IT WAS FIVE MINUTES PAST FIVE in the afternoon, by the clock on the
Maharnilad tower, when I arrived at Congress. The President was already
delivering his State of the Nation message: loudspeakers on both sides
of the legislative building relayed the familiar voice and the equally
familiar rhetoric to anyone in the streets who cared to listen. In front
of the building, massed from end to end of Burgos Drive, spilling over
to the parking lot and the grassy sidewalk that forms an embankment
above the Muni golf course, were the demonstrators. Few of them cared to
listen to the President. They had brought with them microphones and
loudspeakers of their own and they lent their ears to people they could
see, standing before them, on the raised ground that leads to the steps
of the legislative building, around the flagpole, beneath a flag that
was at half-mast. There were, according to conservative estimates, at
least 20,000 of them, perhaps even 50,000. Beyond
the fringes of this huge convocation stood the uniformed policemen,
their long rattan sticks swinging like clocks’ pendulums at their sides;
with them were the members of the riot squad, wearing crash helmets and
carrying wicker shields.
I came on foot from the Luneta, which was as far as my taxi could go,
and made straight for the Congress driveway. A cop at the foot of the
driveway took one look at my hair and waved me away, pointing to the
demonstrators beyond a row of white hurdles. When I pointed to the
special press badge pinned to the breast pocket of my leather jacket, he
eyed me suspiciously, but finally let me through the cordon sanitaire.
The guard at the door of Congress was no less suspicious, on guard
against intruders and infiltrators, and along the corridors it seemed
that every man in uniform tightened his grip on his carbine as I passed
by, and strained his eyes to read the fine print on my press badge.
The doors of the session hall were locked, presumably to prevent late
entrances from disturbing the assembly listening to the President’s
message. A clutch of photographers who had arrived late milled outside
the session hall, talking with some men in barong Tagalog, pleading and
demanding to be let in. The men in barong Tagalog shook their heads,
smiled ruefully, and shrugged; they had their orders. I decided to go
out and have a look at the demonstration.
Among the demonstrators it was possible to feel at ease. None of them
carried guns, they didn’t stand on ceremony, and there was no need for
the aura of privilege that a press badge automatically confers on its
wearer. I took off the badge, pocketed it, and reflected on the
pleasurable sensation that comes from being inconspicuous. It seemed
awkward, absurd, to strut around with a label on a lapel proclaiming
one’s identity, a feeling doubtless shared by cops who were even then
surreptitiously removing their name plates. Also, I was curious. No
joiner of demonstrations in my antisocial student days, I now wanted to
know how it felt like to be in one, not as journalistic observer but as
participant, and I wanted to find out what treatment I could expect from
authority in this guise.
I found out soon enough, and the knowledge hurt.
At about half past five, the demo that had been going on for more
than four hours was only beginning to warm up. The colegialas in their
well-pressed uniforms were wandering off toward the Luneta, munching on
pinipig crunches and dying of boredom. Priests and seminarians lingered
at one edge of the crowd, probably discussing the epistemology of
dissent. Behind the traffic island in the middle of Burgos Drive, in the
negligible shade of the pine trees, ice cream and popsicle carts vied
for attention with small tables each laden with paper and envelopes, an
improvised cardboard mailbox and a sign that urged: Write Your
Congressman. In this outer circle of the demo, things were relatively
quiet; but in the inner circle, nearer Congress, right below the mikes,
the militants were restless, clamorous, chanting their slogans, carrying
the streamers that bore the names of their organizations, waving
placards (made out of those controversial Japanese-made
calendars the administration gave away during the campaign) that
pictured the President as Hitler, the First Couple as Bonnie and Clyde.
There were two mikes, taped together; and this may sound frivolous,
but I think the mikes were the immediate cause of the trouble that
ensued. They were in the hands of Edgar Jopson of the National Union of
Students of the Philippines, the group that had organized the rally and
secured the permit for it. The NUSP dubbed its demonstration “the
January 26 Movement”; its chief objective was to demand “a nonpartisan
Constitutional Convention in 1971.” Demonstrations, however, are never
restricted to members of the organization to which a permit has been
issued. They are, according to standard practice, open to all
sympathizers who care to join; and to the January 26 Movement the
veterans of countless demos sent their representatives. Swelling the
numbers of the dissenters were youth organizations like the Kabataang
Makabayan, the Samahang Demokratiko ng Kabataan, the Malayang Pagkakaisa
ng Kabataang Pilipino, the Kilusan ng Kabataang Makati; labor
groups like the National Association of Trade Unions; peasant associations like the Malayang Samahang Magsasaka.
