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Assassination of Ninoy Aquino

Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr., a former Philippine senator, was assassinated on Sunday, August 21, 1983, on the tarmac of Manila International Airport (now named Ninoy Aquino International Airport in his honor). A longtime political opponent of President Ferdinand Marcos, Aquino had just landed in his home country after three years of self-imposed exile in the United States when he was shot in the head while being escorted from an aircraft to a vehicle that was waiting to transport him to prison. Also killed was Rolando Galman, who was falsely accused of Aquino's murder.

Assassination of Ninoy Aquino
Part of the People Power Revolution
Benigno Aquino Jr.
LocationManila International Airport, Parañaque, Philippines
DateAugust 21, 1983; 39 years ago (1983-08-21)
c. 13:00 PST (UTC+08:00)
TargetBenigno Aquino Jr.
Attack type
Shooting
Weapons.357 revolver
DeathsBenigno Aquino Jr.
Rolando Galman
AssailantDisputed[1]
AccusedRolando Galman[2]
Pablo Martinez[3]
Rogelio Moreno
Convicted16 (including Pablo Martinez and Rogelio Moreno)

Aquino was elected to the Philippine Senate in 1967 and was critical of Marcos. He was imprisoned on trumped up charges shortly after Marcos's 1972 declaration of martial law. In 1980, he had a heart attack in prison and was allowed to leave the country two months later by Marcos' wife, Imelda. He spent the next three years in exile near Boston before deciding to return to the Philippines.

Aquino's assassination is credited with transforming the opposition to the Marcos regime from a small, isolated movement into a national crusade. It is also credited with thrusting Aquino's widow, Corazon Aquino, into the public spotlight and her running for president in the 1986 snap election. Although Marcos was officially declared the winner of the election, widespread allegations of fraud and illegal tampering on Marcos's behalf are credited with sparking the People Power Revolution, which resulted in Marcos fleeing the country and conceding the presidency to Mrs. Aquino.

Although many, including the Aquino family, maintain that Marcos ordered Aquino's assassination, this was never definitively proven. An official government investigation ordered by Marcos shortly after the assassination led to murder charges against 25 military personnel and one civilian, all of whom were acquitted by the Sandiganbayan (special court). After Marcos was ousted, another government investigation under President Corazon Aquino's administration led to a retrial of 16 military personnel, all of whom were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment by the Sandiganbayan. The Supreme Court affirmed the decision and rejected later motions by the convicted soldiers for a retrial.[1] One of the convicts was subsequently pardoned, three have died in prison, and the remainder had their sentences commuted at various times; the last convicts were released from prison in 2009.

Background

Benigno Aquino Jr. began his political career in 1955 as the mayor of Concepcion,[4] and was elected to the Philippine Senate in 1967. During his first years as a senator, Aquino began speaking out against President Ferdinand Marcos. Marcos in turn saw Aquino as the biggest threat to his power.

Aquino was supposed to run for president in the 1973 elections when Marcos declared martial law on September 21, 1972.[5] On that night, Aquino was imprisoned in Fort Bonifacio, and in 1973, Aquino was falsely charged of murder and subversion.[6] Aquino would first refuse to participate in the military trial citing "injustice", before going on a hunger strike, only for him to go into a coma after 40 days.[7] The trial continued until November 25, 1977, when Aquino was convicted on all charges and was sentenced to death by firing squad.[8] However, Aquino and others believed that Marcos would not allow him to be executed as Aquino had gained a great deal of support while imprisoned, and such a fate would surely make him a martyr for his supporters.

In early 1978, Aquino, still in prison, founded a political party named Lakas ng Bayan (or "LABAN")[a] to run for office in the interim Batasang Pambansa elections.[8] During the campaign, Juan Ponce Enrile (then Minister of National Defense) accused Ninoy Aquino of having connections with the New People's Army and the CIA, prompting Aquino to appear on a nationally-televised interview on March 10, 1978.[9] All LABAN candidates lost to candidates of Marcos' party,[10] amid allegations of election fraud.

On March 19, 1980, Aquino had a heart attack in prison, and in May 1980, he was transported to the Philippine Heart Center where he had a second heart attack. Aquino was diagnosed with angina pectoris and needed triple bypass surgery; however, no surgeon would perform the operation out of fear of controversy, and Aquino refused to undergo the procedure in the Philippines out of fear of sabotage by Marcos, indicating that he would either go to the United States to undergo the procedure or die in his prison cell.[11] First Lady Imelda Marcos arranged for Aquino to undergo surgery at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, Texas, and he would be released from prison on humanitarian grounds to leave with his family for San Francisco on a Philippine Airlines flight on May 8, 1980.[12] After the surgery, Aquino met with Muslim leaders in Damascus, Syria, before settling with his family in Newton, Massachusetts.

Aquino spent the next three years in self-exile in the U.S., wherein he worked on manuscripts for two books and delivered several lectures and speeches critical of the Marcos government across the nation. Amid the situation in the Philippines (including rumors of Marcos' health issues and the 1984 elections), Aquino was to return in 1983 as stipulated in his conditions for his release.[13]

Prelude

Despite threats made by former senator Lorenzo M. Tanada in 1981 and Imelda Marcos in 1982, Aquino attempted to submit travel papers at the Philippine Consulate in New York in June 1983, only to be rejected under the pretext of a targeted assassination plot.[14] In July 1983, Pacifico Castro (then Deputy Foreign Minister) warned international air carriers (including JAL) not to allow Aquino to board its planes.[15] Aquino was to return on August 7, but was warned by Juan Ponce Enrile on August 2 to delay his return trip due to alleged "plots against his life".[16]

On August 13, 1983, Aquino, following a morning worship service, went to Boston International Airport, where he would take a flight to Los Angeles[17] to attend conferences with his fellow Filipino contacts. From there, he flew to Japan, Hong Kong, and Singapore, before heading to Malaysia,[17] where Aquino would meet with Mahathir Mohamad (then the Prime Minister of Malaysia) as well as Indonesian and Thai officals. Aquino would then move back to Singapore, before going to Hong Kong, where he boarded a China Airlines plane bound for Taipei. Once Aquino arrived in Taipei on August 19, he was met by his brother-in-law Ken Kashiwahara, a journalist for ABC News on vacation at that time.[17] On August 20, Aquino was joined by journalists, including Katsu Ueda (Kyodo News), Arthur Kan (Asiaweek), Toshi Matsumoto, Kiyoshi Wakamiya, and news crews from ABC News and Tokyo Broadcasting System,[18] and would later give an interview from his room at the Grand Hotel in which he indicated that he would be wearing a bulletproof vest. He advised the journalists that would be accompanying him on the flight:[19]

You have to be ready with your hand camera because this action can become very fast. In a matter of three or four minutes, it could be all over, and I may not be able to talk to you again after this.

— Benigno Aquino Jr.

On the morning of August 21, 1983, Aquino went to Chiang Kai-shek International Airport at 10:10 AM by being driven in circles during baggage check-in.[20] He would be stopped by Taiwanese officials, before he, together with Kashiwahara[21] and other members of the press, boarded China Airlines Flight 811, a Boeing 767-200 (registered as B-1836) bound for Manila, and left Taiwan at 11:15 AM.[22] In Manila, at least 20,000 opposition supporters arrive at the Manila International Airport via buses and jeeps decorated with yellow ribbons.[23] Aurora Aquino (mother of Ninoy Aquino) and opposition candidates are also present,[23] while a contingent of over 1,000 armed soldiers and police were assigned by the government to provide security for Aquino's arrival. During the flight, Aquino went to the lavatory to put on his bulletproof vest and handed over a gold watch to Kawashihara, telling his brother-in law to fetch a bag containing clothes for Aquino's first few days back in prison.[24] His last few moments in the flight while being interviewed by the journalist Jim Laurie, and just prior to disembarking from the flight at Manila airport, were recorded on camera.[25]

During an encounter with Imelda Marcos in 1982, Aquino handed her his expiring passport, unaware that she would keep it under her possession.[26] Former Lanao del Sur congressman Rashid Lucman helped Aquino circumvent Malacañang Palace's order not to issue passports to the Aquino family by providing him with two passports–one a blank passport bearing Aquino's real name, and the other a passport issued in the Middle East under the alias "Marcial Bonifacio".[b][27]

Assassination

 
B-1836, the incident aircraft, taxiing at Kai Tak Airport on October 31, 1983, two months after the assassination.

