EDITORIAL
It would seem
that the controversy over whether the late president Ferdinand Marcos should be
buried at the Libingan ng mga Bayani would be solved – if protagonists would
agree to just let the Supreme Court rule on the matter and follow its decision.
The SC Thursday temporarily stopped the government from
proceeding with the burial of Marcos at the heroes cemetery in Fort Bonifacio,
Taguig City as ordered by President Duterte.
SC justices
decided in regular session to grant immediate relief sought in five petitions
against the burial and issued a status quo ante order enjoining the orders of
the Department of National Defense and Armed Forces of the Philippines on
Marcos’ interment.
SC spokesman Theodore Te said the status quo ante order is
effective for 20 days or until Sept. 12. President Duterte vowed to
comply with any directive from the Supreme Court. “We’ll just follow,” Duterte
said.
The order, which was directed to Defense Secretary Delfin
Lorenzana and AFP chief of staff Gen. Ricardo Visaya, will lapse days before
the scheduled burial on Sept. 18. The Court may, however, issue another order
thereafter.
The high court also decided to reset the oral arguments on
the case from Aug. 24 to Aug. 31.
It also
consolidated all six separate petitions filed by groups of martial law victims
led by Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, former Bayan Muna party-list representative
Satur Ocampo, former Commission on Human Rights chair Etta Rosales, a group led
by former senator Heherson Alvarez, a group of University of the Philippines
students and former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao human rights chair
Algamar Latiph.
Petitioners had argued that the planned burial of the late
dictator is “illegal and contrary to law, public policy, morals and justice.”
They alleged that allowing the burial of Marcos at the
heroes’ cemetery would violate Republic Act 289 (law regulating the Libingan ng
mga Bayani) and RA 10368 (Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognition Act).
They argued that the burial would also violate the
constitutional provision on state policies.
The DND and AFP
as well as the Marcos family answered the petitions last Monday and asked the
high court to dismiss the petitions.
Solicitor General Jose Calida, who filed the comment for
the DND and AFP, argued that the decision of President Duterte to allow a
hero’s burial for Marcos is a valid exercise of his prerogative under the
Constitution and the Administrative Code.
The Marcos family denied claims of human rights violations
during the first three years of martial law. One of the petitioners, Lagman,
hailed the order issued by the SC. “We truly appreciate this development. The
SC should look very keenly on this case,” Lagman said.
Another opposition lawmaker, Akbayan party-list Rep. Tom
Villarin, also lauded the decision.
“We laud the
Supreme Court’s status quo ante order and we hope that after due proceedings,
it will lead to a permanent injunction,” the neophyte party-list legislator
said.
Gabriela Women’s Party said in a statement that the SC’s
issuance of a status quo ante order staying the scheduled burial of late
dictator Ferdinand Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani for the next 20 days is
a welcome development.
Gabriela party-list Rep. Emmi de Jesus, one of the
thousands of victims of human rights violations during martial law, said that
the numerous petitions before the SC are “historically necessary to remind the
nation of the horrors of a brutal dictatorship.”
Mayor Benjamin Sarmiento of San Juan, Ilocos Sur who was a
former aide of the Marcos family, had reiterated his support for Duterte’s
decision to bury the late president at the Libingan.
Stating that Marcos’ burial is one of Duterte’s ways to
bring peace to the country, Sarmiento, who first worked for the Marcoses in 1965
until he became a member of the Presidential Guard Battalion, said citizens
should trust the good intentions of Duterte.
He said there is nothing wrong in allowing Marcos to have
a space in the Libingan ng mga Bayani since he had served as a leader and
president of the Philippines, adding in Filipino, “There is no perfect person.
There is no perfect president.” He said that what happened to Marcos is a
case of command responsibility for the wrongdoing that his subordinates did.
John Monterona, United Overseas Filipinos Worldwide, said
overseas Filipino workers welcome the SC’s order to allow audio livestream of
the oral arguments on the Marcos burial case.
Now political observers are now saying the Marcos family and
those opposed to his burial at the Libingan ng mga Bayani should just abide
with the Supreme Court ruling to settle once and for all the burial controversy
and make the country move on.
No comments:
Post a Comment