VOL. 8 ISSUE 239 • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2016
P 15.00 • 20 PAGES
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EDGEDAVAO Serving a seamless society
One of the most colorful stories of the Martial Law era involve three Davao human rights lawyers, Laurente “Larry” Ilagan (right), Antonio “Tony” Arellano (middle, front), and Marcos “Boy” Risonar, Jr. (left).
THE 30TH EDSA REVOLUTION ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
EDSA AND THE 3 DAVAO LAWYERS
By ATTY. RUBEN ABARQUEZ
I
N our long history as a Filipino nation, we had lived with several oppressors – foreigners, such as the Spaniards from 1521 to the 1890s, the Americans from 1898 to 1946 and the Japanese from 1940 to 1945. The only homegrown one was the martial law regime of Ferdinand Marcos from 1972 to 1986. The period from September 11, 1972 to February 25, 1986, stretching almost 14 years, was the “best of times and the worst of times”, to
quote Dickens in A Tale of Two Cities. For Marcos and his cohorts, it was the best of times. For the victims of their abuses – those killed, tortured, and incarcerated, it was the worst of times. Today, February 25, 2016, we are observing, nay, celebrating, the 30th year of the dismantling of Marcos regime. The memory of martial law and the abuses of the Marcos regime seem to have faded away over the years, even among the older generation. The younger ones
seem to have no knowledge and understanding of them beyond their lessons in their Araling Panlipunan in high school. Let me take you to a leisurely walk down memory lane and relate to you one of the most significant and memorable slices of life in the martial law years which happened right here in Davao City. This is the story of three human rights lawyers, Laurente “Larry” Ilagan, Antonio “Tony” Arellano, and Marcos “Boy” Risonar, Jr.
Upon learning of Larry’s arrest, Atty. Arellano proceeded to the ofThe Arrest In the morning of May fice of Atty. Silvestre Bello III where a 10, 1985, Larry Ilagan was arrested, without a court issued warrant of arrest, by military troopers at the cafe near his office at C.M. Recto St., Davao City while he was taking his usual after-trial-cup of coffee. The troopers who were aboard two military jeeps and a car immediately took Atty. Ilagan to Camp Catitipan, the regional headquarters of the PC/INP Region XI Command.
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