When China Airlines Flight 811 arrived at Manila International Airport at gate number 8 (now 11) at 1:04 PM,[28] three soldiers boarded the airplane to fetch Aquino.[24] At 1:14 PM, Aquino rose from seat 14C, and soldiers escorted him off the airplane; instead of going to the terminal, Aquino would, via the jet bridge's service staircase, be taken straight into the tarmac, where a blue AVSECOM van was waiting.[24][28] Just before shots were fired, he was saying "Ako na!" as he went into the service staircase, while one of the personnel was heard saying "Pusila! Pusila! Op! Pusila! Pusila! Pusila!" [c]. It was recorded on the news camera, but the actual shooting of Aquino was not caught on camera due to the exposure to bright sunlight.[29][30]

50 seconds after Aquino rose from his seat,[31] a shot was fired, followed three seconds later by four shots lasting half a second, and then a prolonged volley of at least twelve shots.[32] When the firing stopped, Aquino and a man later identified as Rolando Galman lay dead on the apron, both from gunshot wounds. Used M16 shells, one .45 shell, and five unused bullets (possibly .365 magnum) were dropped at the scene of the crime.[33] Aquino's body was carried into an Aviation Security Command (AVSECOM) van by two AVSECOM SWAT soldiers, while another soldier at the bumper of the van continued to fire shots at Galman. The AVSECOM van sped away, leaving behind the bullet-riddled body of Galman. According to news reports[34] (together with a subsequent Sandiganbayan ruling),[35] Aquino had died before arriving at Fort Bonifacio General Hospital; that claim remains controversial due to contradicting evidence presented in court interviews of General Custodio.

Autopsies of both Aquino and Galman were conducted by medical-legal officers Bienvenido O. Munoz and Nieto M. Salvador at the Loyola Memorial Chapel Morgue and the Philippine Constabulary Crime Laboratory at 10 PM and 11:20 PM, respectively.[36] The Munoz autopsy showed that Aquino was fatally hit by a bullet "directed forward, downward, and medially" into the head behind his left ear, leaving behind three metal fragments in his head. Bruises were found on Aquino's eyelids, left temple, upper lip, left arm, and left shoulder, while bleeding was found in the forehead and cheek.[37] The Salvador autopsy showed that Galman had died of "shock secondary to gunshot wounds" with eight wounds in his body; the first wound were found behind and above the left ear, second to fourth wounds in the chest, fifth and sixth wound in the back, the seventh wound with nine perforations from stomach to right thigh, and the eighth wound in the elbow region.[38] Seven bullets - four "deformed jacketed", two "slightly deformed jacketed", and one "deformed copper jacket" - were also inside Galman's body.[39]

Initial claims

During a press conference held at 5:15 PM (four hours after the assassination), Prospero Olivas (then the chief of the Philippine Constabulary Metropolitan Command) claimed that the assailant in "his twenties, dressed in blue pants and white shirt"[d] shot Aquino in the back of the head from behind with a .357 magnum revolver;[34] however, Olivas excluded from his accounts chemistry report C-83-1136, which showed that fragments extracted from Aquino were from a .38 caliber or .45 caliber revolver.[40]

A reenactment by the military showed that Rolando Galman approached Aquino and shot him moments before he could board the van.[29] An official report of the Marcos government and Pablo Martinez stated that Galman shot Aquino dead. However, there is no solid evidence to substantiate this claim.[29] Several foreign media personnel were with Aquino on the plane.[29]

Funeral

Even though Aquino was embalmed by renowned embalmer Frank Malabed, Aurora instructed the embalmer not to apply makeup on the body,[41] so that the public may see "what they did to my son."[42] His remains lay in state for eight days. However, Aquino's family decided to display Aquino with the blood-stained safari jacket he wore upon his assassination, and refused any makeup to disguise the visible wounds in his face. Thousands of supporters flocked to Aquino's wake, which took place at his house on Times Street in West Triangle, Quezon City. Aquino's wife, Corazon, and children Ballsy, Pinky, Viel, Noynoy, and Kris arrived from Boston the day after the assassination. In a later interview, Aquino's eldest daughter, Ballsy (now Aquino-Cruz), recounted that they learnt of the assassination through a phone call from Kyodo News.[43] She was initially shocked upon being asked to confirm if her father had indeed been killed. The report of the assassination was verified to Aquino's family when Shintaro Ishihara, an acquaintance of Ninoy and a member of the Japanese Parliament, called Cory and informed her that Kiyoshi Wakamiya, a journalist who had been with Ninoy in the flight from Taipei to Manila, confirmed the shooting to him.[44]

Aquino's remains were later transferred to Santo Domingo Church, where his funeral was held on August 31. Following a Mass at 9 a.m., with the Cardinal Archbishop of Manila, Jaime Sin officiating, the funeral procession brought his remains to Manila Memorial Park in Parañaque. The flatbed truck that served as his hearse wound through Metro Manila for 12 hours. It passed by Rizal Park, where the Philippine flag had been brought to half-staff. Aquino's casket finally reached the memorial park at around 9 p.m. More than two million people lined the streets for the procession. Some stations like the church-sponsored Radio Veritas and DZRH were the only stations to cover the entire ceremony.[45]

Jovito Salonga, then head of the Liberal Party, said about Aquino:

Ninoy was getting impatient in Boston, he felt isolated by the flow of events in the Philippines. In early 1983, Marcos was seriously ailing, the Philippine economy was just as rapidly declining, and insurgency was becoming a serious problem. Ninoy thought that by coming home he might be able to persuade Marcos to restore democracy and somehow revitalize the Liberal Party.[46]

Investigation

Everyone from the Central Intelligence Agency, to the United Nations, to the Communist Party of the Philippines, to First Lady Imelda Marcos was accused of conspiracy.[47] President Marcos was reportedly gravely ill, recovering from a kidney transplant when the incident occurred. Theories arose as to who was in charge and who ordered the execution. Some hypothesized that Marcos had a long-standing order for Aquino's murder upon the latter's return.

Rolando Galman

Mere hours after the shooting, the government alleged that Rolando Galman was the man who killed Aquino, falsely accusing Galman of being a communist hitman acting on orders from Philippine Communist Party chair Rodolfo Salas.[48][49] A government reenactment that aired on television days after the shooting alleged that Galman hid under the service staircase while Aquino and his military escorts descended it, and as Aquino neared the van, Galman emerged from under the staircase and shot Aquino in the back of the head. Several members of the security detail in turn fired several shots at Galman, killing him.

There were numerous irregularities in this version of events, including the amount of time between Aquino leaving the plane to the sound of gunfire (eight seconds), whereas this scenario would have taken at least 13 seconds, when reenacted, as well as how an alleged lone gunman could have penetrated a security detail of over 1,000 people at the airport without assistance. Politicians and diplomats found evident contradictions between the claim and the photos and videotape footage that documented the time before and after the shooting.[50] Years later, the official investigation into the assassination concluded that Galman was a scapegoat in a larger plot to kill Aquino.