Now, at about half past five, Jopson, who was in polo barong and
sported a red armband with the inscription “J26M,” announced that the
next speaker would be Gary Olivar of the SDK and of the University of
the Philippines student council. Scads of demonstration leaders stood
with Jopson on that raised ground with the Congress flagpole, but Olivar
was at this point not to be seen among them. The mikes passed instead
to Roger Arienda, the radio commentator and publisher of Bomba. Arienda
may sound impressive to his radio listeners, but in person he acts like a
parody of a high-school freshman delivering Mark Anthony’s funeral
oration. His bombast, complete with expansive gestures, drew laughter
and Bronx cheers from the militants up front, who now started chanting:
“We want Gary! We want Gary!”
Arienda retreated, the chant grew louder, and someone with glasses
who looked like a priest took the mikes and in a fruity, flute-thin
voice pleaded for sobriety and silence. “We are all in this together,”
he fluted. “We are with you. There is no need for shouting. Let us
respect each other.” Or words to that effect. By this time, Olivar was
visible, standing next to Jopson. It was about a quarter to six.
When Jopson got the mikes back, however, he did not pass them on to
Olivar. Once more he announced: “Ang susunod na magsasalita ay si Gary
Olivar.” Olivar stretched out his hand, waiting for the mikes, and the
crowd resumed its chant; but Jopson after some hesitation now said:
“Aawitin natin ang Bayang Magiliw.” Those seated, squatting, or sprawled
on the road rose as one man. Jopson sang the first verse of the
national anthem, then paused, as if to let the crowd go on from there:
instead he went right on singing into the mikes, drowning out the voices
of everybody else, pausing every now and then for breath or to change
his pitch.
Olivar stood there with a funny expression on his face, his mouth
assuming a shape that was not quite a smile, not quite a scowl. Other
demonstration leaders started remonstrating with Jopson, gesturing
toward the mikes, but he pointedly ignored them. He repeated his
instructions to NUSP members, then started acting busy and looking
preoccupied, all the while clutching the mikes to his breast.
Manifestoes that had earlier been passed from hand to hand now started
flying, in crumpled balls or as paper planes, toward the demonstration
leaders’ perch. It was at this point that one of the militants grabbed
the mikes from Jopson.
Certainly there can be no justification for the action of the
militants. The NUSP leaders had every right to pack up and leave, since
their permit gave them only up to six o’clock to demonstrate and they
had declared their demonstration formally closed; and since it was their
organization that had paid for the use of the microphones and
loudspeakers, they had every right to keep these instruments ot
themselves. Yet, by refusing to at least lend their mikes to the
radicals, the NUSP leaders gave the impression of being too finicky;
they acted like an old maid aunt determined not to surrender her
Edwardian finery to a hippie niece, knowing that it would be used for
more audacious purposes than she had ever intended for it. The radicals
would surely demand more than a nonpartisan Constitutional Convention;
they would speak of more fundamental, doubtless violent, changes; and it
was precisely the prospect of violence that the NUSP feared. The
quarrel over
the mikes revealed the class distinctions in the demonstration: on
the one hand the exclusive-school kids of the NUSP, bred in comfort,
decent, respectful, and timorous; and on the other hand the
public-school firebrands of groups like the KM and the SDK, familiar
with privation, rowdy, irreverent, troublesome. Naturally, the nice
dissenters wanted to dissociate themselves from anything that smelled
disreputable, and besides the mikes belonged to them.
Now the mikes had passed to a young man, a labor union leader I had
seen before, at another demonstration, whose name I do not know.
It had happened so fast Jopson was caught by surprise; the next thing
he knew the mikes were no longer in his possession. This young labor
union leader was a terrific speaker. He was obviously some kind of hero
to the militants, for they cheered him on as he attacked the
“counter-revolutionaries who want to end this demonstration,” going on
from there to attack fascists and imperialists in general. By the time
he was through, his audience had a new, a more insistent chant:
“Rebolusyon! Rebolusyon! Rebolusyon!”
