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Prior to his departure from Taipei, Aquino gave an interview from his hotel room indicating that he would be wearing a [[bulletproof vest]] and advised the journalists that would be accompanying him on the flight, "You have to be ready with your hand camera because this action can become very fast. In a matter of 3 or 4 minutes it could be all over, and I may not be able to talk to you again after this."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuEPFt-Dd-Q |title=YouTube - Ninoy Aquino: Worth Dying For (the last interview!) ORIGINAL UPLOAD |publisher=Youtube.com |date= |accessdate=October 6, 2008}}</ref> In Manila, a contingent of over 1,000 armed soldiers and police were assigned by the government to provide security for Aquino's arrival. Upon the airplane's arrival at the [[gate (airport)|gate]], soldiers escorted Aquino off the airplane onto the [[jet bridge]] and down the service staircase onto the [[airport ramp|apron]], where a military vehicle awaited.
Prior to his departure from Taipei, Aquino gave an interview from his hotel room indicating that he would be wearing a [[bulletproof vest]] and advised the journalists that would be accompanying him on the flight, "You have to be ready with your hand camera because this action can become very fast. In a matter of 3 or 4 minutes it could be all over, and I may not be able to talk to you again after this."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuEPFt-Dd-Q |title=YouTube - Ninoy Aquino: Worth Dying For (the last interview!) ORIGINAL UPLOAD |publisher=Youtube.com |date= |accessdate=October 6, 2008}}</ref> In Manila, a contingent of over 1,000 armed soldiers and police were assigned by the government to provide security for Aquino's arrival. Upon the airplane's arrival at the [[gate (airport)|gate]], soldiers escorted Aquino off the airplane onto the [[jet bridge]] and down the service staircase onto the [[airport ramp|apron]], where a military vehicle awaited.


Sometime between his egress from the aircraft and his boarding of the ground vehicle, Aquino was [[ballistic trauma|shot]] in the back of the head. A rapid outburst of gunfire ensued, and when the firing stopped, Aquino and another man, later identified as [[Rolando Galman]], lay dead on the apron. Aquino's body was quickly loaded into the vehicle, which sped away.
Sometime between his egress from the aircraft and his boarding of the ground vehicle, Aquino was [[ballistic trauma|shot]] in the back of the head. A rapid outburst of gunfire ensued, and when the firing stopped, Aquino and another man, later identified as [[Rolando Galman]], lay dead on the apron. Aquino's body was quickly loaded into the vehicle, which sped away. Despite a large number of international media at the airport filming Aquino's arrival, no camera captured the shooting itself.


[[File:Ninoyassassination.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The bodies of Ninoy Aquino (in white) and Rolando Galman (in blue) on the apron of [[Ninoy Aquino International Airport|Manila International Airport]].]]
[[File:Ninoyassassination.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The bodies of Ninoy Aquino (in white) and Rolando Galman (in blue) on the apron of [[Ninoy Aquino International Airport|Manila International Airport]].]]
[[File:Ninoy-aquino.jpg|thumb|200px|AVSECOM units scramble after Aquino was shot dead.]]
[[File:Ninoy-aquino.jpg|thumb|200px|AVSECOM units scramble after Aquino was shot dead.]]


Initially, the government-run news media reported that Aquino was killed together with an "unknown" assassin. <ref>''Chronicles of a Revolution: 1995'', p. 27</ref>. It later identified the assassin as Galman, a Communist sympathizer who was subsequently killed by the security detail. However, politicians and diplomats found evident contradictions between the claim and the photos and the videotape footage that documented the time before and after the shooting. The footage had circulated throughout the Philippines at that time.<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |author= |coauthors= |title=Test of Wills |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,926285-1,00.html |work=Time (magazine) |id= |pages= |page= |date=October 24, 1983 |accessdate=August 21, 2007 |language= |quote= |archiveurl= |archivedate= }}</ref>
Initially, the government-run news media reported that Aquino was killed together with an "unknown" assassin.<ref>''Chronicles of a Revolution: 1995'', p. 27</ref> It later identified the assassin as Galman, a Communist sympathizer who was subsequently killed by the security detail. However, politicians and diplomats found evident contradictions between the claim and the photos and the videotape footage that documented the time before and after the shooting. The footage had circulated throughout the Philippines at that time.<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |author= |coauthors= |title=Test of Wills |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,926285-1,00.html |work=Time (magazine) |id= |pages= |page= |date=October 24, 1983 |accessdate=August 21, 2007 |language= |quote= |archiveurl= |archivedate= }}</ref>


