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- <text id=89TT2609>
- <link 93HT0774>
- <link 89TT2705>
- <link 89TT1016>
- <title>
- Oct. 09, 1989: The Philippines:From Despot To Exile
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 09, 1989 Want A Baby?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 52
- THE PHILIPPINES
- From Despot to Exile
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In death as in life, Ferdinand Marcos stirs his homeland
- </p>
- <p>By Howard G. Chua-Eoan
- </p>
- <p> Fallen dictators age badly, even in Hawaii. Toward the end,
- Ferdinand Marcos, once overlord of the Philippines, had become
- a joke. He mumbled that he was living on charity, but visitors
- to his rented $2.5 million residence outside Honolulu saw the
- dozen servants, the 30 bodyguards and the chauffeured limousine.
- His wife Imelda was a regular at posh local shops and every now
- and then gave in to the temptation to show off her finery --
- except for new shoes.
- </p>
- <p> His eyes disappearing into puffy cheeks, a cervical collar
- ever at his neck, Marcos insisted he was too sick to travel to
- New York City for arraignment on charges of racketeering and
- real estate fraud. Still, he argued he was up to a trip to the
- Philippines, ready to win back his kingdom in MacArthurian
- style. Hawaii, Marcos proclaimed, was only his Elba. Everyone
- else knew it was St. Helena.
- </p>
- <p> His last attempts at manipulation were unwitting acts in a
- black comedy. When his mother died in Manila, Marcos refused to
- give permission for her burial, using her corpse to prod the
- government of Corazon Aquino into allowing him to return to
- mourn. He was turned down. In December 1988 a physician testing
- the deposed President's fitness to travel to New York said
- Marcos faked pains. A week later, when Marcos was hospitalized
- with congestive heart failure, many scoffed. As if to spite his
- critics, Marcos became truly ill and died last week at 72.
- Imelda once said she might refuse to bury him unless Manila
- allowed her to bring the corpse home. But though Aquino had
- flags lowered to half-staff, she reiterated that Marcos, even
- in death, would remain an exile for an unspecified time. As
- Philippine forces girded for protests by Marcos loyalists,
- Washington banned planes from flying his remains to the islands.
- </p>
- <p> At the zenith of his power, in 1981, Marcos said his
- country was caught between "a world that was dead and a world
- that was too feeble to be born." The vision that he alone could
- lead it to prosperity and greatness proved painfully illusory.
- He died his country's greatest villain.
- </p>
- <p> Marcos could easily have been a hero. When he was first
- elected President of the Philippines, in November 1965, he had
- history within his grasp. His uncommon combination of political
- shrewdness and ironfisted determination gave a strong measure
- of national identity to the fractious Southeast Asian
- archipelago. Encountering minimal opposition when he took on
- dictatorial powers in 1972, Marcos thoroughly reordered
- Philippine economic and political life, impressing both his
- people and his key ally, the U.S., with his irreplaceability in
- one of the most strategic corridors of the world.
- </p>
- <p> Deliberately patterning their life-style on John Kennedy's
- Camelot, Marcos and his wife enthralled most Filipinos when he
- initially took office. He also set about fulfilling his
- campaign promises of reforms in industry and education. But by
- his second term, in January 1970, the tide had begun to turn
- against the brilliant young President. Protesting the country's
- economic inequities, militant anti-American students pelted the
- Marcoses with rocks and bottles, forcing the couple to bolt
- themselves inside Malacanang Palace for their own security.
- </p>
- <p> In September 1972 Marcos imposed martial law, citing the
- growing strength of the Communist New People's Army (N.P.A.)
- and the collapse of public order, some of which he may have
- orchestrated. In a meticulously executed crackdown, thousands
- of students, journalists, labor leaders and politicians were
- arrested. The government shut down the press and confiscated all
- firearms. Marcos then set the country on a forced march toward
- what he called the New Society.
- </p>
- <p> One-man rule had its salutary effects. Inflation dropped,
- and government revenue increased. If Marcos had dismantled
- martial law by 1977, said his former Defense Chief Juan Ponce
- Enrile later, "he would have been enshrined as the best
- President the country ever had." Marcos, however, decided to
- hold on to absolute power and legitimized it as "constitutional
- authoritarianism."
- </p>
- <p> With rising hubris, Marcos tailored Philippine politics to
- fit his needs even as the Treasury was slowly siphoned into his
- secret Swiss bank accounts. With the loyalty of a military that
- kept his enemies under control through detention, torture and
- murder, the President sat confidently in Malacanang, turning
- down all calls for democracy with pedantic arguments and
- withering hauteur. Marcos, said Jaime Cardinal Sin, Archbishop
- of Manila, "believes he is the only intelligent human being in
- the world."
- </p>
- <p> The beginning of the end came in August 1983 with the
- assassination of Marcos' rival, Benigno Aquino. Marcos blamed
- the N.P.A., which had prospered during his dictatorship, but
- few Filipinos believed him. Public protests blossomed.
- </p>
- <p> In November 1985, in a ploy to satisfy U.S. demands for the
- reinstatement of democracy, Marcos announced an election,
- confident he could still win. It was a stunning miscalculation.
- Marcos counted on the inability of the opposition to unite under
- a single candidate. Instead, his foes -- and the powerful Roman
- Catholic Church -- coalesced under Aquino's widow Corazon. The
- President's blatant attempts to steal the election stirred
- reform elements in the military and the public into the decade's
- first great exercise of People Power. With large elements of the
- military defecting, Marcos was effectively trapped within
- Malacanang, besieged by civilian mobs and air-force rocket
- attacks. Three days after the rebellion broke out, on Feb. 24,
- 1986, his family was evacuated by U.S. helicopters. Within 48
- hours, Marcos was in Hawaii.
- </p>
- <p> Six years before that ignominious flight, Marcos seemed to
- glimpse how his own downfall would come about. During a visit
- to Honolulu, he delivered a telling analysis of the decline of
- Presidents. "I do not care how brave a President is; I do not
- care how many medals he may wear," said he. "I do not care how
- well trained his guards may be. If he violates the will of the
- people, he shall be eliminated."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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