BusinessMirror October 03, 2021

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A broader look at today’s business n

Sunday, October 3, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 354

P25.00 nationwide | 12 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

‘WIND of CHANGE’

40 years after escaping martial rule, a Zambaleño recalls the horrors—and eventual redemption

M

By Henry E. Empeño

ASINLOC, Zambales—On May 30, 1981, a native son of this town left home to become one of the first Filipinos to be granted political asylum by the government of Canada. It was a tough decision to make for Bernard-Adan Ebuen, then 34 years old. He had to leave his wife and two children, abandon his calling in organizing poor miners and fishermen, and fly away with little money to an unfamiliar place where he knew not a soul. But it was a choice he had to make. The Philippines was then under the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos’s martial law regime, and he felt the noose closing in.

“For almost eight years in the underground movement, I prepared myself for this eventuality. I found it harrowing,” related Ebuen in an essay he posted on social media on the eve of the anniversary of the declaration of martial law on September 21.

Ebuen wanted to be a priest, graduated with a degree in philosophy from the Major Seminary in Vigan, Ilocos Sur, and taught philosophy and theology at the Ateneo de Zamboanga from 1970 to 1971. But after a stint at Delta Motor Sales Corporation—then a

ENJOYING being a senior citizen with Gov. Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. (left), who is Ebuen’s distant cousin. MARCOS-ERA human-rights victim Bernard-Adan Ebuen visits his old detention cell at Camp Conrado Yap, where he was first held after his arrest in 1980.

MEMENTOES of a former political activist and refugee: an article in Canada’s The Mail and Globe; acknowledgement receipt from the Human Rights Victims’ Claims Board; HRVCB resolution awarding four points for Arbitrary Detention.

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.8790

progressive automotive manufacturer and dealer until its owners fell out of favor with the powers-that-be and operations stopped in 1983, Ebuen went home to Masinloc for a different work. “With some friends, I helped organize the workers of Benguet Consolidated Mining Company at Coto,” he now recalled. “We established initial contacts and formed a core group to formally establish a legal union which later on became affiliated with a national labor group in Manila.” Sitio Coto was famous for its lucrative export of refractory chromite, which is used in making projectiles, guns, ballbearings, safes, as well as armor-plate for warships. The mine is located at the rugged foothills of Taltal, the village where Ebuen was born. And while it was then operated by one of the oldest and biggest mining and mineral extraction firms in the country, miners grumbled about low wages and poor work conditions.

Dangerous times

THE formation of a miners’ union at Coto was soon followed by more organizing work. By 1978, Ebuen became involved with local fishermen and formed the Samatob, or Samahan ng mga Mangingisda ng Atob, also in Masinloc. Atob is a sitio of Baloganon, a coastal village with a port where chromite ores from Coto were loaded onto ships. It is also where some of the poorest fishermen in town lived and eked meager living from the sea. Ebuen organized the fisherfolk and helped to give them a voice in the community. “It was the first fishermen’s union in Zambales, I believe,” Ebuen said. It was a good opportunity for Ebuen and his fellow community organizers to change the lives of the poorer sectors of the society, a fruitful period that was also fraught with danger. At this time, elections were held for the Batasang Pambansa, and the Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4572 n UK 68.5595 n HK 6.5350 n CHINA 7.8620 n SINGAPORE 37.4772 n AUSTRALIA 36.7703 n EU 58.9382 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5666

Source: BSP (October 1, 2021)


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