==Funeral==
==Funeral==

Revision as of 21:54, 10 June 2010

Ninoy Aquino assassination
File:Shot Dead on Arrival.JPG
Aftermath of the assassination captured on video.
LocationManila International Airport, Manila, Philippines
DateAugust 21, 1983
Attack type
Shooting assassination
Weaponssmall arms
Deaths2 (Benigno Aquino, Jr. and Rolando Galman)
PerpetratorsRogelio Moreno

The assassination of Benigno Aquino, Jr. was an act of murder that occurred on August 21, 1983 at Manila International Airport near Manila in the Philippines. Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino, Jr., returning to his home country after a 3-year political exile in the United States, was shot in the head on the airport ramp while being escorted from an aircraft to a waiting vehicle.

Aquino was a longtime opponent of Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos and had been imprisoned shortly after Marcos' 1972 declaration of martial law. He suffered a heart attack in 1980 while in prison and was allowed to leave the country two months later by Marcos' wife, Imelda. He spent the next three years in exile near Boston before deciding to return to the Philippines.

Aquino's assassination is credited with transforming the opposition to the Marcos regime from a small, isolated movement into a nationally unified crusade. It is also credited with thrusting Aquino's widow, Corazon, into the public spotlight and her running for president in the snap election of 1986. Though Marcos was officially declared the winner of the election, widespread allegations of fraud and illegal tampering on Marcos' behalf is credited with sparking the People Power Revolution, which resulted in Marcos fleeing the country and conceding the presidency to Corazon Aquino.

An official government investigation ordered by Marcos shortly after Aquino's assassination led to murder charges against 25 military personnel; all were acquitted by the Sandiganbayan (special court). After Marcos was ousted, another government investigation under Corazon Aquino's administration led to the conviction of 16 people, all of whom were sentenced to life imprisonment. Since their conviction, all 16 people convicted in Aquino's murder have had their sentences commuted and have been released from prison, or died in prison.

Background

Benigno Aquino, Jr. was elected to the Philippine Senate in 1967. During his first year as senator, Aquino began speaking out against the authoritarian rule of President Ferdinand Marcos; Marcos in turn saw Aquino as the biggest threat to his power.

On September 21, 1972, Marcos declared martial law and ordered Aquino and others arrested and imprisoned on trumped up charges of murder and subversion. Aquino went on a hunger strike to protest the injustice of his military tribunal but ended the strike after 40 days. The tribunal lasted several years, all while Aquino was still imprisoned, and on November 25, 1977, he was convicted on all charged and sentenced to death. However, Aquino and others believed that Marcos would not allow him to be executed, as Aquino had gained a great deal of support while imprisoned and such a fate would surely make him a martyr for his supporters.

In 1978, while still in prison, Aquino founded his political party, Lakas ng Bayan (abbreviated "LABAN"; English: People's Power) to run for office in the Interim Batasang Pambansa (Parliament). All LABAN candidates lost, primarily to candidates of Marcos' party, amid allegations of election fraud.

In March 1980, Aquino suffered a heart attack in prison. He was transported to the Philippine Heart Center, where he suffered a second heart attack. Doctors determined he needed coronary artery bypass surgery; however, no surgeon wanted to perform the operation out of fear of controversy, and Aquino refused to undergo the procedure in the Philippines out of fear of sabotage by Marcos, indicating he would either go to the United States to undergo the procedure or die in his prison cell. On May 8, 1980, First Lady Imelda Marcos arranged for Aquino and his family to leave for the U.S. He underwent the coronary bypass surgery in Dallas, Texas and met with Muslim leaders in Damascus, Syria, before settling with his family in Newton, Massachusetts.

Aquino spent the next three years in exile in the U.S., wherein he worked on manuscripts for two books and delivered several lectures and speeches critical of the Marcos government. By 1983, news of the political situation in the Philippines led Aquino to return to his homeland, fully aware of the danger that awaited him. Despite attempts by the government to block his return, Aquino, after flying in a circuitous route from the United States to several Asian countries, boarded a China Airlines plane in Taipei and landed in Manila on August 21, 1983.