Agrava Board

Marcos immediately created a fact-finding commission called the Fernando Commission to investigate Aquino's assassination. It was headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Enrique Fernando. Four retired Supreme Court justices were appointed; they resigned after its composition was challenged in court. Arturo M. Tolentino declined his appointment as board chair. However, the commission held only two sittings due to intense public criticism.[28]

On October 14, 1983, President Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 1886,[51] creating an independent board of inquiry, called the "Agrava Commission" or "Agrava Board". The board was composed of former Court of Appeals Justice Corazon Agrava[28] as chair, with lawyer Luciano E. Salazar, entrepreneur Dante G. Santos, labor leader Ernesto F. Herrera, and educator Amado C. Dizon as members.

The Agrava Fact-Finding Board convened on November 3, 1983. Before the Agrava Board could start its work, President Marcos claimed that the decision to eliminate Aquino was made by the general-secretary of the Philippine Communist Party, Rodolfo Salas. He was referring to his earlier claim that Aquino had befriended and subsequently betrayed his communist comrades.

The Agrava Board conducted public hearings and requested testimonies from several persons who might shed light on the crimes, including Imelda Marcos, and General Fabian Ver, Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

In the subsequent proceedings, no one actually identified who fired the gun that killed Aquino, but Rebecca Quijano, another passenger, testified that she saw a man behind Aquino (running from the stairs towards Aquino and his escorts) point a gun at the back of his head, after which there was a sound of a gunshot. A post-mortem analysis disclosed that Aquino was shot in the back of the head at close range with the bullet exiting at the chin at a downward angle, which supported Quijano's testimony. More suspicions were aroused when Quijano described the assassin as wearing a military uniform. Some airside employees of the airport on duty during the assassination gave testimonies that support that of Quijano, stating that Galman was having a conversation with one soldier when gunshots rang out.

After a year of thorough investigation—with 20,000 pages of testimony given by 193 witnesses, the Agrava Board submitted two reports to President Marcos—the Majority and Minority Reports. The Minority Report, submitted by Chairman Agrava alone, was submitted on October 23, 1984. It confirmed that the Aquino assassination was a military conspiracy, but it cleared General Ver. Many believed that President Marcos intimidated and pressured the members of the Board to persuade them not to indict Ver, Marcos's first cousin and most trusted general. Excluding Chairman Agrava, the majority of the board submitted a separate report—the Majority Report indicting several members of the Armed Forces including Ver, General Luther Custodio, head of the AVSECOM, and General Prospero Olivas, chief of the Metropolitan Command (METROCOM). The board members unanimously rejected the theory that it was Galman who killed Aquino.[52] The Agrava Board forwarded its findings to the Ombudsman for trial by the Sandiganbayan.[52]

Trials and convictions

In 1985, 25 military personnel (including several generals and colonels) and one civilian were charged for the murders of Benigno Aquino Jr. and Rolando Galman. President Marcos relieved Ver as AFP Chief and appointed his second cousin, General Fidel V. Ramos, as acting AFP Chief. The accused were tried by the Sandiganbayan (special court). After a brief trial, the Sandiganbayan acquitted all of the accused on December 2, 1985.[53] Immediately after the decision, Marcos reinstated Ver. The 1985 Sandiganbayan ruling and the reinstatement of Ver were denounced as a mockery of justice.

After Marcos was ousted in 1986, another investigation was set up by the new government.[54] The Supreme Court ruled that the previous court proceedings were "a sham" ordered by the "authoritarian president" himself; the Supreme Court ordered a new Sandiganbayan trial.[55][56] Sixteen defendants were found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment by the Sandiganbayan in 1990[57] and ordered to pay damages to the families of Aquino and Galman.[58][59]

The sixteen were Brig. Gen. Luther Custodio, Capt. Romeo Bautista, 2nd Lt. Jesus Castro, Sergeants Claro L. Lat, Arnulfo de Mesa, Filomeno Miranda, Rolando de Guzman, Ernesto Mateo, Rodolfo Desolong, Ruben Aquino, and Arnulfo Artates, Constable Rogelio Moreno (the gunman),[60] M/Sgt. Pablo Martinez (also the alleged gunman), C1C Mario Lazaga, A1C Cordova Estelo, and A1C Felizardo Taran. The Supreme Court affirmed the decision in 1991.[57]

Pablo Martinez, one of the convicted conspirators in the assassination, alleged that his co-conspirators told him that Danding Cojuangco ordered the assassination. Martinez also alleged that only he and Galman knew of the assassination, and that Galman was the actual shooter, a point not corroborated by other evidence in the case.[61] The convicts filed an appeal to have their sentences reduced after 22 years, claiming that the assassination was ordered by Marcos's crony and business partner (and Corazon Aquino's estranged cousin) Danding Cojuangco. The Supreme Court ruled that it did not qualify as newly found evidence. Even though the supreme court didn't convict President Marcos, there are those that still believe that Marcos did, indeed, kill Ninoy Aquino.[62] Through the years, some have been pardoned, others have died in detention, while others have had their terms commuted and then served out. In November 2007, Pablo Martinez was released from the New Bilibid Prison after President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ordered his release on humanitarian grounds.[63] In March 2009, the last remaining convicts were released from prison.

Aftermath

 
Bloodied safari jacket, pants (folded), belt, and boots worn by Aquino upon his return from exile are on permanent display at the Aquino Center in Tarlac.

Aquino's death transformed the Philippine opposition from a small isolated movement to a massive unified crusade, incorporating people from all walks of life. The middle class got involved, the impoverished majority participated, and business leaders whom Marcos had irked during martial law endorsed the campaign—all with the crucial support of the military and the Catholic Church hierarchy. The assassination showed the increasing incapacity of the Marcos regime—Ferdinand was mortally ill when the crime occurred while his cronies mismanaged the country in his absence. It outraged Aquino's supporters that Marcos, if not masterminding it, allowed the assassination to happen and engineered its cover-up. The mass revolt caused by Aquino's demise attracted worldwide media attention and Marcos's American contacts, as well as the Reagan administration, began distancing themselves. There was a global media spotlight on the Philippine crisis, and exposes on Imelda's extravagant lifestyle (most infamously, her thousands of pairs of shoes) and "mining operations", as well as Ferdinand's excesses, came into focus.

The assassination thrust Aquino's widow, Corazon, into the public eye. She was the presidential candidate of UNIDO opposition party in the 1986 snap election, running against Marcos. The official results showed a Marcos victory, but this was universally dismissed as fraudulent.[64][65] In the subsequent People Power Revolution, Marcos resigned and went into exile, and Corazon Aquino became president.

While no Filipino president has ever been assassinated, Benigno Aquino is one of three presidential spouses who had been murdered. Alicia Syquia-Quirino and three of her children were murdered by Imperial Japanese troops along during the Battle of Manila in 1945, while Doña Aurora Quezon was killed along with her daughter and son-in-law in a Hukbalahap ambush in 1949.

AVSECOM van discovery

In 2010, the AVSECOM van that bore Aquino's body was found in Villamor Air Base in Pasay in a decrepit state.[66] It had been apparently dumped in a secluded area of the base where it was left to rot until its purchase by Marlon Marasigan, a retired Philippine Air Force colonel in 1997.[67]

The van was brought to the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) complex for restoration. The van will be displayed at the Freedom Memorial Museum, located at the University of the Philippines Diliman campus. A scale replica of the China Airlines aircraft as well as the original airbridge where Ninoy alighted will also be added to the exhibit. A proposal to display the van at the Presidential Car Museum in Quezon City was deemed inappropriate by NHCP chair Rene Escalante.[68]

Memorials

 
The airport terminal where the assassination occurred, now the present day Terminal 1 of Manila International Airport, which as since been renamed as "Ninoy Aquino International Airport" in his honor. Many still refer to the airport by its former and call this terminal as "Ninoy Aquino Terminal".