Passions were high, exacerbated by the quarrel over the mikes; and
the President had the back luck of coming out of Congress at this
particular instant.
WHERE THE DEMONSTRATION LEADERS STOOD, emblems of the enemy were
prominently displayed: a cardboard coffin representing the death of
democracy at the hands of the goonstabulary in the last elections; a
cardboard crocodile, painted green, symbolizing congressmen greedy for
allowances; a paper effigy of Ferdinand Marcos. When the President
stepped out of Congress, the effigy was set on fire and, according to
report, the coffin was pushed toward him, the crocodile hurled at him.
From my position down on the street, I saw only the burning of the
effigy—a singularly undramatic incident, since it took the effigy so
long to catch fire. I could not even see the President and could only
deduce the fact of his coming out of Congress from the commotion at the
doors, the sudden radiance created by dozens of flashbulbs bursting
simultaneously, and the rise in the streets of the cry: “MARcos PUPpet!
MARcos PUPpet! MARcos PUPpet!”
Things got so confused at this point that I cannot honestly say which
came first: the pebbles flying or the cops charging. I remember only
the cops rushing down the steps of Congress, pushing aside the
demonstration leaders, and jumping down to the streets, straight into
the mass of demonstrators. The cops flailed away, the demonstrators
scattered. The cops gave chase to anything that moved, clubbed anyone
who resisted, and hauled off those they caught up with. The
demonstrators who got as far as the sidewalk that led to the Muni golf
links started to pick up pebbles and rocks with which they pelted the
police. Very soon, placards had turned into missiles, and the sound of
broken glass punctuated the yelling: soft-drink bottles were flying,
too. The effigy was down on the ground, still burning.
The first scuffle was brief. By the time it was over, the President
and the First Lady must have made good their escape. The cops retreated
into Congress with hostages. The demonstrators re-occupied the area they
had vacated in their panic. The majority of NUSP members must have been
safe in their buses by then, on their way home, but the militants were
still in possession of the mikes.
The militants were also in possession of the field. Probably not more
than 2,000 remained on Burgos Drive—some of them just hanging around,
looking on; many of them raging mad, refusing to be cowed. A small group
defiantly sang the Tagalog version of the “Internationale,” no longer
bothering now to hide their allegiances. Their slogan was “fight and
fear not,” and they made a powerful incantation out of it: “Ma-ki-BAKA!
Huwag maTAKOT!” They marched with arms linked together and faced the
cops without flinching, baiting them, taunting them.
“Pulis, pulis, titi matulis!”
“Pulis, mukhang kuwarta!”
“Me mga panangga pa, o, akala mo lalaban sa giyera!”
“Takbo kayo nang takbo, baka lumiit ang tiyan n’yo!”
“Baka mangreyp pa kayo, lima-lima na’ng asawa n’yo!”
“Mano-mano lang, o!”
NOTHING MORE CLEARLY REVEALED THE DEPTHS to which the reputation of
the supposed enforcers of the law has sunk than this open mocking of the
cops. Annual selections of ten outstanding policemen notwithstanding,
the cops are generally believed to be corrupt, venal, brutal, vicious,
and zealous in their duties only when the alleged lawbreaker is neither
rich nor powerful. Those who deplore the loss of respect for the law
forget that respect needs to be earned, and anyone is likely to lose
respect for the law who has felt the wrath of lawmen or come face to
face with their greed.
The students who now hurled insults at the cops around Congress
differed from the rest of their countrymen only in that they did not
bother to hide their contempt or express it in bitter whispers. In at
least two recent demonstrations—one at the US Embassy on the arrival of
Agnew, the other at Malacanang to denounce police brutality and the rise
of fascism—students had suffered at the hands of the cops, and now the
students were in a rage, they were spoiling for trouble, they were in no
mood for dinner-party chatter or elocution contents.
In the parliament of the streets, debate takes the form of confrontation.