Assassination

Prior to his departure from Taipei, Aquino gave an interview from his hotel room indicating that he would be wearing a bulletproof vest and advised the journalists that would be accompanying him on the flight, "You have to be ready with your hand camera because this action can become very fast. In a matter of 3 or 4 minutes it could be all over, and I may not be able to talk to you again after this."[1] In Manila, a contingent of over 1,000 armed soldiers and police were assigned by the government to provide security for Aquino's arrival. Upon the airplane's arrival at the gate, soldiers escorted Aquino off the airplane onto the jet bridge and down the service staircase onto the apron, where a military vehicle awaited.

Sometime between his egress from the aircraft and his boarding of the ground vehicle, Aquino was shot in the back of the head. A rapid outburst of gunfire ensued, and when the firing stopped, Aquino and another man, later identified as Rolando Galman, lay dead on the apron. Aquino's body was quickly loaded into the vehicle, which sped away. Despite a large number of international media at the airport filming Aquino's arrival, no camera captured the shooting itself.

File:Ninoyassassination.jpg
The bodies of Ninoy Aquino (in white) and Rolando Galman (in blue) on the apron of Manila International Airport.
File:Ninoy-aquino.jpg
AVSECOM units scramble after Aquino was shot dead.

Initially, the government-run news media reported that Aquino was killed together with an "unknown" assassin.[2] It later identified the assassin as Galman, a Communist sympathizer who was subsequently killed by the security detail. However, politicians and diplomats found evident contradictions between the claim and the photos and the videotape footage that documented the time before and after the shooting. The footage had circulated throughout the Philippines at that time.[3]

Funeral

Aquino's body lay in state in a glass coffin. No effort was made to disguise a bullet wound that had disfigured his face. Aquino's funeral on August 31 lasted from 9 a.m., when his funeral mass was held at Santo Domingo Church, with the Cardinal Archbishop of Manila, Jaime Sin officiating, to 9 p.m., when his body was interred at the Manila Memorial Park. Two million people lined the streets during the procession which was aired by the Church-sponsored Radio Veritas, the only station to do so. The procession reached Rizal Park, where the Philippine flag was brought to half-staff.

Jovito Salonga, then head of the Liberal Party, said about Ninoy:

"... Ninoy was getting impatient in Boston, he felt isolated by the flow of events in the Philippines. In early 1983, Marcos was seriously ailing, the Philippine economy was just as rapidly declining, and insurgency was becoming a serious problem. Ninoy thought that by coming home he might be able to persuade Marcos to restore democracy and somehow revitalize the Liberal Party ..."[4]

and called him:

"...The greatest president we never had ..."[4]

Investigation

Everyone from the Central Intelligence Agency, to the United Nations, to the Communist Party of the Philippines to First Lady Imelda Marcos was accused of conspiracy.[citation needed] President Marcos was reportedly gravely ill, recovering from a kidney transplant when the incident occurred. Theories arose as to who was in charge and who ordered the execution. Some hypothesized that Marcos had a long-standing order for Aquino's murder upon the latter's return.

Marcos immediately created a fact-finding commission to investigate the Aquino assassination, headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Enrique Fernando. Four retired Supreme Court Justices were appointed; they resigned, after its composition was challenged in court. Arturo M. Tolentino declined appointment as board chairman. However, the commission held only two sittings due to intense public criticism. On October 14, 1983, President Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 1886 creating an independent board of inquiry. The board was composed of former Court of Appeals Justice Ma. Corazón J. Agrava as chairman, with lawyer Luciano E. Salazar, businessman Dante G. Santos, labor leader Ernesto F. Herrera and educator Amado C. Dizón.

The Agrava Fact-Finding Board convened on November 3, 1983. But, before it could start its work President Marcos accused the Communists of the killing of Senator Aquino: the decision to eliminate the former Senator, Marcos claimed, was made by none other than the general-secretary of the Philippine Communist Party, Rodolfo Salas. He was referring to his earlier claim that Aquino had befriended and subsequently betrayed his Communist comrades."

The Agrava Board conducted public hearings, and requested testimony from several persons who might shed light on the crimes, including Imelda Marcos, and General Fabián Ver, Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).

In the subsequent proceedings, no one actually identified who fired the gun that killed Aquino, but Rebecca Quijano, another passenger, testified that she saw a man behind Aquino (running from the stairs towards Aquino and his escorts) point a gun at the back of his head, then there was the sound of a gunshot. A post-mortem analysis disclosed that Aquino was shot in the back of the head at close range with the bullet exiting at the chin at an angle which supported Quijano's testimony. More suspicions were aroused when Quijano described the assassin as wearing a military uniform.