In 1987, Manila International Airport, where the assassination occurred, was renamed "Ninoy Aquino International Airport" in Aquino's honor. The spot on the apron where his body lay sprawled is now marked by a brass plaque.

August 21 (the anniversary of Aquino's death) was declared Ninoy Aquino Day, a national holiday, through the passage of Republic Act No. 9256.[69] Under then-President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, the observance of this holiday became moveable—to be celebrated on the "Monday nearest August 21" every year—as part of her controversial 'holiday economics' philosophy as reflected in Republic Act No. 9492.[70] The commemoration has since been reverted to August 21 by orders of then-President Benigno Aquino III.

In popular culture

  • The incident is dramatized at the beginning of the 1988 political thriller film, A Dangerous Life, starring Gary Busey. The Agrava Board is also depicted in the film and the depiction of the incident is based on the testimony of one of the few witnesses to the assassination, Rebecca Quijano, as well as airport employees who also witnessed the shooting.
  • An archival audio of the incident is heard in the 2002 film, Dekada 70.
  • The incident is dramatized in the March 26, 2009, episode of the GMA Network docudrama series, Case Unclosed, named "Sino ang Pumatay kay Ninoy?" (Who Killed Ninoy?).
  • The incident is mentioned in the 2012 Filipino science fiction horror anthology film Shake, Rattle and Roll Fourteen: The Invasion through radio news reports during the ending of the segment "Pamana" ("Inheritance").
  • Director Darryl Yap intends to make a sequel to Maid in Malacañang titled Martyr or Murderer[71] to be shown in February 2023.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Lakas ng Bayan is a Tagalog term for "people's force", with the backronym laban meaning "fight" in Tagalog.
  2. ^ The first name Marcial refers to martial law, and the last name Bonifacio alludes to Fort Bonifacio, where Ninoy was imprisoned.
  3. ^ Pusila is an imperative form of the Cebuano (southern Tagalog) word pusil (based on the Spanish word fusil). In this context, Pusila! is translated as "Shoot (him)!".
  4. ^ Contrary to Olivas, the alleged person was wearing a light blue shirt.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Who masterminded Ninoy's murder?". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved November 25, 2020. Who masterminded Ninoy's murder? After 35 years and after two Aquino presidencies, the answer remains a legal enigma.
  2. ^ "Who killed Ninoy? (1)". Philippine Daily Inquirer. August 16, 2018. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  3. ^ "Bandila: One of the accused on killing Ninoy dies". ABS-CBN News. YouTube.
  4. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 4.
  5. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 5 and 7.
  6. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 8.
  7. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 8–9.
  8. ^ a b Hill & Hill 1983, p. 10.
  9. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 10–11.
  10. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 11.
  11. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 13.
  12. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 13–14.
  13. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 14, 15, and 16.
  14. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 16 and 17.
  15. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 17–18.
  16. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 18.
  17. ^ a b c Hill & Hill 1983, p. 25.
  18. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 26 and 53.
  19. ^ "YouTube - Ninoy Aquino: Worth Dying For (the last interview!) ORIGINAL UPLOAD". Youtube.com. Archived from the original on December 15, 2021. Retrieved October 6, 2008.
  20. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 26.
  21. ^ Kashiwahara, Ken (October 16, 1983). "Aquino's Final Journey". The New York Times. Retrieved January 4, 2017.
  22. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 26–27.
  23. ^ a b Hill & Hill 1983, p. 27.
  24. ^ a b c Hill & Hill 1983, p. 28.
  25. ^ Laurie, Jim. "The Last moments and assassination of Ninoy Aquino". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 15, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  26. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 17.
  27. ^ Aquino, Corazon C. (August 21, 2003). "The last time I saw Ninoy". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  28. ^ a b c d (PDF). Maynila: Fact Finding Board. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 3, 2009. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  29. ^ a b c d "Agosto Beinte-Uno". ABS-CBN News. Archived from the original on December 15, 2021 – via YouTube.
  30. ^ "Benigno Aquino Assassinated - 1983 | Today In History | Aug 21, 17". AP Archive. YouTube.
  31. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 29.
  32. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 90–91.
  33. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 32.
  34. ^ a b Hill & Hill 1983, p. 31.
  35. ^ People of the Philippines v. B/Gen. Luther A. Custodio, et al., 1983, Decision of the Special Division of the Sandiganbayan in Criminal Case No. 10010 and 10011
  36. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 32–33.
  37. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 33 and 94-97.
  38. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, pp. 33-34 and 98.
  39. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 34.
  40. ^ del Mundo, Larah Vinda (August 21, 2022). "How Marcos suppressed the truth behind Ninoy Aquino's assassination". Vera Files. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
  41. ^ Hill & Hill 1983, p. 35.
  42. ^ "Francisco Malabed, mortician to Marcos and Ninoy, dies at 67". ABS-CBN News. September 22, 2017. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  43. ^ "The assassination of Benigno Aquino". History Channel. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  44. ^ "24 hours that changed Philippine history." Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 21, 2013. Accessed August 28, 2021. https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/470559/24-hours-that-changed-philippine-history.
  45. ^ Robles, Raissa (August 25, 2014). "Ninoy's funeral was the day Filipinos stopped being afraid of dictators". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved May 31, 2021.
  46. ^ "The Greatest President We Never Had". Retrieved April 19, 2015.
  47. ^ "6 People Who Killed Ninoy Aquino, According to Conspiracy Theorist". August 21, 2014. Retrieved July 25, 2016.
  48. ^ Chronicles of a Revolution: 1995, p. 27
  49. ^ "G.R. No. 72670 - Saturnina Galman vs. Sandiganbayan". Chan Roble Virtual Law Library. from the original on October 4, 2021. Retrieved October 4, 2021.
  50. ^ . Time. October 24, 1983. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
  51. ^ Presidential Decree No. 1886 (1983), Creating a Fact-Finding Board with Plenary Powers to Investigate the Tragedy Which Occurred on August 21, 1983, retrieved August 30, 2013
  52. ^ a b del Mundo, Larah Vinda (August 21, 2022). "How Marcos suppressed the truth behind Ninoy Aquino's assassination". Vera Files. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  53. ^ 10 things of interest about the assassination of Ninoy Aquino, Aquino, Tricia. (August 20, 2013), Interaksyon.com
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Sources

  • Hill, Gerald N.; Hill, Kathleen Thompson (1983). Aquino Assassination: The True Story and Analysis of the Assassination of Philippine Senator Benigno S. Aquino, Jr. Steve Psinakis. Sonoma, Calif.: Hilltop Pub. Co. ISBN 0-912133-04-X.

