SPECIAL EDSA
20TH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE JAN-FEB 2006 TUNE IN TO 20 Featured Filipinos
Corazon C. Aquino Imelda Marcos Fidel V. Ramos Juan Ponce Enrile Gregorio ‘Gringo’ Honasan Jose Concepcion Jr. Rene A.V. Saguisag Bernabe ‘Kumander Dante’ Buscayno Nur Misuari Teresita Ang See Romeo J. Intengan Eugenia Apostol William Torres Carmen Deunida, a.k.a. Nanay Mameng Jim Paredes Luz Emmanuel Soriano Raymundo Jarque Jose Luis Martin ‘Chito’ Gascon Ma. Cecilia Flores-Oebando Alfonso Tomas ‘Atom’ P. Araullo
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‘We returned to democracy, but the practices are undemocratic’
For Jarque, as well as for many other military officers, Edsa 1 was a major turning point. Then already the deputy commander for civil and military operations of the Regional Unified Command No. 3 based in Camp Olivas, Pampanga, he had thrown his support behind the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) in its coup plot against Ferdinand Marcos in 1986. Though Marcos had nipped the attempt in the bud, RAM's withdrawal of support from the government ushered in the four-day people power revolt that eventually toppled the dictatorship. Jarque and his men were already semi-members of RAM at the time. Having served mostly under Marcos as commander in chief, he, like many of his fellow officers, were unhappy with the military organization. Their grievances sowed the seeds of the reform movement within the military. The early 1980s saw growing resentment within the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), particularly among middle-ranking officers who were graduates of the Philippine Military Academy (PMA). These officers balked at the lack of professionalism and corruption they saw among the generals and senior officers, problems that they blamed solely on Marcos. "We believed that as long as Marcos was still the president and commander in chief, we had no chance to rise up in the military hierarchy," he says, pointing to Marcos's penchant for appointing fellow Ilocanos to the AFP top brass to the demoralization of officers like himself who hailed from other regions. Marcos also subverted the promotions system by extending the terms of his favored generals. Gen. Romeo Espino, for instance, served as AFP chief of staff for nine years from 1972 to 1981. Edsa 1 caught Jarque in Camp Olivas, where the commanding general, Gen. Isidoro de Guzman, remained loyal to the duly constituted authority, meaning Marcos and the military chain of command. Jarque and many other men in the camp, however, began getting orders from the new AFP commanded by Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos in Camp Crame, even as they continued to extend due courtesy and cooperation to de Guzman. In the succeeding days, Jarque and his men would secure the Basa airbase in Pampanga in an effort to frustrate the takeover of the 5th Air Fighter Wing by followers of the Marcos loyalist, Gen. Jose Zumel. They also blocked the highways leading to Nueva Ecija and Bulacan, barricading them with trucks to prevent the Marcos forces from coming to Manila. They were not alone: dozens of nuns, priests, and civic leaders helped the soldiers put up the roadblocks. When the Marcoses fled, and the new government and armed forces had been put in place, Jarque nurtured high expectations. He would not be a part of any of the post-Edsa coup attempts, saying he wanted to give the Aquino government a chance. The general, who confesses to idolizing the late Sen. Benigno 'Ninoy' Aquino Jr. and keeping clippings of his writings, had hoped that the Filipino people, especially those in government, including the military and police, would be jolted out of the culture of patronage, corruption, and abuse that prevailed during the Marcos years. He certainly did not foresee that he would one day be accused of graft himself, or that his son, a West Point graduate and promising young officer, would leave the armed forces in disgust and disillusionment.
But Jarque has few — if any — regrets about how he conducted himself in the military. If he had to flee to the enemy camp after being unjustly sued, it was not because he was guilty, but because he knew the Edsa Revolution had restored only democracy and not much else. As he saw it, the system had merely tilted more toward the privileged, which included his accuser, a rich businessman named Magdaleno Peña. Jarque says that in 1991, he was accused of stealing a ton of — of all things — prawns from Peña's fishpond. The general was then head of the Negros Island Command, which had jurisdiction over some of the most feudal, and most rebel-infested, areas in the country. He says he got caught in a vicious family feud: he and his men had merely been helping the Philippine Constabulary implement a court order reinstating Peña's brother as administrator of their grandmother's estate. Magdaleno Peña, an haciendero who had well-placed connections in the government and the military, apparently took it out on Jarque, filing theft, graft and other cases against the general and vowing to send him to Muntinlupa. Suspecting that the scales of justice were tipped against him because the Ombudsman was in Peña's pocket, Jarque sought asylum in 1995 among the New People's Army (NPA) in the hills of Negros. Surprisingly, the communists welcomed him to their fold — but not after many months of conducting a check on his background. "When I finally met Fr. (Frank) Fernandez, the Negros Island NPA commander, I asked how come they're accepting me. They'd checked and found out that I (was) the only military commander who did not enrich himself while in power, and who (had) only one wife," he recounts, unable to contain a chuckle. "He said you cannot be a revolutionary if you don't stand on moral high ground." He didn't get away as easily regarding "Operation Thunderbolt," the military's seven-month-long counterinsurgency campaign in 1989 in the CHICKS (Cauayan, Hinobaan, Ilog, Candoni, Kabankalan, and Sipalay) area of Negros Island, home to the first guerrilla front of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP). "Thunderbolt" resulted in the massive displacement of 30,000 villagers and the death of about 300 children, including infants. Jarque explained to his communist hosts that his was a purely military response to the NPA raid on a military outpost in Candoni that killed six of his men and a civilian. He has nonetheless apologized for his role in the operation. But he says he wasn't really a cruel commander, pointing out, "A lot of times, I would send home the NPA rebels we captured as many of them joined the rebel movement out of a sense of injustice and poverty."
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