After a year of thorough investigation – with 20,000 pages of testimony given by 193 witnesses, the Agrava Board submitted two reports to President Marcos – the Majority and Minority Reports. The Minority Report, submitted by Chairman Agrava alone, was submitted on October 23, 1984. It confirmed that the Aquino assassination was a military conspiracy but it cleared General Ver. Many believed that President Marcos intimidated and pressured the members of the Board to persuade them not to indict Ver, Marcos’ first cousin and most trusted general. Excluding Chairman Agrava, the majority of the board submitted a separate report – the Majority Report – indicting several members of the Armed Forces including Ver, General Luther Custodio, and General Próspero Olivas, head of AVSECOM.

Later, 25 military personnel, including several generals and colonels, and one civilian were charged for the murder of Senator Aquino. President Marcos relieved Ver as AFP Chief and appointed his second cousin, General Fidel V. Ramos as acting AFP Chief. The accused were tried by the Sandiganbayan (special court). After a brief trial, the Sandiganbayan acquitted all the accused on December 2, 1985. Immediately after the decision, Marcos re-instated Ver. The Sandiganbayan ruling and the reinstatement of Ver were denounced as a mockery of justice.

After Marcos was ousted in 1986, another investigation was set up by the new government. Sixteen defendants were found guilty: Brig. Gen. Luther Custodio, Capt. Romeo Bautista, 2nd Lt. Jesús Castro, Sergeants Claro L. Lat, Arnulfo de Mesa, Filomeno Miranda, Rolando de Guzmán, Ernesto Mateo, Rodolfo Desolong, Ruben Aquino and Arnulfo Artates, Constable Rogelio Moreno (the gunman), M/Sgt. Pablo Martínez, C1C Mario Lazaga, A1C Cordova Estelo, and A1C Felizardo Taran.

They were sentenced to life imprisonment. They recently filed an appeal to have their sentences reduced after 22 years, claiming the assassination was ordered by a Marcos crony and business partner (and Corazón Aquino's estranged cousin), Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr., who was eventually cleared by the Aquino family. Through the years, some have been pardoned, others have died in detention, while yet others have had their terms commuted and then served these out. As of March 2009, the last remaining convicts have been released from prison.

Aftermath

File:Ninoy Aquino's bloodied jacket.JPG
Ninoy Aquino's actual bloodied safari jacket, pants (folded), belt and boots that he wore upon his return from exile are on permanent display at the Aquino Center in Tarlac.

The death of Benigno Aquino transformed the Philippine opposition from a small isolated movement to a massive unified crusade, incorporating people from all walks of life. The middle class got involved, the impoverished majority participated, and business leaders whom Marcos had irked during martial law endorsed the campaign—all with the crucial support of the military and the Catholic Church hierarchy. The assassination showed the increasing incapacity of the Marcos regime—Ferdinand was mortally ill when the crime occurred while his cronies mismanaged the country in his absence. It outraged Aquino's supporters that Marcos, if not masterminding it, allowed the assassination to happen and engineered its cover-up. The mass revolt caused by Aquino's demise attracted worldwide media attention and Marcos' American contacts, as well as the Reagan Administration, began distancing themselves. There was a global media spotlight on the Philippine crisis, and exposés on Imelda's extravagant lifestyle (most infamously, her thousands of pairs of shoes) and "mining operations", as well as Ferdinand's dictatorial excesses, came into focus.

The assassination thrust Aquino's widow, Corazón "Cory" Aquino, into the public eye. She was the presidential candidate of UNIDO opposition party in the 1986 snap election, running against Marcos. The official results showed a Marcos victory, but this was universally dismissed as fraudulent. In the subsequent People Power Revolution, Marcos resigned and went into exile, and Mrs. Aquino became President.

While no Filipino president has ever been assassinated, Benigno Aquino is one of three presidential spouses who have been murdered. Aurora Quezon was killed along with her daughter and son-in-law in a Hukbalahap ambush in 1949, while Alicia Syquia-Quirino was murdered by the Japanese along with three of her children during the Battle of Manila in 1945.

In 1987, Manila International Airport, where the assassination occurred, was renamed "Ninoy Aquino International Airport" in Aquino's honor.