External links

  • * History Channel's feature documentary on Ninoy Aquino's Assassination on YouTube
  • . Archived from the original on May 16, 2006. Retrieved September 9, 2005.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • Tambayan ng mga Benignian
  • Video on YouTube

assassination, ninoy, aquino, benigno, ninoy, aquino, former, philippine, senator, assassinated, sunday, august, 1983, tarmac, manila, international, airport, named, ninoy, aquino, international, airport, honor, longtime, political, opponent, president, ferdin. Benigno Ninoy Aquino Jr a former Philippine senator was assassinated on Sunday August 21 1983 on the tarmac of Manila International Airport now named Ninoy Aquino International Airport in his honor A longtime political opponent of President Ferdinand Marcos Aquino had just landed in his home country after three years of self imposed exile in the United States when he was shot in the head while being escorted from an aircraft to a vehicle that was waiting to transport him to prison Also killed was Rolando Galman who was falsely accused of Aquino s murder Assassination of Ninoy AquinoPart of the People Power RevolutionBenigno Aquino Jr LocationManila International Airport Paranaque PhilippinesDateAugust 21 1983 39 years ago 1983 08 21 c 13 00 PST UTC 08 00 TargetBenigno Aquino Jr Attack typeShootingWeapons 357 revolverDeathsBenigno Aquino Jr Rolando GalmanAssailantDisputed 1 AccusedRolando Galman 2 Pablo Martinez 3 Rogelio MorenoConvicted16 including Pablo Martinez and Rogelio Moreno Aquino was elected to the Philippine Senate in 1967 and was critical of Marcos He was imprisoned on trumped up charges shortly after Marcos s 1972 declaration of martial law In 1980 he had a heart attack in prison and was allowed to leave the country two months later by Marcos wife Imelda He spent the next three years in exile near Boston before deciding to return to the Philippines Aquino s assassination is credited with transforming the opposition to the Marcos regime from a small isolated movement into a national crusade It is also credited with thrusting Aquino s widow Corazon Aquino into the public spotlight and her running for president in the 1986 snap election Although Marcos was officially declared the winner of the election widespread allegations of fraud and illegal tampering on Marcos s behalf are credited with sparking the People Power Revolution which resulted in Marcos fleeing the country and conceding the presidency to Mrs Aquino Although many including the Aquino family maintain that Marcos ordered Aquino s assassination this was never definitively proven An official government investigation ordered by Marcos shortly after the assassination led to murder charges against 25 military personnel and one civilian all of whom were acquitted by the Sandiganbayan special court After Marcos was ousted another government investigation under President Corazon Aquino s administration led to a retrial of 16 military personnel all of whom were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment by the Sandiganbayan The Supreme Court affirmed the decision and rejected later motions by the convicted soldiers for a retrial 1 One of the convicts was subsequently pardoned three have died in prison and the remainder had their sentences commuted at various times the last convicts were released from prison in 2009 Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Assassination 3 1 Initial claims 4 Funeral 5 Investigation 5 1 Rolando Galman 5 2 Agrava Board 5 3 Trials and convictions 6 Aftermath 6 1 AVSECOM van discovery 6 2 Memorials 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksBackground EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Benigno Aquino Jr began his political career in 1955 as the mayor of Concepcion 4 and was elected to the Philippine Senate in 1967 During his first years as a senator Aquino began speaking out against President Ferdinand Marcos Marcos in turn saw Aquino as the biggest threat to his power Aquino was supposed to run for president in the 1973 elections when Marcos declared martial law on September 21 1972 5 On that night Aquino was imprisoned in Fort Bonifacio and in 1973 Aquino was falsely charged of murder and subversion 6 Aquino would first refuse to participate in the military trial citing injustice before going on a hunger strike only for him to go into a coma after 40 days 7 The trial continued until November 25 1977 when Aquino was convicted on all charges and was sentenced to death by firing squad 8 However Aquino and others believed that Marcos would not allow him to be executed as Aquino had gained a great deal of support while imprisoned and such a fate would surely make him a martyr for his supporters In early 1978 Aquino still in prison founded a political party named Lakas ng Bayan or LABAN a to run for office in the interim Batasang Pambansa elections 8 During the campaign Juan Ponce Enrile then Minister of National Defense accused Ninoy Aquino of having connections with the New People s Army and the CIA prompting Aquino to appear on a nationally televised interview on March 10 1978 9 All LABAN candidates lost to candidates of Marcos party 10 amid allegations of election fraud On March 19 1980 Aquino had a heart attack in prison and in May 1980 he was transported to the Philippine Heart Center where he had a second heart attack Aquino was diagnosed with angina pectoris and needed triple bypass surgery however no surgeon would perform the operation out of fear of controversy and Aquino refused to undergo the procedure in the Philippines out of fear of sabotage by Marcos indicating that he would either go to the United States to undergo the procedure or die in his prison cell 11 First Lady Imelda Marcos arranged for Aquino to undergo surgery at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas Texas and he would be released from prison on humanitarian grounds to leave with his family for San Francisco on a Philippine Airlines flight on May 8 1980 12 After the surgery Aquino met with Muslim leaders in Damascus Syria before settling with his family in Newton Massachusetts Aquino spent the next three years in self exile in the U S wherein he worked on manuscripts for two books and delivered several lectures and speeches critical of the Marcos government across the nation Amid the situation in the Philippines including rumors of Marcos health issues and the 1984 elections Aquino was to return in 1983 as stipulated in his conditions for his release 13 Prelude EditDespite threats made by former senator Lorenzo M Tanada in 1981 and Imelda Marcos in 1982 Aquino attempted to submit travel papers at the Philippine Consulate in New York in June 1983 only to be rejected under the pretext of a targeted assassination plot 14 In July 1983 Pacifico Castro then Deputy Foreign Minister warned international air carriers including JAL not to allow Aquino to board its planes 15 Aquino was to return on August 7 but was warned by Juan Ponce Enrile on August 2 to delay his return trip due to alleged plots against his life 16 On August 13 1983 Aquino following a morning worship service went to Boston International Airport where he would take a flight to Los Angeles 17 to attend conferences with his fellow Filipino contacts From there he flew to Japan Hong Kong and Singapore before heading to Malaysia 17 where Aquino would meet with Mahathir Mohamad then the Prime Minister of Malaysia as well as Indonesian and Thai officals Aquino would then move back to Singapore before going to Hong Kong where he boarded a China Airlines plane bound for Taipei Once Aquino arrived in Taipei on August 19 he was met by his brother in law Ken Kashiwahara a journalist for ABC News on vacation at that time 17 On August 20 Aquino was joined by journalists including Katsu Ueda Kyodo News Arthur Kan Asiaweek Toshi Matsumoto Kiyoshi Wakamiya and news crews from ABC News and Tokyo Broadcasting System 18 and would later give an interview from his room at the Grand Hotel in which he indicated that he would be wearing a bulletproof vest He advised the journalists that would be accompanying him on the flight 19 You have to be ready with your hand camera because this action can become very fast In a matter of three or four minutes it could be all over and I may not be able to talk to you again after this Benigno Aquino Jr On the morning of August 21 1983 Aquino went to Chiang Kai shek International Airport at 10 10 AM by being driven in circles during baggage check in 20 He would be stopped by Taiwanese officials before he together with Kashiwahara 21 and other members of the press boarded China Airlines Flight 811 a Boeing 767 200 registered as B 1836 bound for Manila and left Taiwan at 11 15 AM 22 In Manila at least 20 000 opposition supporters arrive at the Manila International Airport via buses and jeeps decorated with yellow ribbons 23 Aurora Aquino mother of Ninoy Aquino and opposition candidates are also present 23 while a contingent of over 1 000 armed soldiers and police were assigned by the government to provide security for Aquino s arrival During the flight Aquino went to the lavatory to put on his bulletproof vest and handed over a gold watch to Kawashihara telling his brother in law to fetch a bag containing clothes for