Sangil: The anti-terror law is scary

SUDDEN change of heart? Pressured by the massive public opinion? Anyway there a saying that only fools don't change their minds. One by one, and then in batches members of the House of Representatives withdrew their support on the Anti-Terrorism bill which was recently approved by both houses. What is sad, the lower house just adopted en toto the senate version. The bill didn't even pass the bi-cameral conference committee which is sometimes called the third congress where passed bills are smoothen out before they are transmitted to Malacanang.

Life in the Philippines keeps evolving. When I was in grade school there were no television yet, and only the very rich families in our town owned radios. Information technology grew faster and the population the same manner. We are now more than 105 million. The laidback towns morphed into urban areas. As it was then, the government with the Philippine Constabulary fiercely engaged the dissidents. Government never won in its campaign. As a testament, the New People's Army is still very much around. Under the Anti-Terrorism bill, once it will be signed into a law by President Duterte, anyone who will be tagged as a symphatizer can be "invited" for questioning without a warrant and can be held for more than a week or two. That's scary. In defense of the bill, former top cop now Senator Panfilo Lacson said if it will be abused he will lead personally a rally denouncing such. Sorry, Mr. Senator not much people will believe you there.

RETRO: Ramon Magsaysay deserves the title "Man of the Masses." I remember this incident vividly about this well loved president. I was still in shorts and was playing with other kids at the town plaza in my hometown of Porac when a car stopped and a hunk of a man with a buri hat alighted from a car and seemingly sought a direction from an old lady waiting for a ride to Angeles City.

The old lady must have been shocked and unbelieving with a her eyes fixed on the tall man. When she was able to collect herself she was so agitated and waved to everyone she saw and started shouting: "Hoy, hoy I Magsaysay, I Magsaysay." I wouldn't know what was President Magsaysay's doing in my laid back town, but my young mind was so impressed.

When Magsaysay was voted president he wanted nothing more than to achieve peace. But standing in between was the Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan (HMB) a dissident group led by its Supremo Ka Luis M. Taruc, a tailor from San Luis Pampanga who earlier founded the Hukbo Laban sa Hapon (Hukbalahap), a guerrilla unit that fought the Japanese invaders during World War 2. He became a member of the congressmen of seven who opposed passages of Bell Trade Act, Parity Rights and the RP-US Bases Agreement. Then President Manuel Roxas reportedly initiated moves to unseat the oppositionist Taruc. He was removed from congress and went back to the hills.

There was this young reporter of the Manila Times, the largest newspaper in the country during those years, who in 1951 covered the Korean War and made a good account of himself. It was his passport to fame. The young Benigno S. Aquino Jr. aka Ninoy of Concepcion, Tarlac was invited by Magsaysay to Malacanang and tasked him to seek for Taruc and convince the latter to lay down his arms. There was an arranged meeting between the two on a hillside somewhere in Porac. The young Ninoy was able to convince the dissident leader.

(As a sidelight, the Aquinos of Tarlac are originally from Angeles City, but the Aquino patriarch, Braulio moved to Concepcion town, then a barrio of Magalang. He had a son named Servillano who became a war hero. Braulio had a son he named Benigno who became a senator and was married to Aurora Aquino. The couple's most popular son was Ninoy, a junior of his father).

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Ka Luis Taruc was given a long jail sentence. Magsaysay met his untimely death in a plane crash in Manunggal in Cebu province and wasn't able to redeem his pledge to the jailed Taruc. It was only during the time of President Ferdinand Marcos when he became a free man. He died in his early nineties.

The death of Ka Luis didn't end the insurgency problem in the country. The HMB continued and produced leaders like Pedro Taruc alias Ka Boyong, Faustino Del Mundo alias Commander Sumulong and Cesario Manarang alias Commander Alibasbas. The feud between Sumulong and Alibasbas heightened when some local politicians sowed intrigued between the two. Sumulong's henchmen massacred Alibasbas and group. Sumulong prevailed for many years till his capture in Angeles City in 1970. Earlier in 1962, A new dissident group emerged, and styled themselves as the New People's Army. And still exist today.

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