Duterte, but please allow a daughter to speak through this
post?" Kris wrote.
"Kasi
po sa maraming magandang narinig ko mula mismo sa mga Duterte supporters & members
of government patungkol po sa inyo, lahat sila sinasabi, nagu-umapaw ang
pagmamahal ninyo po sa inyong mommy, si Nanay Soling. Pareho po tayo, I love my
mom with all my heart," she added.
(Because I heard so many good things
from Duterte supporters and members of the government about you, all of
them send that you have an overwhelming love for your mother, Nanay Soling.
We're the same. I love my mom with all my heart.)
And all the supposed legacy of the late
president Corazon Aquino has been on the news again, since in a speaking
engagement in Davao City President Rodrigo Roa Duterte took note of the
so-called centerpiece policy of the Cory Administration – the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Program, where its intention was to give land to the landless
farmers. This could have been such a noble policy, except that he exempted the
Hacienda Luisita in Tarlac which belongs to the Cojuangco clan, where Cory is a
part of. Ironic isn’t?
One of the mind boggling question that
has been everyone’s mind is that despite Cory and his son Benigno “Noynoy”
Aquino III presidency they did not bother to drill down as to who was the true perpetrator
in the murder of Ninoy Aquino who was gunned in the airport tarmac last August
21, 1983.
Former Ambassador and veteran journalist Rigoberto Tiglao in his
August 21, 2014 published article in The Manila Times titled “His powerful son has done nothing to solve his
murder” gave a very enlightening and mind boggling revelations as to who really
is responsible for the death of Ninoy Aquino.
For purposes of public information ,clarity and
full disclosure, we are quoting in full the said article by Mr. Tiglao titled His
powerful son has done nothing to solve his murder.”
His
powerful son has done nothing to solve his murder
Yesterday was the 31st anniversary of
the assassination of our national martyr, Ninoy Aquino, and again, photos of
his son President Aquino with his sisters praying before the hero’s grave hog
newspapers’ front pages.
Ninoy’s murder on August 21, 1983 was
an event that changed the course of Philippine history.
I am still astounded at how its
masterminds and conspirators were so daring and precise in their execution of
the deed as to kill him in broad daylight. If the killers’ timing was just a
few seconds late – or if the journalists with Aquino had been a bit bolder as
to insist on following Aquino down the tube – the opposition leader’s killing
could have been witnessed and photographed by foreign media who would have told
the world about it.
As mysterious, though, as to who were
the brains behind the assassination is the fact that Aquino’s now powerful
son, Benigno 3rd, has done nothing to uncover who were behind his
killing, as well as that of Rolando Galman, allegedly the actual trigger man
who put a .357 mm. bullet into his head.
This is despite his four years as the
most powerful man in the country that he has been able to remove the Supreme
Court Chief Justice, incarcerate the former president on flimsy grounds, and
have the entire Congress under his thumb.
Aquino
is known to be vengeful against those who have slighted him in the most minor
manner. This trait certainly doesn’t apply to his apparent nonchalance
towards his father’s murderers.
In contrast, the masterminds of the
assassinations don’t seem to have been idle, and have been determined to
forever erase all trails of the evil deed that could lead to them.
In the early morning of May 7 this
year,discharged Master Sergeant Pablo Martinez was killed in what initially
appeared to be an accident along Roxas Boulevard.
An eyewitness claimed that an SUV
Montero driven by one Henry Roque ran over him after he fell from his bicycle
which the vehicle bumped. The police initially concluded that it
was purely an unfortunate accident. His son Diomedes, also an Air
Force sergeant, however, suspected he was murdered.
The latest report I’ve been able to dig
up was a Philippine Star news item dated May 19: “Parañaque police
investigators confirmed that Roque could no longer be contacted after three
witnesses surfaced and claimed they saw his SUV deliberately run over Martinez
after he hit the victim’s bike and fell down into the asphalt.”
Who is Martinez? He was convicted as
one of the conspirators in Aquino’s assassination and had served nearly 30
years in jail for the crime. Since his release in 2007, and probably because he
had become deeply religious, Martinez had been volunteering to disclose the
brains of the murder. (An excellent documentary titled “The Assassination of
Benigno Aquino, Jr.” produced by Kara Magsanoc-Alikpala, daughter of Philippine
Daily Inquirer editor-in-chief Letty Magsanoc, shown on History Channel
yesterday and every August 21 since it was produced in 2010, also focused on Martinez
and his revelations.)
In 1995, he admitted his role in the
plot, and testified that it was Galman who killed Ninoy with a single bullet to
the head. He said it was he who escorted Galman to a motel to spend the night
before the assassination.
