Demolition of Clark ‘dog heroes’ cemetery sparks outrage
>> Tuesday, December 4, 2018
By Ding Cervantes
CLARK
FREEPORT, Pampanga — A cemetery established here by the US Air Force for “dog
heroes” has been ploughed through and laid over with soil overnight, prompting
some sectors to cry foul.
“The K-9 Cemetery at the
former US Air Force Base is considered a historical and cultural heritage of
ours. The cemetery is a sacred ground. These dogs had military ranks, too, and
served in the armed forces like regular servicemen. They were also heroes that
protected and saved lives in the past,” said Lt. Guy Indra Hilbero of the 26th
US Cavalry Philippine Scouts Memorial Regiment, a group recognized by the US
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Hilbero, in a statement,
said the “desecration of the cemetery is in full violation of the Cultural
Properties Preservation and Protection Act of the National Museum of the
Philippines.”
The cemetery had been
under the jurisdiction of Clark Development Corp. (CDC) since the US Air Force
abandoned the base in 1992.
CDC
public affairs and information chief Noel Tulabut insisted that the cemetery
remained untouched.
But
an ocular inspection media showed the cemetery, with its 284 tombstones, was
gone.
The
K-9 Cemetery signboard remained, along with a low concrete pedestal where the
statue of a US military officer and his trained dog once stood.
When
the Americans left Clark, they removed the statue and sent it to the Security
Forces Museum in Texas in the US.
The
tombstones were “piled like garbage,” according to Hilbero, on one side of the
cemetery.
“Every
year there are many former US military men who pay their respects and visit
this sacred ground,” Hilbero said.
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