Aquino s first few days back in prison 24 His last few moments in the flight while being interviewed by the journalist Jim Laurie and just prior to disembarking from the flight at Manila airport were recorded on camera 25 During an encounter with Imelda Marcos in 1982 Aquino handed her his expiring passport unaware that she would keep it under her possession 26 Former Lanao del Sur congressman Rashid Lucman helped Aquino circumvent Malacanang Palace s order not to issue passports to the Aquino family by providing him with two passports one a blank passport bearing Aquino s real name and the other a passport issued in the Middle East under the alias Marcial Bonifacio b 27 Assassination Edit B 1836 the incident aircraft taxiing at Kai Tak Airport on October 31 1983 two months after the assassination When China Airlines Flight 811 arrived at Manila International Airport at gate number 8 now 11 at 1 04 PM 28 three soldiers boarded the airplane to fetch Aquino 24 At 1 14 PM Aquino rose from seat 14C and soldiers escorted him off the airplane instead of going to the terminal Aquino would via the jet bridge s service staircase be taken straight into the tarmac where a blue AVSECOM van was waiting 24 28 Just before shots were fired he was saying Ako na as he went into the service staircase while one of the personnel was heard saying Pusila Pusila Op Pusila Pusila Pusila c It was recorded on the news camera but the actual shooting of Aquino was not caught on camera due to the exposure to bright sunlight 29 30 50 seconds after Aquino rose from his seat 31 a shot was fired followed three seconds later by four shots lasting half a second and then a prolonged volley of at least twelve shots 32 When the firing stopped Aquino and a man later identified as Rolando Galman lay dead on the apron both from gunshot wounds Used M16 shells one 45 shell and five unused bullets possibly 365 magnum were dropped at the scene of the crime 33 Aquino s body was carried into an Aviation Security Command AVSECOM van by two AVSECOM SWAT soldiers while another soldier at the bumper of the van continued to fire shots at Galman The AVSECOM van sped away leaving behind the bullet riddled body of Galman According to news reports 34 together with a subsequent Sandiganbayan ruling 35 Aquino had died before arriving at Fort Bonifacio General Hospital that claim remains controversial due to contradicting evidence presented in court interviews of General Custodio Autopsies of both Aquino and Galman were conducted by medical legal officers Bienvenido O Munoz and Nieto M Salvador at the Loyola Memorial Chapel Morgue and the Philippine Constabulary Crime Laboratory at 10 PM and 11 20 PM respectively 36 The Munoz autopsy showed that Aquino was fatally hit by a bullet directed forward downward and medially into the head behind his left ear leaving behind three metal fragments in his head Bruises were found on Aquino s eyelids left temple upper lip left arm and left shoulder while bleeding was found in the forehead and cheek 37 The Salvador autopsy showed that Galman had died of shock secondary to gunshot wounds with eight wounds in his body the first wound were found behind and above the left ear second to fourth wounds in the chest fifth and sixth wound in the back the seventh wound with nine perforations from stomach to right thigh and the eighth wound in the elbow region 38 Seven bullets four deformed jacketed two slightly deformed jacketed and one deformed copper jacket were also inside Galman s body 39 Initial claims Edit During a press conference held at 5 15 PM four hours after the assassination Prospero Olivas then the chief of the Philippine Constabulary Metropolitan Command claimed that the assailant in his twenties dressed in blue pants and white shirt d shot Aquino in the back of the head from behind with a 357 magnum revolver 34 however Olivas excluded from his accounts chemistry report C 83 1136 which showed that fragments extracted from Aquino were from a 38 caliber or 45 caliber revolver 40 A reenactment by the military showed that Rolando Galman approached Aquino and shot him moments before he could board the van 29 An official report of the Marcos government and Pablo Martinez stated that Galman shot Aquino dead However there is no solid evidence to substantiate this claim 29 Several foreign media personnel were with Aquino on the plane 29 Funeral EditEven though Aquino was embalmed by renowned embalmer Frank Malabed Aurora instructed the embalmer not to apply makeup on the body 41 so that the public may see what they did to my son 42 His remains lay in state for eight days However Aquino s family decided to display Aquino with the blood stained safari jacket he wore upon his assassination and refused any makeup to disguise the visible wounds in his face Thousands of supporters flocked to Aquino s wake which took place at his house on Times Street in West Triangle Quezon City Aquino s wife Corazon and children Ballsy Pinky Viel Noynoy and Kris arrived from Boston the day after the assassination In a later interview Aquino s eldest daughter Ballsy now Aquino Cruz recounted that they learnt of the assassination through a phone call from Kyodo News 43 She was initially shocked upon being asked to confirm if her father had indeed been killed The report of the assassination was verified to Aquino s family when Shintaro Ishihara an acquaintance of Ninoy and a member of the Japanese Parliament called Cory and informed her that Kiyoshi Wakamiya a journalist who had been with Ninoy in the flight from Taipei to Manila confirmed the shooting to him 44 Aquino s remains were later transferred to Santo Domingo Church where his funeral was held on August 31 Following a Mass at 9 a m with the Cardinal Archbishop of Manila Jaime Sin officiating the funeral procession brought his remains to Manila Memorial Park in Paranaque The flatbed truck that served as his hearse wound through Metro Manila for 12 hours It passed by Rizal Park where the Philippine flag had been brought to half staff Aquino s casket finally reached the memorial park at around 9 p m More than two million people lined the streets for the procession Some stations like the church sponsored Radio Veritas and DZRH were the only stations to cover the entire ceremony 45 Jovito Salonga then head of the Liberal Party said about Aquino Ninoy was getting impatient in Boston he felt isolated by the flow of events in the Philippines In early 1983 Marcos was seriously ailing the Philippine economy was just as rapidly declining and insurgency was becoming a serious problem Ninoy thought that by coming home he might be able to persuade Marcos to restore democracy and somehow revitalize the Liberal Party 46 Investigation EditEveryone from the Central Intelligence Agency to the United Nations to the Communist Party of the Philippines to First Lady Imelda Marcos was accused of conspiracy 47 President Marcos was reportedly gravely ill recovering from a kidney transplant when the incident occurred Theories arose as to who was in charge and who ordered the execution Some hypothesized that Marcos had a long standing order for Aquino s murder upon the latter s return Rolando Galman Edit Mere hours after the shooting the government alleged that Rolando Galman was the man who killed Aquino falsely accusing Galman of being a communist hitman acting on orders from Philippine Communist Party chair Rodolfo Salas 48 49 A government reenactment that aired on television days after the shooting alleged that Galman hid under the service staircase while Aquino and his military escorts descended it and as Aquino neared the van Galman emerged from under the staircase and shot Aquino in the back of the head Several members of the security detail in turn fired several shots at Galman killing him There were numerous irregularities in this version of events including the amount of time between Aquino leaving the plane to the sound of gunfire eight seconds whereas this scenario would have taken at least 13 seconds when reenacted as well as how an alleged lone gunman could have penetrated a security detail of over 1 000 people at the airport without assistance Politicians and diplomats found evident contradictions between the claim and the photos and videotape footage that documented the time before and after the shooting 50 Years later the official investigation into the assassination concluded that Galman was a scapegoat in a larger plot to kill Aquino Agrava Board Edit Marcos immediately created a fact finding commission called the Fernando Commission to investigate Aquino s assassination It was headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Enrique Fernando Four retired Supreme Court justices were appointed they resigned after its composition was challenged in court Arturo M Tolentino declined his appointment as board chair However the commission held only two sittings due to intense public criticism 28 On October 14 1983 President Marcos issued Presidential Decree No 1886 51 creating an independent board of inquiry called the Agrava Commission or Agrava Board The board was composed of former Court of Appeals Justice Corazon Agrava 28 as chair with lawyer Luciano E Salazar entrepreneur Dante G Santos labor leader Ernesto F Herrera and educator Amado C Dizon as