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Dear readers, Last February it was the month of Love and trues enough that was the month when I received that last Valentines card from my husband. I did not know that even in his hospital bed he asked his youngest daughter to get me a card and a box of chocolates to make me feel [...]
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Page added on August 20, 2016
All is set for the burial of the late president Ferdinand Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani in Taguig City on Sept. 18, his son and namesake, former senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr., disclosed yesterday.
Their family has, in fact, started preparations for the interment rites that include military honors, according to Marcos.
He said President Duterte has given the go-signal for his family to finally bury his father at Libingan during a meeting with him at Malacañang earlier this week.
Yesterday, over lunch with selected editors, Marcos said he and older sister, Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos, have been coordinating with key officials of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) that administers the heroes’ cemetery.
“My sister Imee is taking care of the rites in Ilocos because Ilocanos would get angry at us if they would not be able to pay their last respects to him. We’ll bring him first to Sarrat, then to Paoay, before taking him by plane for the burial here at Libingan,” he said.
Meanwhile, he has been coordinating with the AFP protocol and learned that aside from military honors – a 21-gun salute – and horse-ridden funeral cortege, they must conform with the tradition of burying the remains at exactly noon.
Asked by The STAR why Sept. 18 and not Sept. 11 or the birth anniversary of the elder Marcos, the former senator replied: “Because we want another day to celebrate, and not only on his birth or death anniversary.”
Marcos Jr., who ran but lost in the vice presidential race during the May 9 polls, told the editors that the lunch gathering was part of his “pasasalamat (thank you)” for the fair coverage of his campaign.
He came along with his wife, lawyer Liza Araneta-Marcos, and two of his three sons – Zandro and Simon.
Their youngest, Vincent, was not around.
Marcos is contesting the slim margin – 200,000-plus votes – by which he lost to Liberal Party (LP) candidate, former Camarines Sur representative Leni Robredo, in a protest filed before the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET).
His lawyers lodged separate complaints against Smartmatic and the Commission on Elections before the lower courts all the way to the Supreme Court (SC).
During the campaign, then Davao City mayor Duterte and former vice president Jejomar Binay replied “yes” to a question on whether they would allow the burial of former president Marcos at the Libingan.
The issue was raised to all five presidential candidates – Duterte, Binay, Sen. Grace Poe, LP standard-bearer Manuel Roxas and former senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago.
A Marcos burial at Libingan has been vehemently opposed by human rights victims of the late dictator during the martial law regime and other critics.
But Duterte has been unperturbed over sentiments against the issue.
Prior to his official assumption into office at Malacañang, then president-elect Duterte dismissed criticisms on the commitment he gave to Marcos Jr. to make good his campaign stand to allow a Libingan burial for his father.
During the courtesy call at Malacañang last Wednesday by The STAR editors and reporters, Duterte praised Marcos as “the most brilliant president” that the Philippines ever had.
He lauded the Masagana 99 rice production program of the late president as trailblazing, among other long-range plans and programs that propelled the country to where it is now.
“Ang ganda ng patakbo nya (he ran the country well), even in Mindanao, nasira lang ng asawa (it was just ruined by his wife),” the President said.
Though he did not name her, Duterte was obviously referring to Marcos’ widow, former first lady Imelda Romualdez-Marcos, who has been reelected for a third and last term as representative of the second district of Ilocos Norte.
Duterte renewed his commitment for a Marcos burial last June 11 when Marcos Jr. flew to Davao City for a courtesy call.
“The issue on the burial of President Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani has long created divisions among our people,” Duterte said after the June 11 meeting with the young Marcos.
“I will allow the burial of President Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani not because he is a hero. He was a Filipino soldier, period. That can be arranged immediately,” Duterte said.
Marcos Jr. told The STAR he met anew with Duterte earlier this week to update him about the burial arrangements.
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