While the braver radicals flung jeers at the cops in a deliberate
attempt to precipitate a riotous confrontation, the rest of the
demonstrators gathered in front of the Congress flagpole, listening to
various speakers, though more often outshouting them. Senator Emmanuel
Pelaez had come out of Congress, dapper in a dark-blue suit, and the
mikes were handed over to him. Despite the mikes, his voice could hardly
be heard above the din of the demonstrators. Because Pelaez spoke in
English, they shouted: “Tagalog! Tagalog!” They had also made up a new
chant: “Pakawalan ang hinuli! Pakawalan ang hinuli! Pakawalan ang
hinuli!” Not after several minutes of furious waving from student
leaders gesturing for quiet did the noise of the throng subside.
Pelaez made an appeal for peace that received an equal amount of
cheers and jeers. Then he made the mistake of calling MPD Chief Gerardo
Tamayo to his side. The very sight of a uniformed policeman is enough to
drive demonstrators into a frenzy; his mere presence is provocation
enough. The reaction to Tamayo was unequivocal, unanimous. The moment he
appeared, fancy swagger stick in hand, an orgy of boos and catcalls
began, sticks and stones and crumpled sheets started to fly again, and
Pelaez had to let the police chief beat a hasty retreat.
With Tamayo out of sight, a little quiet descended on the crowd once
more. Speeches again, and more speeches. The lull, a period of watchful
waiting for the demonstrators, lasted for some time. And then, from the
north, from the Maharnilad side of Congress, came the cry: “Eto na naman
ang mga pulis!”
Thunder of feet, tumult of images and sounds. White smooth round
crash helmets advancing like a fleet of flying saucers in the growing
darkness. The tread of marching feet, the rat-tat-tat of fearful feet on
the run, the shuffle of hesitant feet unable to decide whether to stand
fast or flee. From loudspeakers, an angry voice: “Mga pulis! Pakiusap
lang! Tahimik na kami rito! Huwag na kayong makialam!” And everywhere, a
confusion of shouts: Walang tatakbo! Walang uurong! Balik! Balik!
Walang mambabato! Tigil ang batuhan! Link arms, link arms! Ma-ki-BAKA!
Huwag maTAKOT!
The khaki contingent broke into a run. The demonstrators fled in all
directions, each man for himself. Some merely stepped aside, hugging the
Congress walls, clustering around trees. The cops at this time went
only after those who ran, bypassing all who stood still. Three cops
cornered one demonstrator against a traffic sign and clubbed him until
the signpost gave way and fell with a crash. One cop caught up with a
demonstrator and grabbed him by the collar, but the demonstrator
wriggled free of his shirt and made a new dash for freedom in his
undershirt. One cop lost his quarry near the golf course and found
himself surrounded by other demonstrators; they didn’t touch
him—“Nag-iisa’yan, pabayaan n’yo”—but they taunted him mercilessly. This
was a Metrocom cop, not an unarmed trainee, and finding himself
surrounded by laughing sneering faces, he drew his .45 in anger, his
eyes flashing, his teeth bared. He kept his gun pointed to the ground,
however, and the laughter and sneers continued until he backed off
slowly, trying to maintain whatever remaining dignity he could muster.
The demonstrators who had fled regrouped, on the Luneta side of
Congress, and with holler and whoop they charged. The cops slowly
retreated before this surging mass, then ran, ran for their lives,
pursued by rage, rocks, and burning placard handles. Now it was the
students giving chase, exhilarated by the unexpected turnabout. The
momentum of their charge, however, took them only up to the center of
Burgos Drive; either there was a failure of nerve or their intention was
merely to regain ground they had lost, without really charging into the
very ranks of the police.
Once again, the lines of battle were as before: the students in the center, the cops at the northern end of Burgos Drive.
In the next two hours, the pattern of battle would be set. The cops
would charge, the demonstrators would retreat; the demonstrators would
regroup and come forward again, the cops would back off to their former
position. At certain times, however, the lines of battle would shift,
with the cops holding all of the area right in front of Congress and the
students facing them across the street, with three areas of
retreat—north toward Maharnilad, south toward the Luneta, and west
toward the golf course and Intramuros. There were about seven waves of
attack and retreat by both sides, each attack preceded by a tense noisy
lull, during which there would be sporadic stoning, by both cops and
demonstrators.