Martinez alleged that former Philippine
Constabulary Maj. Romeo Gatan, a businessman named Hermilo Gosuico, former Air
Force Col. Romeo Ochoco, and Air Force Capt. Felipe Valerio were in that hotel
to tell Galman what he would do the next day. The other 11 officers and
soldiers made up the team that allowed Galman to get close to and shoot Aquino
in the head, after which they gunned him down.
Martinez’ earth-shaking testimony,
though, was first narrated in a February 2006 article in the U.S. Time
magazine and in an on-camera interview in 2007 by ABS-CBN’s Julius Babao with
him right after his release from prison:
“I didn’t hear any direct order from
him, but I asked them [the conspirators in the hotel] who was giving them the
orders, and they replied, ‘Danding.’“
He was referring to oligarch Eduardo
Cojuangco who had controlled until the last few years the giant San Miguel
Corp. Martinez’s claims were recorded in a formal deposition and submitted to
the Supreme Court, which had been asked to reopen the case. The Court, though,
ruled that it didn’t qualify as “newly found evidence.”
Cojuangco’s denial
Mr. Cojuangco has vehemently denied
such accusations.
“Valerio is among those who might be
able to shed light, but to me, it’s Ochoco whom the government should ask because
he was the one who ordered me to bring Galman to the airport,” Martinez said in
2007.
Capt. Valerio was the head of the
10-man team of the Aviation Security Command who collected Aquino from the
China Airlines plane to the airport’s tarmac, where the former senator and then
Galman were shot dead. Valerio and his immediate superior Air Force Col. Ochoco
disappeared right after Marcos’ fall in 1986.
Valerio was not included among the 16
convicted or the other 18 accused who were acquitted since he could not be
arraigned, as he could not be found and arrested. He was reported to be living
in the US. Ochoco, for some reason was also not indicted, and has been reported
to be living in Australia.
Aquino or his officials had done
absolutely nothing to get in touch with Martinez or with the other 10 officers
and soldiers convicted of the crime to convince them that they would be placed
under his protection if they told everything they knew about the assassination.
Having given everything the Americans
wanted, allowing them to have military forward operating sites here, couldn’t
have Aquino asked them for a small favor of looking for Ochoco and Valerio, and
extraditing them here to face justice?
One would have thought the martyr’s
only son would use all the resources at his command as President not just to
seek justice for his father, but also to shed light on what is one of the most
ruthless but pivotal killings in our nation’s history.
Aquino hasn’t.
Aquino’s seeming lack of concern over
his father’s murder convinces me that either there is something deeply wrong in
this person’s psyche, or that there is something terribly embarrassing in the
assassination that has been kept so secret that even the victim’s powerful
family has refused to uncover its mastermind.
Aquino’s mother Cory also seemed
disinterested when she was president in getting to the bottom of her husband’s
murder. However, this was mostly viewed as an understandable, even laudable,
above-the-fray stance of the Saint of Democracy.
More cynical observers felt, however,
that she was afraid to discover that the mastermind could be Cojuangco, her
cousin, or that she even already knew this.
For political stability’s sake
An interpretation kind to her claimed
that if she had pursued Cojuangco for the crime, the oligarch could have joined
and funded the many coup attempts against her rule, and that she chose to
sacrifice her personal wish—to avenge her husband—for the sake of the country
‘s political stability.
The son certainly can’t make such
justification now for his disinterest in finding out who ordered his father’s
murder.
A big lacuna in our nation’s history
remains to be filled, as mysterious as why his widow and the son hadn’t lifted
a finger to expose who ordered the head of their family killed.
In the case of the also mysterious
assassination of another president, the US’s John F. Kennedy, the trail had
gone totally cold after nightclub owner Jack Ruby, who killed the alleged
assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, died in prison four years later in 1967.
In Ninoy’s case, Martinez had provided
enough leads to solve the mystery, and many of the soldiers convicted are still
alive and can be persuaded to tell everything they know. They can even be
convinced to disclose who reportedly has been generously taking care of their
families financially in the 30 years they’ve been in prison.
The crimes’ planners—Col. Ochoco and
Capt. Valerio, Martinez alleged—can still be tracked down. (Businessman Gosuico
and Gen. Gatan reportedly had died several years ago by natural causes,
although I have been unable to confirm this.)
How can Aquino keep wearing that yellow
ribbon on his chest, when he has done nothing to solve the crime it signifies?
How can we be proud of a nation whose
two presidents, one the widow and the other the son, had not bothered to bring
justice to a hero who had declared that the Filipino is worth dying for?
Or maybe it would be more realistic to
hope that Senator Ferdinand Marcos, Jr.—who aspires to lead this nation—would
provide evidence to prove that it wasn’t his father who ordered Aquino’s
murder, as most Filipinos believe the Senior did.
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Report from Manila Times
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