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Vol. 17 No. 135 P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 12 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
THE People Power Monument gets cleaned in preparation for the 36th anniversary of the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution, the bloodless revolt that inspired similar regime changes elsewhere, and sent President Ferdinand Marcos to exile in Hawaii. NONOY LACZA
The 1986 Edsa Revolution: Lessons learned, then and now S
By Joel C. Paredes*
ILVESTRE AFABLE, until now, remains awestruck with the “mercurial emotions” of over a million people who took to the streets for a four-day vigil to protect military rebels during the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution.
As the Ministry of National Defense (MND) information service chief, he was the only civilian in that hurriedly organized meeting on February 22, 1986, when then Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Gen. Fidel Ramos, then chief of the Philippine Constabulary-Integrated National Police (PC-INP), declared they were withdrawing support from then President Ferdinand E. Marcos. Afable confided that, at first, it was really only a matter of their survival after Malacañang uncovered a coup plot which, Afable said, was initially hatched by a group of disgruntled military officers led by then Col. Gregorio “Gringo” Honasan, who called themselves the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM). Afable recalled phoning his family, telling them he might die at any moment, if the government troops loyal to the President moved in to quell the military uprising. The strongman had just been proclaimed winner of the February 7 snap elections against popular opposition candidate Corazon Aquino, widow of Benigno ”Ninoy” Aquino Jr., who was gunned down on August 21, 1983, upon returning from a three-year US exile.
US connection
AFABLE admitted that the military rebels had “strategically”
linked with US authorities as early as September, even before Marcos called for a presidential election amid pressure from Washington. “At that point in time, the coordination with US elements was already very active with the rebel groups,” he said. That was also the time when the RAM’s “planning became a serious effort,” according to Afable. Meanwhile, crowds had just been drawn to Edsa, outside Camps Aguinaldo and Crame, by a call from influential Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin, as droves of officers, lawmakers and high-profile government officials started abandoning the Marcos camp after his pyrrhic victory. The “revolution of the people,” General Ramos called it, after what began as a military uprising drew civilians pledged to protect the rebel soldiers. “That was the first time that I realized that Filipinos were really crazy if you awaken their emotions. They will not sleep. They will not go home,” he said. “It’s really hair-raising to look at a million people around you. It gives you an insight on what kind of people we were [then],” Afable said. And yet, Afable believes that while he finds the 1986 People Power Revolution that ousted Marcos after 21 years in power remains to be relevant today, it
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HUNDREDS of thousands of people are seen on Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (Edsa), facing northbound toward the Boni Serrano Avenue-Edsa intersection (February 1986). JOEY DE VERA VIA PRESIDENTIAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY
might not happen again for different reasons.
‘Disempowered’ people
IN Afable’s view, the Edsa revolt “was more of the middle class. These are people who had lots of aspirations.” “[But] people now are very disempowered economically,” he said. “Today, people are totally different.
They’re so hard up. It’s very hard to awaken any political ideals.” He was also hardly surprised that Enrile and Honasan have since mended ties with the Marcoses, throwing their support behind the strongman’s son, Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., in his bid this May 9 to regain the presidency his father lost. “JPE [Enrile] is really a pure
pragmatist. He makes decisions on the parameter of pragmatic things,” Afable said. He also painted Honasan as, “such a congenial person with a lot of patriotism,” adding he is one who “would not just shoot a person.” Saying that “he [Honasan] took it as matter of political expediency,” Afable insisted that Honasan remains allied to his Philip-
pine Military Academy classmate Ping Lacson, another presidential hopeful, and “had simply accepted the support of BBM [Bongbong Marcos].” Honasan was named part of the Senate slate of Marcos Jr., who framed his choices as in line with his UniTeam’s consistent vision of national unity for progress. Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4463 n UK 69.8645 n HK 6.5763 n CHINA 8.0921 n SINGAPORE 38.1863 n AUSTRALIA 36.8402 n EU 58.2734 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6684
Source: BSP (February 18, 2022)