Sometime during the lull in the clashes, two fire trucks appeared in
the north. They inched their way forward, flanked by the cops, and when
they were near the center of Burgos Drive they trained their hoses on
the scattered bonfires the students had made with their placards and
manifestoes. Students who held their ground, getting wet in the weak
stream, yelled: “Mahal ang tubig! Isauli n’yo na ’yan sa Nawasa!” Other
demonstrators, emboldened by the lack of force of the jets of water,
came forward with rocks to hurl at the fire trucks. The trucks hurriedly
backed away from the barrage and soon made themselves scarce.
At one student attack, the demonstrators managed to occupy the
northern portion the cops had held throughout the battle. When the cops
started moving forward, from the Congress driveway where they had taken
shelter, the demonstrators backed away one by one, until only three
brave and foolhardy souls remained, standing fast, holding aloft, by its
three poles, a streamer that carried the name of the Kabataang
Makabayan. There they stood, those three, no one behind them and the
cops coming toward them slowly, menacingly. Without a warning, some cops
dashed forward, about ten of them, and in full view of the horrified
crowd flailed away at the three who held their ground, unable to resist.
The two kids holding the side poles either managed to flee or were
hauled off to the legislative building to join everybody else who had
the misfortune of being caught. The boy in the center crumpled to the
ground and stayed there cringing, bundled up like a foetus, his legs to
his chest and his arms over his head. The cops made a small tight circle
around him, and then all that could be seen were the rattan sticks
moving up and down and from side to side in seeming rhythm. When they
were through, the cops walked away nonchalantly, leaving the boy on the
ground. One cop, before leaving, gave one last aimless swing of his
stick as a parting shot, hitting his target in the knees.
The cops really had it in for the Kabataang Makabayan. The fallen
standard was picked up by six or seven KM boys and carried to the center
of Burgos Drive, where it stood beside another streamer, held up by
members of the Kilusan ng Kabataang Makati, bearing the words: “Ibagsak
ang imperyalismo at piyudalismo!” When the cops made another attack and
everybody in the center of Burgos Drive scattered, the KM boys again
held their ground. The cops gave them so severe a beating one of the
wooden poles broke in half.
I had taken shelter beneath the Kilusan ng Kabataang Makati streamer
during the attack; we were left untouched. The KM boys had to abandon
their streamer. One of them, limping, joined us, and when the cops had
gone he asked me, probably thinking I was another KM member, to help him
pick up the streamer. I thought it was the least I could do for the
poor bastards, so I took hold of the broken pole and helped the KM boy
carry the streamer a little closer to the Congress walls. There I stood,
thinking of the awkwardness of my position, being neither demonstrator
nor KM member, until a few other guys began to gather around us. I
handed the broken pole to someone who nodded when I asked him if he
belonged to the KM.
About this time, or sometime afterwards, Pelaez was down on the
street, surrounded by aides and students all talking at the same time,
complaining to him about missing nameplates and arrested comrades. He
was probably still down there when the cops advanced once again. Panic
spread, and I found myself running, too. In previous attacks I had
merely stepped aside and watched; but I had already seen what had
happened to the KM boys who refused to flee, and I had seen policemen,
walking back to their lines after a futile chase, club or haul off
anyone standing by who just happened to be in their way, or who seemed
to have a look of gloating and triumph on their faces; and I realized it
was no longer safe to remain motionless. I had completely forgotten the
press badge in my pocket.
Meanwhile, it seemed that certain distinguished personages trapped
inside the legislative building had grown restless and wanted to get on
to their mansions or their favorite night clubs or some parties in their
honor, but cars were parked up front. At any rate, some cars started
moving up the driveway to pick up passengers. The sight of those long
sleek limousines infuriated the demonstrators all the more; the sight of
those beautiful air-conditioned limousines was like a haughty voice
saying, “Let them eat cake.” Cries of “Kotse! Kotse!” were followed by
“Batuhin! Batuhin!” Down the driveway came the cars, and whizz went the
rocks. Some cars even had the effrontery of driving down Burgos Drive
straight into the lines of the demonstrators, as though meaning to
disperse them. All the cars got stoned.