members The Agrava Fact Finding Board convened on November 3 1983 Before the Agrava Board could start its work President Marcos claimed that the decision to eliminate Aquino was made by the general secretary of the Philippine Communist Party Rodolfo Salas He was referring to his earlier claim that Aquino had befriended and subsequently betrayed his communist comrades The Agrava Board conducted public hearings and requested testimonies from several persons who might shed light on the crimes including Imelda Marcos and General Fabian Ver Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines In the subsequent proceedings no one actually identified who fired the gun that killed Aquino but Rebecca Quijano another passenger testified that she saw a man behind Aquino running from the stairs towards Aquino and his escorts point a gun at the back of his head after which there was a sound of a gunshot A post mortem analysis disclosed that Aquino was shot in the back of the head at close range with the bullet exiting at the chin at a downward angle which supported Quijano s testimony More suspicions were aroused when Quijano described the assassin as wearing a military uniform Some airside employees of the airport on duty during the assassination gave testimonies that support that of Quijano stating that Galman was having a conversation with one soldier when gunshots rang out After a year of thorough investigation with 20 000 pages of testimony given by 193 witnesses the Agrava Board submitted two reports to President Marcos the Majority and Minority Reports The Minority Report submitted by Chairman Agrava alone was submitted on October 23 1984 It confirmed that the Aquino assassination was a military conspiracy but it cleared General Ver Many believed that President Marcos intimidated and pressured the members of the Board to persuade them not to indict Ver Marcos s first cousin and most trusted general Excluding Chairman Agrava the majority of the board submitted a separate report the Majority Report indicting several members of the Armed Forces including Ver General Luther Custodio head of the AVSECOM and General Prospero Olivas chief of the Metropolitan Command METROCOM The board members unanimously rejected the theory that it was Galman who killed Aquino 52 The Agrava Board forwarded its findings to the Ombudsman for trial by the Sandiganbayan 52 Trials and convictions Edit In 1985 25 military personnel including several generals and colonels and one civilian were charged for the murders of Benigno Aquino Jr and Rolando Galman President Marcos relieved Ver as AFP Chief and appointed his second cousin General Fidel V Ramos as acting AFP Chief The accused were tried by the Sandiganbayan special court After a brief trial the Sandiganbayan acquitted all of the accused on December 2 1985 53 Immediately after the decision Marcos reinstated Ver The 1985 Sandiganbayan ruling and the reinstatement of Ver were denounced as a mockery of justice After Marcos was ousted in 1986 another investigation was set up by the new government 54 The Supreme Court ruled that the previous court proceedings were a sham ordered by the authoritarian president himself the Supreme Court ordered a new Sandiganbayan trial 55 56 Sixteen defendants were found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment by the Sandiganbayan in 1990 57 and ordered to pay damages to the families of Aquino and Galman 58 59 The sixteen were Brig Gen Luther Custodio Capt Romeo Bautista 2nd Lt Jesus Castro Sergeants Claro L Lat Arnulfo de Mesa Filomeno Miranda Rolando de Guzman Ernesto Mateo Rodolfo Desolong Ruben Aquino and Arnulfo Artates Constable Rogelio Moreno the gunman 60 M Sgt Pablo Martinez also the alleged gunman C1C Mario Lazaga A1C Cordova Estelo and A1C Felizardo Taran The Supreme Court affirmed the decision in 1991 57 Pablo Martinez one of the convicted conspirators in the assassination alleged that his co conspirators told him that Danding Cojuangco ordered the assassination Martinez also alleged that only he and Galman knew of the assassination and that Galman was the actual shooter a point not corroborated by other evidence in the case 61 The convicts filed an appeal to have their sentences reduced after 22 years claiming that the assassination was ordered by Marcos s crony and business partner and Corazon Aquino s estranged cousin Danding Cojuangco The Supreme Court ruled that it did not qualify as newly found evidence Even though the supreme court didn t convict President Marcos there are those that still believe that Marcos did indeed kill Ninoy Aquino 62 Through the years some have been pardoned others have died in detention while others have had their terms commuted and then served out In November 2007 Pablo Martinez was released from the New Bilibid Prison after President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ordered his release on humanitarian grounds 63 In March 2009 the last remaining convicts were released from prison Aftermath EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bloodied safari jacket pants folded belt and boots worn by Aquino upon his return from exile are on permanent display at the Aquino Center in Tarlac Aquino s death transformed the Philippine opposition from a small isolated movement to a massive unified crusade incorporating people from all walks of life The middle class got involved the impoverished majority participated and business leaders whom Marcos had irked during martial law endorsed the campaign all with the crucial support of the military and the Catholic Church hierarchy The assassination showed the increasing incapacity of the Marcos regime Ferdinand was mortally ill when the crime occurred while his cronies mismanaged the country in his absence It outraged Aquino s supporters that Marcos if not masterminding it allowed the assassination to happen and engineered its cover up The mass revolt caused by Aquino s demise attracted worldwide media attention and Marcos s American contacts as well as the Reagan administration began distancing themselves There was a global media spotlight on the Philippine crisis and exposes on Imelda s extravagant lifestyle most infamously her thousands of pairs of shoes and mining operations as well as Ferdinand s excesses came into focus The assassination thrust Aquino s widow Corazon into the public eye She was the presidential candidate of UNIDO opposition party in the 1986 snap election running against Marcos The official results showed a Marcos victory but this was universally dismissed as fraudulent 64 65 In the subsequent People Power Revolution Marcos resigned and went into exile and Corazon Aquino became president While no Filipino president has ever been assassinated Benigno Aquino is one of three presidential spouses who had been murdered Alicia Syquia Quirino and three of her children were murdered by Imperial Japanese troops along during the Battle of Manila in 1945 while Dona Aurora Quezon was killed along with her daughter and son in law in a Hukbalahap ambush in 1949 AVSECOM van discovery Edit In 2010 the AVSECOM van that bore Aquino s body was found in Villamor Air Base in Pasay in a decrepit state 66 It had been apparently dumped in a secluded area of the base where it was left to rot until its purchase by Marlon Marasigan a retired Philippine Air Force colonel in 1997 67 The van was brought to the National Historical Commission of the Philippines NHCP complex for restoration The van will be displayed at the Freedom Memorial Museum located at the University of the Philippines Diliman campus A scale replica of the China Airlines aircraft as well as the original airbridge where Ninoy alighted will also be added to the exhibit A proposal to display the van at the Presidential Car Museum in Quezon City was deemed inappropriate by NHCP chair Rene Escalante 68 Memorials Edit The airport terminal where the assassination occurred now the present day Terminal 1 of Manila International Airport which as since been renamed as Ninoy Aquino International Airport in his honor Many still refer to the airport by its former and call this terminal as Ninoy Aquino Terminal In 1987 Manila International Airport where the assassination occurred was renamed Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Aquino s honor The spot on the apron where his body lay sprawled is now marked by a brass plaque August 21 the anniversary of Aquino s death was declared Ninoy Aquino Day a national holiday through the passage of Republic Act No 9256 69 Under then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo the observance of this holiday became moveable to be celebrated on the Monday nearest August 21 every year as part of her controversial holiday economics philosophy as reflected in Republic Act No 9492 70 The commemoration has since been reverted to August 21 by orders of then President Benigno Aquino III In popular culture EditThe incident is dramatized at the beginning of the 1988 political thriller film A Dangerous Life starring Gary Busey The Agrava Board is also depicted in the film and the depiction of the incident is based on the testimony of one of the few witnesses to the assassination Rebecca Quijano as well as airport employees who also witnessed the shooting An archival audio of the incident