The GUIDON - November 2016

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Ateneo hold 1st Indigenous People’s Week celebration

Ateneo ROTC to represent Air Force in ROTC summit

Com Dept turns 50, delves deeper into what’s ‘patok’

From grass to cement

The foreign touch

NEWS, 3

NEWS, 4

NEWS, 5

SPORTS, 10

SPORTS, 11

T H E OF F ICI A L ST U DEN T PU BL IC AT ION OF T H E AT EN EO DE M A N I L A U N I V ER SI T Y VOL. LXXXVII, NO. 4 · NOVEMBER 2016

theguidon.com

“Marcos, diktador, hindi bayani!” Ateneans express indignation over Marcos burial

BY MIGUEL N. SEVIDAL

SPORTS Striving for success Back at it—Ateneo blue and lady shuttlers both make UAAP finals for the first time since Season 76

BEYOND LOYOLA Plight and prejudice: Sexism in Philippine society Sexism is alive in the Philippines despite being Asia’s most-gender equal nation.

FEATURES The retrograde revolution What happens when James Dean, Annie Hall, Andie Walsh, and Cher Horowitz meet in the 21st century?

INQUIRY The issue of transition “Ateneo says it’s inclusive, pero ‘ di ko feel (I don’t feel it).”

“HINDI BAYANI si Marcos!” The Ateneo community e x pre s s e d i nd i g n at ion against the surprise burial of Former President Ferdinand Marcos in the Libingan ng mga Bayani (LNMB) and turned to various outlets to channel their dissent. Marcos was buried at the LNMB at 11:45 AM on November 18. His burial was attended by members of the Marcos family and several of their supporters. The late dictator was given full military honors during his interment. Details of his burial were disclosed to the public only a few hours prior to the burial. The burial came ten days after the Supreme Court (SC) upheld President Rodrigo Duterte’s decision ordering Marcos’ burial at the LNMB. The president said that burying Marcos’ remains with other former presidents at the LNMB would expedite the “healing” process of the nation. In a report by CNN Philippines, the SC cited that there is no law prohibiting Marcos’s burial at the LNMB. Thus, the president did not commit a grave abuse of discretion and holds the power to reserve for specific purposes any lands under public domain. The SC further argued that Marcos can be buried at the LNMB under the regulations of the Armed Forces of the Philippines as he was not dishonorably discharged or convicted of crimes of moral turpitude. “ATENISTANG KABATAAN, NGAYON AY LUMALABAN”

On both the day of the SC’s decision and the day of the burial, hundreds of students, faculty members, a nd non-teaching sta ff walked to Katipunan Avenue to protest a nd ex press collective indignation. Both mobilizations were organized by the Sanggunian and the Union of Students for the Advancement of Democracy (USAD). The protesters repeatedly chanted “Marcos, diktador, hindi bayani (Marcos is

dictator, not a hero)!” and “At eni st an g k ab at a an , ngayon ay lum al aban (Atenean youth are fighting now)!” They called the late dictator duwag (coward) and magnanakaw (thief) while reviving the martial law era chant “Marcos, Hitler, diktador, tuta!” Protesters called on passing motorists to join the call for justice by honking their car horns, chanting “Busina, busina, para sa hustisya!” The Blue Babble Battalion also joined both mobilizations, helping turn the protest into a noise barrage. During the rally on November 8, victims of martial law spoke about the atrocities committed during the era, with Cristina Montiel, PhD of the Psychology Department saying that the horrors of martial law still remain in their minds today. She s a id t h at t he mobilization “gives political hope because people are coming out again. They’re not anymore hiding.” Du r ing t he ra l ly on November 18, Office of Social Concern and Involvement Director Leland Dela Cruz called the surprise burial of Marcos as “absolutely disgusting,” citing that the Supreme Court “has not even ruled the finality of the matter.” At t he sa me ra l ly, creative writing senior Paolo Villanueva, whose grandfather’s remains rest at the LMNB, also claimed that the burial was “disgusting,” adding that that it was “a disgrace to those buried [in the LNMB].” I n add it ion, H i s tor y Depa r tment A ssista nt Professor Jose Tirol, PhD said that the burial today was “nothing more than a betrayal.” He said that the burial of Marcos at the LNMB “shows no respect at all for our history for our current generation and the future generations.” Tirol also blasted the Duterte administration for MARCOS, DIKTADOR › 5

PHOTOS BY JOHN P. ORANGA AND DANICA T. BIBERA

Chief Magistrate resigns SJC to consider ‘internal reform’ BY FAITH T. LIM AND MIGUEL C. MUNAR

FORMER CHIEF Magistrate of the Ateneo Student Judicial Court (SJC) Generoso Jacinto was called to resign from his position on October 14 by the magistrates of the SJC. The statement was issued through a post on the SJC’s official Facebook page following issues on transparency and accountability within the court’s internal system. The document outlined a list of infringements Jacinto was held accountable for. According to the statement, Jacinto failed to “align with the missions and principles that the Court wishes to uphold.” The main issues raised by the petition against Jacinto’s leadership were the overstepping of boundaries as a leader, as stipulated in the SJC’s Code of Internal Procedure, as well as his control of the dissemination of important court documents. Jacinto has since submitted a letter of resignation from his post as the Chief Magistrate and his magistrate position. The current magistrates chose amongst themselves and elected Antonio Lagura to serve as Chief Magistrate before formally electing a Chief Magistrate

after the application period for new magistrates. “It was a difficult decision on his part but the magistrates would like to believe that this was a decision he made for the court,” Lagura said. In response to this, the Union of Students for the Advancement of Democracy (USAD) released a public statement rejecting any form of “extraconstitutional attempt to demand the removal of a duly elected official of the Sanggunian without respect for the legal processes enshrined in [the] Constitution.” INTERNAL CONFLICT

According to Lagura, the decision of the magistrates to release the statement came after much internal dialogue among the court’s officials, including Jacinto himself. It began when Lagura noticed that there were delays in the decisions of petitions and discrepancies between the resolutions and statements being issued and voted on. “In that regard, we started to notice that there was a lack of communication between our leader and the rest of the magistrates. We wanted to make sure he was aware. [However], there was a continuing process [of a] lack of transparency and [the] lack of

communication which pushed us to take action,” he added. After a lack of communication between Jacinto and the other officials, Lagura and the other magistrates felt the need to take an immediate course of action by releasing a statement calling for his resignation. “It was a terrible burden on the court. The only alternative was the impeachment of the former Chief Magistrate [which] would have been much [more] problematic. It would have burdened not only the court but the Central Assembly as well, so it felt like we had to do it,” Lagura explained. According to Lagura, the statement released was not part of a process for a formal petition but rather a manifestation of what the rest of the magistrates felt needed to be done at the time. Through discussion with his fellow magistrates, observations of the processes in court and receiving multiple criticisms from multiple sectors, the magistrates knew that there was an internal problem within the court. Hours after its initial posting, the statement was deleted from their Facebook page. “We decided to remove it because it would have created an CHIEF MAGISTRATE › 4


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