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UP, Mapua student leaders want Marcoses barred from their campuses

By: Matthew Reysio-Cruz - @inquirerdotnet

Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:32 AM September 20, 2019

NEVER FORGET THIS FACE In time for the 47th anniversary of the declaration of martial law during the
Marcos regime, which student activists are marking on Saturday, a papier-mâché depicting the late
dictator has been installed at the entrance of Palma Hall on the University of the Philippines Diliman
campus in Quezon City. —Niño Jesus Orbeta

Student leaders from two universities known for their history of activism want their campuses to be
declared off-limits to members of the Marcos family, alleging that the presence of the late dictator
Ferdinand Marcos’ widow and children “endangers students’ lives and freedoms.”

A resolution declaring the Marcoses persona non grata was signed on Thursday by student council
members of the University of the Philippines (UP) and Mapua University. They plan to enlist support
from more schools in the coming days.

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At a press conference in Quezon City, the youth leaders said the resolution was prompted by the
controversial visits of Imee Marcos to UP Diliman in 2018 for a Kabataang Barangay (KB) reunion and
sister Irene Marcos to both UP Diliman and Ateneo de Manila University (Admu) this year for cultural
events.

The siblings’ presence drew flak from some students, alumni, faculty members and netizens who noted
the history of these universities as cradles of youth activism that was suppressed by the Marcos
dictatorship.
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Justice

“Their right to enter these universities was revoked after they started killing student leaders one by one
during martial law,” said Renzo Relente of the UP Diliman University Student Council (USC). “Academic
spaces are first and foremost a space for knowledge and the safety of students.”

The proponents of the ban noted how the Marcoses had evaded jail time and refused to apologize
despite the well-documented atrocities committed during martial law, whose 47th anniversary will be
marked by the nation on Saturday.

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“Their presence in our schools is a threat not just to safety but to the history we are fighting to protect,”
said Relente, citing Marcoses’ efforts to whitewash the martial law years, having regained influence and
political power under President Duterte.

Murder of Mapua student

Ace Catling, a member of Mapua student council, brought up the case of Archimedes Trajano, a Mapua
student activist who was killed in 1977 after he publicly questioned Imee Marcos’ qualifications as
appointed director of KB, a nationwide government youth organization.

The District Court of Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1993 found the dictator’s daughter civilly liable for the death of
Trajano and ordered her to pay his family $4.16 million in damages.
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“Now she is in the Senate,” Catling said. “It is frightening that her power is growing.”

Senator Marcos could not be immediately reached for comment.

Justine Balane, Akbayan Youth secretary general, said talks had been held with student organizations in
Admu, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila and Polytechnic University of the Philippines for them to also
sign the anti-Marcos resolution.

Unrepentant

“Hopefully [the resolutions] will be submitted for approval to our respective [school] administrations,”
Balane said. “We are really drawing the line against the Marcoses while they are unrepentant and
unaccountable.”

Aside from Imee and Irene Marcos, the student leaders also seek to bar the late dictator’s widow,
Imelda, and son, former Sen. Bongbong Marcos, from setting foot on their campuses “by virtue of their
past and present human and students’ rights violations.”

“Be it further resolved that the said Marcoses be denied entry to said educational institutions as they
pose a threat to students’ democratic involvement and participation in civic, social and political affairs,”
the resolution said.

Day of Remembrance

UP Diliman on Thursday also held, for the second consecutive year, a “Day of Remembrance” to
commemorate the Sept. 21, 1972, declaration of martial law.
The first time it was held in 2018, the occasion also served to convey the UP community’s reaction to
Imee turning up on the Diliman campus for a reunion of KB officials, a gathering also attended by the
state university’s president, Danilo Concepcion.

Earlier this week, the UP College of Arts and Letters also approved a new subject in its curriculum—
Philippine Studies 21—which will delve into the “language, literature and culture” during the martial law
years under Marcos. The university also announced that a design had been chosen for the martial law
museum that will soon be built on the Diliman campus.

Not one conviction

Like the student leaders, Chuck Crisanto, head of the Human Rights Violations Victims’ Memorial
Commission, lamented during Thursday’s event that no one had been convicted for the atrocities
committed during martial law.

“Now, what does that mean?” he told the Inquirer. “It means that … what you now see is the culture of
impunity. Since no one was [held] accountable in the past, then maybe most [members] of the security
sector now feel they will be insulated in the present.”

UP Diliman Chancellor Michael Tan, in a message delivered during the program, stressed the need for
vigilance because the “military and police do remember—and recycle—old tactics.”

Read more: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1166987/up-mapua-student-leaders-want-marcoses-barred-


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