One apple-green Mercedes-Benz, belonging to Senator Jose Roy,
screeched to a stop when the rocks thudded on its roofs and sides. The
driver got out and started picking up rocks himself, throwing them at
the students. A few cops had to brave the rain of stones that ensued to
save the poor driver who had only tried to defend his master’s car. The
demonstrators then surged forward with sticks and stones and beat the
hell out of the car, stopping only when it was a total wreck. “Sunugin!”
rose the cry, but by then the cops were coming in force.
The demonstrators had hired a jeepney in which rode some of their
leaders. It had two loudspeakers on its roof, was surrounded by
students, and inched its way forward and backward throughout the melee.
The cops, seemingly maddened by the destruction of a senator’s Model
1970 Mercedes-Benz, swooped down on the jeepney with their rattan
sticks, striking out at the students who surrounded it until they fled,
then venting their rage some more on those inside the jeepney who could
not get out to run. The shrill screams of women inside the jeepney rent
the air. The driver, bloody all over, managed to stagger out; the cops
quickly grabbed him.
When the cops were through beating up the jeepney’s passengers, they
backed away. Some stayed behind, trying to drag out those who were still
inside the jeepney, from which came endless shrieks, sobs, curses,
wails, and the sound of weeping. It was impossible to remain detached
and uninvolved now, to be a spectator forever. When the screams for help
became unendurable, I started to walk toward the jeepney, and was only
four or five steps away when, from the other side of the jeepney, crash
helmet, khaki uniform, and rattan stick came charging at me. The cop’s
hands gripped his stick at both ends. “O, isa ka pa, lalapit-lapit ka
pa!” he cried as he swung at me. I stepped back, feeling the wind from
the swing of his stick ruffle the front of my shirt. In stepping back I
lost my balance. Before I realized what had happened, I was down on my
back and the cop was lunging at me, still holding his stick at both
ends. I caught the middle of the stick
with my hands and, well, under the circumstances, I don’t think I can
be blamed for losing my cool. “Putangnamo,” I shouted at him, “tutulong
ako do’n, e!”
I jumped to my feet, dusted myself off angrily, and glared at my
would-be tormentor. If my eyes had the gift of a triple whammy, he would
be dust and ashes now. We stared at each other for a few seconds, but
when I dropped my glance down to his breast, to see no nameplate there,
he turned his back and slowly walked away. I had no intention of doing a
Norman Mailer and getting arrested, so I let him go. By this time, the
jeepney’s passengers had decided, screaming and swearing and sobbing all
the while, to abandon their vehicle with its load of mimeographed
manifestoes and various literature, and to look for a safer place from
which to deliver their exhortations to their fellow demonstrators.
On two other occasions, I found myself running with the
demonstrators. Once I jumped down with them to the golf course and got
as far as the fence of the mini-golf range. Behind us, the cops were
firing into the air. When it was the students’ turn to charge, I found
my way back to the street. Another time, running along the sidewalk down
rows of pine trees toward the Luneta, I saw a girl a few meters away
from me stumble and fall. I stopped running, with the intention of
helping her up, when whack! I felt the sting of a blow just below my
belt and above my ass. When I turned around the cop was gone; he was
swinging wildly as he ran and I just happened to be in the way of his
rattan. The girl, too, was nowhere to be seen; there was no longer
anyone to play Good Samaritan to.
As I stood there, rubbing that part of me where I was hit, I heard
more screaming and curses from the golf course. A boy and two girls, who
had decided to sit out the attack on a mound, had been set upon by the
cops. People inside the mini-golf enclosure were yelling at the cops,
shaking their golf clubs in helpless fury. “Tena, tulungan natin!” cried
one demonstrator; but the cops had retreated by the time we got to the
trio on the mound. The two girls were cursing through their tears; the
boy was calm, consoling them in his fashion. “This is just part of the
class struggle,” he said, and one girl sobbed, “I know, I know. Pero
putangna nila, me araw din sila!”
IT WAS NOW EIGHT O’CLOCK. The battle of Burgos Drive was over, Burgos
Drive was open to traffic once more. I decided it was time to go to the
Philippine General Hospital for a change of scene. Crossing the street,
on my way to Taft Avenue, I saw for the first time, on the Luneta side
of the traffic island, a row of horses behind a squad of uniformed men.