Timeline of the murder case

  • August 24, 1983: Ferdinand Marcos created a fact-finding commission headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Enrique Fernando to investigate the Aquino murder; it dissolved after two meetings.
  • August 31, 1983: More than 2 million people lined the streets for Aquino's funeral procession.
  • October 22, 1983: Marcos created another fact-finding committee known as the Agrava Fact-Finding Board.
  • October 22, 1984: THE Agrava Board released reports concluding that military officers, including then Armed Forces Chief of Staff General Fabian Ver, conspired to kill Ninoy Aquino; the Supreme Court assigned the case to the Sandiganbayan.
  • December 2, 1985: The Sandiganbayan acquitted all the accused.
  • September 12, 1986: The Supreme Court, newly re-organized following the 1986 Edsa Revolution, orders a retrial of the accused. 25 military men and one civilian are charged.
  • September 28, 1990: 16 defendants are convicted by the Sandiganbayan and sentenced to life imprisonment.
  • July 23, 1991: The Supreme Court affirmed the conviction.
  • November 21, 1998: Ver died of a lung ailment in Bangkok.
  • March 8, 2005: The Supreme Court denied the petition of the accused (filed on August 2004) to re-open the case.
  • August 21, 2007: The 24th anniversary of Ninoy’s murder. Chief Justice Andrés Narvasa appealed for the closure of the case; Juan Ponce Enrile asked for the review for clemency in favor of the 14 convicts; Palawan Bishop Pedro Arigo, chairman of the CBCP’s Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care (ECPPC) asked pardon for the convicts; Corazón Aquino and Benigno Aquino III forgave the 14 soldiers but opposed their appeals for clemency or parole (which Sec. Raul Gonzales submitted to the President on 2004); Eduardo Ermita stated that the Bureau of Pardons and Parole had recommended a grant of executive clemency.[5][6][7]
  • August 24, 2007: Eduardo Ermita officially announced that due to political implications, the appeal for clemency by the 14 soldiers was archived, even if the Bureau of Pardons and Parole presently reviews the plea. The executive secretary refused to give a time frame for the review.[8]
  • November 22, 2007: After more than 21 years, one of the convicts, Pablo Martínez, was released after President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo pardoned him for humanitarian reasons. Martínez said:
"Kung nakikinig man kayo Madam Cory Aquino patawarin ninyo ako sa nagawa kong pagkakasala noon."
("If you are listening, Madame Cory Aquino, forgive me for the wrongdoings that I did before.")[9]
  • March 14, 2008: Former Cpl. 1st Class Mario Lazaga one of the 16 convicted soldiers died of hypertension in prison. Two other convicts had already died in detention since M/Sgt. Pablo Martinez’s pardon.[10]
  • February 2009: A1C Felizardo Taran and Sgt. Rolando de Guzman, whose sentences were commuted by former President Fidel V. Ramos and President Arroyo respectively, completed their prison terms and were released.[11]
  • March 4, 2009: The remaining 10 convicts, Rogelio Moreno, Rubén Aquino, Arnulfo Artates, Romeo Bautista, Jesús Castro, Arnulfo De Mesa, Rodolfo Desolong, Claro Lat, Ernesto Mateo, and Filomeno Miranda, were released.[12]

References

  1. ^ "YouTube - Ninoy Aquino: Worth Dying For (the last interview!) ORIGINAL UPLOAD". Youtube.com. Retrieved October 6, 2008.
  2. ^ Chronicles of a Revolution: 1995, p. 27
  3. ^ "Test of Wills". Time (magazine). October 24, 1983. Retrieved August 21, 2007. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ a b The Greatest President We Never Had - Liberal Party of the Philippines
  5. ^ Inquirer.net, Pardon for Ninoy Aquino’s killers now in Arroyo’s hands
  6. ^ GMA NEWS.TV, Bishop to ask clemency for convicts in Ninoy case
  7. ^ Lawphil.net, G.R. No. 72670, September 12, 1986
  8. ^ "Abs-Cbn Interactive, Palace mulls clemency for 14 soldiers in Aquino-Galman slay". Archived from the original on September 26, 2007.
  9. ^ gmanews.tv, Aquino-Galman murder convict freed by Arroyo
  10. ^ Abs-Cbn Interactive, Another Aquino-Galman convict dies
  11. ^ Timeline: Double murders on tarmac - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
  12. ^ 10 Aquino-Galman convicts free finally - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos