Patulan natin ang tanong ng @onenewsph. Pero hindi tayo babatay sa kwento ng matatanda. Babatay tayo sa tunay na ebidensya. May isang kwento mula sa pagkakakulong ni Ninoy Aquino na dapat niyong malaman:
Here it from the man himself. What Ninoy Aquino said about his tragic experience in Laur in an exclusive interview from his prison cell in Fort Bonifacio in 1979:
In February 1981, during his historic speech in a Movement for Free Philippines (MFP) caucus rally at the Wilshire Ebell Theater in Los Angeles, Ninoy described what Laur was and felt like for him:
Hirit palagi ng mga loyalista: Ninoy was an ambitious politician. Totoo naman, lalo na pre-1972. Pero ang ayaw nilang aminin: Ang pagdurusa na hinarap ni Ninoy sa Fort Magsaysay, Laur, Nueva Ecija, ang nagbago sa kanya. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Dahil ipinuslit ni Ninoy ang isang artikulong bumabatikos sa rehimeng Marcos kahit nakakulong na siya sa Fort Bonifacio, at inilathala ito ng Bangkok Post, pinarusahan siya (kasama si Sen. Jose W. Diokno) ng diktador at ipinatapon sa Laur. Incommunicado. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Within 43 days (March-April 1973), Aquino and Diokno were held under solitary confinement. Their families were kept in the dark; Sen. Lorenzo Tañada himself had wept in the Supreme Court. After weeks, their families were allowed to visit them for one hour. #DefendHistoricalTruth
*Hear
In a letter to Francisco “Soc” Rodrigo on June 25, 1973, Ninoy recounted the horrors he underwent in Laur. He questioned God: “I felt, at that moment, he was having a very good sound siesta and I was afraid when he finally woke up, I would have been gone!” #DefendHistoricalTruth
Ninoy also questioned the justice of God:
“What terrible crimes have I committed to deserve this fate? The magnanakaws are living it up and I who tried to walk the narrow path of public service with integrity (and I) am now about to meet an uncertain fate?” #DefendHistoricalTruth
The once ambitious and egregious Ninoy begged on his knees and prayed, in his words, as he never did before. He later confided in his letter to Soc Rodrigo: “In Laur, I gave up my life and offered it to Him . . . picked up my cross and followed Him.” #DefendHistoricalTruth
March 12, 1973: Ninoy Aquino and Pepe Diokno were flown out of their prison cells in Fort Bonifacio, blindfolded and handcuffed in a presidential helicopter, and slipped into Fort Magsaysay, Laur, Nueva Ecija to be held in solitary confinement for a month. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Ninoy was stripped naked. His eyeglasses, watch, belt, personal effects were taken away from him. They had to ask permission to go to the CR. They were given one set of sando and shorts which they need to wash every day. The aim was to make them despondent. #DefendHistoricalTruth
More military indignities were heaped upon Ninoy. Quoting from his Rodrigo letter: “I even suspected they were putting drugs in my meager ration. So I refused to eat. Later, the guards gave me six crackers a day. I subsisted on six crackers and water.” #DefendHistoricalTruth
Alpha (Aquino) and Delta (Diokno) were their Laur codenames. They were also barred from talking to each other. To ascertain if the other was still alive, Ninoy would sing a few lines of Bayan Ko. Ka Pepe would respond with a few lines from Lupang Hinirang. #DefendHistoricalTruth
When the Aquinos were finally allowed to visit him, all of them cried—except for Cory (who took tranquilizers). It was a heartbreaking scene. Despite this, a military agent still snapped photos of them for profiling. So much for military emotional torture. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Ninoy’s experience in Laur was harrowing. At one time, he was almostdriving mad. Then he heard a voice telling him: “I have given you a full life, a great wife and beautiful lovable children. Now that I visit you with a slight desolation, you cry and whimper like a spoiled brat!”
Ninoy’s spiritual transformation started in Laur. He discarded political ambition. Until today, the Aquinos still consider Laur to be their lowest point in life—all because a dictator was irked by what his most prized political prisoner wrote against him. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Today, in the former sweatbox prison cells of Ninoy and Ka Pepe in Laur now stand the Aquino-Diokno Memorial in Nueva Ecija. It is a continuous reminder of the unspeakable horrors and tragedies inflicted upon the Filipino people by the Marcos dictatorship. #DefendHistoricalTruth
#Snap86 | Snapshots from the 1986 snap elections, campaign, and fraud
Pebrero 16, 1986: 2 milyong Pilipino ang nagtipon sa Luneta upang dumalo sa “Tagumpay ng Bayan” rally. Pinangunahan ni Cory Aquino ang isang boycott campaign laban sa diktadurang Marcos. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Sa rally na ito, pormal na idineklara ni Aquino ang isang pambansang kampanya upang iboykot ang lahat ng mga kumpanya, banko, at media outlet na pagaari ng mga crony ni Marcos. Kabilang dito ang mga produkto ng San Miguel, pagmamay-ari ni Danding Cojuangco. #DefendHistoricalTruth
Kaalinsabay rin nito ang isang general nationwide strike na magsisimula sa Pebrero 26, isang araw matapos manumpa ni Marcos, malawakang pagboykot sa mga trabaho at klase, at araw-araw na kilos-protesta at martsa upang yanigin ang diktadurang Marcos. #DefendHistoricalTruth
1. There are no credible sources at all that indicate that Cory Aquino was “playing mahjong” with Carmelite sisters in Cebu in 1986. 2. Cory’s exact quote: “Tell him it’s okay to go. My only condition is that he leave the country.”
WHAT REALLY HAPPENED ON FEBRUARY 22, 1986: Cory Aquino was in Cebu to pitch for the civil disobedience campaign that she started on Feb 16 in Manila. At 6:00 PM of that same day, Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Lt. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos defected from the Marcos dictatorship.
Even before Cory flew to Cebu, her aide, Lt. Jose Honrado, already informed her of rumors of a coup against the Marcos regime. But later that evening, through Belinda Olivarez-Cunanan (one of the journalists covering her since the snap polls), she knew of the Enrile-Ramos break.
Feb 22, 1986. Lt. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos roared: “I came here because of my sincere conviction that the time had come to reverse the situation […] it had been building up, in my perception, that General Ver and the President were bent on making themselves permanent in our society.”
Around 6:00 PM on February 22, 1986, a Sunday, a sudden press conference was called in Camp Aguinaldo. Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Lt. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos, the acting Armed Forces chief-of-staff, announced their defection from Ferdinand E. Marcos’ dictatorship.
Among a smorgasbord of his own reasons behind his defection, Ramos explained: “But on top of that, I came here to support the decision of the Minister of National Defense to seek a better armed forces, which I feel partly responsible for—and a better overall life for our people.”