There are
many reasons why the former dictator should not be in a cemetery for heroes,
but the Philippines has more pressing matters to deal with
Of all the Philippines’ problems, the burial of ousted dictator
Ferdinand Marcos in the national cemetery for heroes should have been among the
least bothersome. As a former president and soldier, he fitted the criteria.
President Rodrigo Duterte made the interment an election promise and following
the supreme court’s approval, the body was flown in last Friday and after a
21-gun salute, buried. More than two decades of protest and debate is over; the
nation can finally put discussion behind and move on to more important issues.
The arguments against Marcos’ burial as a hero were repeatedly voiced
after his family returned his body from exile in Hawaii in 1992. Despite a deal
with the then government that the body be buried immediately in his home
province of Ilocos Norte, it was instead put on display in a glass mausoleum.
That was one reason to deny the request for him to be buried in the heroes’
cemetery, but not the most apt: during two decades as leader, he and his
cronies plundered the country of up to US$10 billion and to stay in power,
murdered and tortured opponents and rescinded rights and freedoms under
military rule. The US$3.6 billion so far recovered and its distribution to the
victims and their families prove corruption and oppression.
Marcos fought beside US soldiers during the second world war, although
falsified claims about his bravery. The economy prospered under his leadership
and much infrastructure was built, but the abuses meant it was also one of the
darkest periods in Philippine history. A popular backlash culminated in the
People Power revolution of 1986 that forced him to flee.
Burying Marcos’ body beside 45,000 other soldiers and three former
presidents may seem wrong to some given the abuses. But opinions are divided
and the Marcoses still have strong support in parts of the country. The burial
issue was not going to go away and Duterte resurrected it as a means to promote
national healing. With the legal doubts removed and the dictator’s body buried,
it is time for Filipinos to put the controversy behind and look forward.
South
China Morning Post
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