At the PGH, confusion reigned. More than thirty demonstrators with
bloody heads and broken wrists had been or were being treated along with
three or four policemen hit by rocks. Other students kept coming,
looking for companions, bringing news from the field. The battle was not
over yet, they said, it had merely shifted ground. The cops were
chasing demonstrators right up to Intramuros, all the way to Plaza
Lawton; were even boarding jeepneys and buses to haul down demonstrators
on their way home. There was a rumor that two or three students had
been killed—did anyone know anything about it? (It proved to be a false
alarm.) Even NUSP members were at the PGH. Some of them had called up
Executive Secretary Ernesto Maceda, and he came in a long black car,
mapungay eyes, slicked-down hair, newly pressed barong Tagalog, and all,
accompanied by a photographer and scads of technical assistants or
security men.
The next day came the post-mortems, the breast-beating, the press releases, the alibis.
“We maintain,” said MPD Deputy Chief James Barbers, “that the police
acted swiftly at a particular time when the life of the President of the
Republic—and that of the First Lady—was being endangered by the vicious
and unscrupulous elements among the student demonstrators. One can just
imagine what would have resulted had something happened to the First
Lady!” Barbers did not bother to explain why the rampage continued after
the President being protected had gone.
Manila Mayor Antonio J. Villegas commended Tamayo and his men for
their “exemplary behavior and courage” and reportedly gave them a day
off. Then he announced that Manila policemen would henceforth stay away
from demonstration sites. “I’m doing this to protect Manila policemen
from unfair criticism and to avoid friction between the MPD and student
groups.”
“The night of January 26,” said UP president S.P. Lopez, “must be
regarded as a night of grave portent for the future of the nation. It
has brought us face to face with the fundamental question: Is it still
possible to transform our society by peaceful means so that the many who
are poor, oppressed, sick, and ignorant may be released from their
misery, by the actual operation of law and government, rather than by
waiting in vain for the empty promise of ‘social justice’ in our
Constitution?”
The faculty of the University of the Philippines issued a declaration
denouncing “the use of brutal force by state authorities against the
student demonstrators” and supporting “unqualifiedly the students’
exercise of democratic rights in their struggle for revolutionary
change.” The declaration went on to say: “It is with the gravest concern
that the faculty views the January 26 event as part of an emerging
pattern of repression of the democratic rights of the people. This
pattern is evident in the formation of paramilitary units such as the
Home Defense Forces, the politicalization of the Armed Forces, the
existence of private armies, foreign interference in internal security,
and the use of specially trained police for purposes of suppression.”
From the Lyceum faculty came another strongly worded statement:
“Above the sadism and inhumanity of the action of the police, we fear
that the brutal treatment of the idealistic students has done
irreparable harm to our society. For it is true that the skirmish was
won by the policemen and the riot soldiers. But if we view the battle in
the correct perspective of the struggle for the hearts and minds of our
youth, we cannot help but realize that the senseless, brutal, and
uncalled-for acts of the police have forever alienated many of our young
people from our society. The police will have to realize that in
winning the battles, they are losing the war for our society.”
While he deplored the “abusive language” he read in some of the
demonstrators’ placards, Senator Gil J. Puyat said, “I regret the use of
unnecessary force by the police when they could have used a less
harmful method.” IF the police had “kept their cool,” said Senator
Benigno Aquino, there would have been no violence—“it takes two to
fight.” Senator Salvador Laurel said he had witnessed “with my own eyes
the reported brutalities perpetrated by a number of [police officers]
upon unarmed students, some of them helpless women.” Senator Eva Kalaw
warned: “The students set the emotional powderkeg that may become the
signal for wave upon wave of unrest in the streets, in the factories, on
the campuses, in our farms.”
“Students,” said President Ferdinand Marcos, “have a legitimate right
to manifest their grievances in public and we shall support their just
demands, but we do not consider violence a legitimate instrument of
democratic dissent, and we expect the students to cooperate with
government in making sure that their demonstrations are not marred by
violence.”
Some of the students began talking of arming themselves the next time
with molotov cocktails and pillboxes, of using dos-por-dos as placard
handles, of wearing crash helmets. Everyone agreed that the January 26
confrontation was the longest and most violent in the history of the
Philippine student movement.
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