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Cronies of Ferdinand Marcos

Certain associates of former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, historically referred to using the catchphrase "Marcos cronies",[1][2][3] benefited from their friendship with Marcos – whether in terms of legal assistance, political favors, or facilitation of business monopolies, during his administration.[4][5][6] Marcos critics, and the local and international press began referring to these individuals as "cronies" during the latter days of the Marcos dictatorship,[2] and the Philippine government – especially the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) – continued using the term after the ouster of Marcos in 1986.[4]

These "cronies" were awarded government commissions, projects, and funds, many of which were later investigated for corruption, misuse of funds, and disregard of the Constitution of the Philippines. Marcos' cronies were given strategic positions both in the government and in private sectors in order for the Marcoses to seize control of the major industries of the country.[2][4]

Individuals regarded as cronies

Juan Ponce Enrile

Enrile served the Marcos Administration under many positions. He was Commissioner of Customs in 1965, and rose to become Defense Minister in 1970. He resigned a year later to run unsuccessfully for the Senate, but was quickly reinstated in 1972. The Marcos administration also fabricated an ambush of Enrile's car, claiming it was perpetrated by militants.[7] This staged act served as justification for the declaration of martial law. Enrile later revealed in a 1985 interview that the attack on his car had been faked.[8]

For the majority of the martial law period, Enrile was in charge of all the armed forces, which were responsible for many human rights abuses and summary executions.[9] Enrile was also involved with many cases of corruption, namely:

  • involvement in the smuggle of goods during his appointment at the Bureau of Customs, particularly several shiploads of imported rice in La Union.[10]
  • with Marcos, gave concessions to politically-favored logging companies, such as to Juan Tuvera, the presidential assistant, and a nephew of Isabela governor Faustino Dy, a close Marcos associate. Publicly, Enrile made pronouncements against illegal logging, yet allowed logging concessions to their associates. Alfonso Lim, another close associate of the Marcoses, was allowed seven logging concessions with a total area of 600,000 hectares, a number far from the 100,000-hectare constitutional limit to any one family. Enrile also owns San Jose Lumber, which is a 95,777-hectare logging concession.[11]
  • involvement with the Coconut Levy Fund scam, which was originally a tax plan for coconut farmers which will give them opportunities to invest stocks and buy industry-related businesses for their benefit. However, Enrile, with Danding Cojuangco, allegedly used the earnings of the Fund for his own personal and business affairs.[2] Cojuangco allegedly used the levy earnings to purchase San Miguel Corporation, the biggest food and beverage conglomerate in the Philippines.[12] The Philippine Commission on Good Government stated that nearly P9.8 billion was collected from farmers from 1971-1983. Current coconut levy assets amount to P93 billion.[13]

Antonio Floirendo Sr.

Banana magnate Floirendo began his business career in Davao City in the 1940s, when he found it favorable to cultivate relationships with running politicians. He contributed to Marcos’ 1965 and 1969 presidential campaign funds, and it was in his Davao estate where Marcos launched his 1969 presidential campaign in southern Philippines.[14]

Under the Marcos administration, Floirendo’s company Tagum Agricultural Development Company, Inc. (TADECO) leased 6,000 hectares of prime, fertile, government land and employed prison labor from the neighboring prisons.[15] This project was formerly halted during the Macapagal Administration. It violated the 1935 Constitution of the Philippines and Philippine corporate law, which permitted only up to 1,024 land acquisition. Sen. Lorendo Tañada chaired a Blue Ribbon Committee investigation into the matter, which caused Floirendo to retreat the plan to wait for a more favorable political climate. His plan finally came into fruition after Marcos’ second term.[10]

Floirendo also served as a front for the Marcoses in purchasing international properties. With former First Lady Imelda Marcos, he purchased three condominium apartments in Olympic Tower in New York City.[16] He purchased two expensive units at the St. James Towers in Manhattan. He purchased a $1.35 million mansion in Makiki Heights in Hawaii. The mansion, known as the Helen Knudsen estate, sits directly across the Tantoco house where the Marcoses lived in exile. He purchased the $4.5 million Lindenmere estate in Long Island New York,[17] and a $2.5 million Beverly Hills property.[4]

