A look back at Marag Valley: Folks tell tales of violence, abuse
>> Tuesday, February 24, 2015
MARAG VALLEY, Luna, Apayao – Once the hotbed
of rebellion against the Marcos dictatorship in the early seventies, Marag
Valley now sees its future in tourism as
the province gears for brighter future.
Barangay
Marag, located within the Municipality of Luna, boasts of a thickly forested
landscape with hidden rock formations and limestone caves that had once been
the perfect spot for rebels to set up camp and training grounds for new
recruits fighting on what they believed was a corrupt government.
Romina
Morales, a resident of the village recalls how she and her family had to
evacuate to the inner jungles of the valley after having had experienced what
they called “military injustices” in their community.
“It was too
much for us to bear, some of our neighbors were abducted by the military for
suspicion of being rebels and then seeing them the next day piled up dead
inside one of the artesian wells used by the community,” Morales said.
“We feared
the military because they could easily accuse anyone in our neighborhood for
being a rebel, then the next thing, we see are their dead bodies,” Morales
added.
Morales
denied she or any of her kin ever took arms against the government during those
times of turmoil. “I nor any of my family members never fought against the
military or joined the rebels because fear was all over us. That was why we had
to move to the most remote part of the forests,” she said.
In these
forests, they ate ferns and other edible plants that they could find. “It was a
heavy burden for us to find rice. We had to walk many kilometers to the nearest
store just to purchase a kilo of rice since we left our rice fields unattended
for fear of being suspected and snatched by the military on suspicion of being
a rebel,” Morales laments.
“When the
military helicopters started dropping bombs in 1986, things got worse as these
carpet bombings affected all of our lives,” Morales recalled.
This trauma
was shared by most of the community members during those times.
As another
survivor recalled, he spent months at the evacuation center in Pamplona,
Cagayan in the early 90s after he was brought there by a humanitarian group
which had found him wandering aimlessly after his family’s house was heavily
strafed in the crossfire between military forces and the rebels. Both his
parents died in that incident.
The
survivor, who asked to be called Ricky, could remember: “I could not even take
a look at a man in a military uniform, for fear that he will shoot at me with
just a stare.”
He said he
was a young boy when that happened in 1992, and without the people who
evacuated them in Pamplona Refugee Center, he would have been long gone.
Years have
passed and the rice fields are once again teeming with the color of greens and
animals are being pastured near the forest edges in Marag. The river is
bountiful with fish.
Asked about
what would the people in Mamasapano, Maguindanao feel with regards the recent
clash between government and a Muslim armed groups that killed 44 Special
Action Force personnel, Morales shrugged and just said, “I pray to God all
these killings would stop, because the civilians there, like us are also deeply
affected.”
Morales
added : “The residents in the area are the most affected because they are the
ones who are most helpless. I hope the leaders would soon realize that their
lives are also important.”
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