is heard in the 2002 film Dekada 70 The incident is dramatized in the March 26 2009 episode of the GMA Network docudrama series Case Unclosed named Sino ang Pumatay kay Ninoy Who Killed Ninoy The incident is mentioned in the 2012 Filipino science fiction horror anthology film Shake Rattle and Roll Fourteen The Invasion through radio news reports during the ending of the segment Pamana Inheritance Director Darryl Yap intends to make a sequel to Maid in Malacanang titled Martyr or Murderer 71 to be shown in February 2023 See also Edit Philippines portal Biography portal 1980s portalTimeline of the presidency of Ferdinand MarcosFootnotes Edit Lakas ng Bayan is a Tagalog term for people s force with the backronym laban meaning fight in Tagalog The first name Marcial refers to martial law and the last name Bonifacio alludes to Fort Bonifacio where Ninoy was imprisoned Pusila is an imperative form of the Cebuano southern Tagalog word pusil based on the Spanish word fusil In this context Pusila is translated as Shoot him Contrary to Olivas the alleged person was wearing a light blue shirt References EditCitations Edit a b Who masterminded Ninoy s murder Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved November 25 2020 Who masterminded Ninoy s murder After 35 years and after two Aquino presidencies the answer remains a legal enigma Who killed Ninoy 1 Philippine Daily Inquirer August 16 2018 Retrieved September 23 2020 Bandila One of the accused on killing Ninoy dies ABS CBN News YouTube Hill amp Hill 1983 p 4 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 5 and 7 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 8 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 8 9 a b Hill amp Hill 1983 p 10 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 10 11 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 11 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 13 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 13 14 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 14 15 and 16 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 16 and 17 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 17 18 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 18 a b c Hill amp Hill 1983 p 25 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 26 and 53 YouTube Ninoy Aquino Worth Dying For the last interview ORIGINAL UPLOAD Youtube com Archived from the original on December 15 2021 Retrieved October 6 2008 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 26 Kashiwahara Ken October 16 1983 Aquino s Final Journey The New York Times Retrieved January 4 2017 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 26 27 a b Hill amp Hill 1983 p 27 a b c Hill amp Hill 1983 p 28 Laurie Jim The Last moments and assassination of Ninoy Aquino YouTube Archived from the original on December 15 2021 Retrieved August 30 2013 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 17 Aquino Corazon C August 21 2003 The last time I saw Ninoy Philippine Daily Inquirer a b c d Sandiganbayan ruling Investigation of the assassination of Benigno Aquino PDF Maynila Fact Finding Board Archived from the original PDF on September 3 2009 Retrieved August 30 2013 a b c d Agosto Beinte Uno ABS CBN News Archived from the original on December 15 2021 via YouTube Benigno Aquino Assassinated 1983 Today In History Aug 21 17 AP Archive YouTube Hill amp Hill 1983 p 29 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 90 91 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 32 a b Hill amp Hill 1983 p 31 People of the Philippines v B Gen Luther A Custodio et al 1983 Decision of the Special Division of the Sandiganbayan in Criminal Case No 10010 and 10011 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 32 33 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 33 and 94 97 Hill amp Hill 1983 pp 33 34 and 98 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 34 del Mundo Larah Vinda August 21 2022 How Marcos suppressed the truth behind Ninoy Aquino s assassination Vera Files Retrieved January 3 2023 Hill amp Hill 1983 p 35 Francisco Malabed mortician to Marcos and Ninoy dies at 67 ABS CBN News September 22 2017 Retrieved December 8 2021 The assassination of Benigno Aquino History Channel Retrieved August 30 2013 24 hours that changed Philippine history Philippine Daily Inquirer August 21 2013 Accessed August 28 2021 https newsinfo inquirer net 470559 24 hours that changed philippine history Robles Raissa August 25 2014 Ninoy s funeral was the day Filipinos stopped being afraid of dictators ABS CBN News Retrieved May 31 2021 The Greatest President We Never Had Retrieved April 19 2015 6 People Who Killed Ninoy Aquino According to Conspiracy Theorist August 21 2014 Retrieved July 25 2016 Chronicles of a Revolution 1995 p 27 G R No 72670 Saturnina Galman vs Sandiganbayan Chan Roble Virtual Law Library Archived from the original on October 4 2021 Retrieved October 4 2021 Test of Wills Time October 24 1983 Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved August 21 2007 Presidential Decree No 1886 1983 Creating a Fact Finding Board with Plenary Powers to Investigate the Tragedy Which Occurred on August 21 1983 retrieved August 30 2013 a b del Mundo Larah Vinda August 21 2022 How Marcos suppressed the truth behind Ninoy Aquino s assassination Vera Files Retrieved November 11 2022 10 things of interest about the assassination of Ninoy Aquino Aquino Tricia August 20 2013 Interaksyon com Challenge to Marcos The Tumult Since 83 Aquino Assassination in 1983 Created Conditions for Crisis The New York Times February 23 1986 Retrieved August 30 2013 Panganiban Artemio August 26 2018 Who masterminded Ninoy s murder Inquirer Retrieved July 20 2021 Yamsuan Cathy Canares August 22 2021 Agrava report on Ninoy Aquino slay Groundbreaking search for truth Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved November 10 2022 a b In the Know Pablo Martinez among 16 soldiers convicted of killing Aquino Inquirer May 9 2014 Archived from the original on May 9 2014 Retrieved August 1 2021 Philippine Court Convicts 16 Acquits 20 in Slaying of Aquino s Husband Los Angeles Times September 28 1990 Retrieved February 11 2022 Cold Trail 10 Issues and Cases in the Philippines That are Still Unresolved Spot January 20 2014 Retrieved February 11 2022 Gavilan Jodesz August 20 2016 Look back The Aquino assassination RAPPLER Retrieved February 11 2022 Transcript of ABS CBN Interview with Pablo Martinez co accused in the Aquino murder case Archived from the original on June 28 2015 Retrieved April 19 2015 Custodio vs Sandiganbayan 96027 28 March 8 2005 J Puno En Banc Resolution sc judiciary gov ph Archived from the original on October 12 2016 Retrieved November 19 2016 Aquino Galman murder convict freed by Arroyo GMA News November 22 2007 Retrieved August 30 2013 Fact Check Controversial Lawyer Claimed Marcos Sr Won The 1986 Snap Elections Rappler June 13 2022 Retrieved November 10 2022 Flake Dennis Edward February 23 2021 Reflections on the 1986 Snap Election and the People Power Revolution Inquirer USA Retrieved November 10 2022 Robles Raissa August 20 2012 Ninoy Aquino s death van Inside Philippine Politics and Beyond Cayabyab Jason August 22 2019 1 Van that carried Ninoy s body up for restoration Museum is final stop of Avsecom van that bore Ninoy s body August 22 2019 Republic Act No 9256 2004 Act Declaring August 21 of Every Year as Ninoy Aquino Day a Special Nonworking Holiday and for Other Purposes retrieved April 28 2011 Republic Act No 9492 2007 Act Rationalizing the Celebration of National Holidays Amending for the Purpose Section 26 Chapter 7 Book I of Executive Order No 292 as amended otherwise known as the Administrative Code of 1987 retrieved April 28 2011 Maid In Malacanang sequel Martyr Or Murderer to premiere around EDSA anniversary next year DailyPedia Dailypedia August 27 2022 Retrieved October 30 2022 Sources Edit Hill Gerald N Hill Kathleen Thompson 1983 Aquino Assassination The True Story and Analysis of the Assassination of Philippine Senator Benigno S Aquino Jr Steve Psinakis Sonoma Calif Hilltop Pub Co ISBN 0 912133 04 X External links EditI AM NINOY website History Channel s feature documentary on Ninoy Aquino s Assassination on YouTube The last time I saw Ninoy Aug 21 2003 Archived from the original on May 16 2006 Retrieved September 9 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Time magazine https web archive org web 20120114150414 http www rmaf org ph Awardees Biography BiographyAquinoCor htm The good die young Sen Benigno Servillano Aquino Jr 1932 1983 Index to Philippine Periodicals https web archive org web 20120930105738 http newsinfo inquirer net inquirerheadlines nation view 20080821 155890 Fewer than 10 people in plot 5 core 5 others in the know https web archive org web 20120930105809 http newsinfo inquirer net inquirerheadlines nation view 20080823 156342 The Pattugalan Memos on Project Four Flowers https web archive org web 20090808024519 http services inquirer net print print php article id 154970 Tambayan ng mga Benignian Video on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Assassination of Ninoy Aquino amp oldid 1137754378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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