Floirendo escaped the Philippines a day before Ferdinand Marcos was exiled to Hawaii. In 1987, Floirendo turned over PHP 70 million in cash to the Presidential Commission on Good Government, as well as titles for the Lindenmere Estate, the Olympic Towers apartments, and the Makiki Heights Drive property. He admitted transferring amounts of $600,000, $2 million, and $4 million to George Hamilton, an American actor involved in the Marcos’ business ties and federal fraud and racketeering cases. They were supposedly loans from Imelda Marcos, who he alleges to have ordered him these transfers. He also admitted that the Marcos-tied corporations of Ancor, Calno, Kuodo and Camelton belonged to him.[4]

Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco

Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco kept close, familial ties with the Marcoses. Aside from business and political dealings, Cojuanco and Marcos are godfathers to each other’s children — Cojuangco to Marcos’ junior, nicknamed Bongbong, and Marcos to Cojuangco’s son which he named ‘Marcos’.[18]

Cojuangco, with Juan Ponce Enrile, were involved with the Coco Levy Fund Scam, which taxed small farmers with the promise of shares in the coconut investment company (Cocofund). However, farmers benefitted nothing from this levy, as the middle-men did not return receipts that proved they paid the coconut levy and were entitled to equity in the company.[10]

Due to the sudden surge of the price of coconuts in the world market, this fund became extremely profitable, amounting to as much as $785 million total profits. These funds were channeled to the private financial interests of Marcos and cronies and was consolidated in the United Coconut Planters Bank (UCPB).[19]

With the backing of the Marcos government and the wealth from the levy fund, Cojuangco was able to completely vertically integrate the coconut trade industry by controlling the financing through UCPB and by buying out Unicom, which was the entity in charge of manufacturing and trading of coconut and coconut by-products. Cojuangco’s wealth increased rapidly, and by the peak of martial law, the value of all the assets he controlled was $1.5 billion, or 25% of the GNP.[10]

Cojuangco then used the windfalls from the coconut levy fund and United Coconut Planters Bank to finance his purchase of the enormously profitable San Miguel Corporation.[20] The Marcos government gave favors to San Miguel Corporation (SMC). For example, when taxes for liquor and cigarettes were raised in January 1986, excise taxes on beer nevertheless decreased, beer being one of the main products of SMC. The tax cut gave SMC $40 million worth of savings that year.

Roberto Benedicto

Roberto Benedicto was Marcos’ former classmate and fraternity brother at the UP Law School.[21] When Marcos was president, Benedicto became part of his small circle in Malacañan, one of the few with full access even to private quarters.

Under the Marcos administration, he served as Ambassador to Japan and Chief of the Philippine National Bank, which was the largest state-owned bank at the time. He permitted huge loans for business of other cronies and associates. He used PNB to grant loans for his shipping company, Northern Lines, and his sugar business. His election as Japanese Ambassador allowed him to develop high-level contacts in Japan. Working with President Marcos, they ratified the Treaty of Amity, Commerce and Navigation between Japan and the Philippines, which gave Japan a “most-favored nation” status.  This agreement gave Japan undue advantage in using the country’s natural resources, which was the primary reason the Philippine Senate did not ratify the treaty for 13 years. Benedicto, understanding the business interests of the Japanese, arranged lucrative joint-venture operations between Japanese corporations and his own. His role as Ambassador also gave him control of the $550 million Japanese war reparations money.[21]

At the prime of his career, Benedicto’s empire consisted of 85 corporations, 106 sugar farms, 14 haciendas, other agricultural lands, 17 radio stations, 16 television stations, 2 telecommunications networks, 7 buildings, 10 vessels and 5 aircraft.[10] He also owned 14 hectares of real estate in Bacolod City, 13.5 billion shares in Oriental Petroleum, and membership shares in golf and country clubs estimated at $491,000.[10] Overseas, he owned a sugar mill in Venezuela, a trading company in Madrid, bank deposits, mansions, and limousines in California. Marcos’ executive secretary estimated that in 1983, Benedicto’s net worth was $800 million.[10]

Lucio Tan

Lucio Tan styles himself as a rags-to-riches self-made millionaire who worked his way up[22] from sweeping and mopping floors to becoming one of the most influential people in Philippine history. However, a closer inspection at his history will reveal deep connections and cronyism to President Ferdinand Marcos, who was able to launch Tan’s immense wealth through sky-high tariff rates on imported cigarettes, under-the-table tax breaks, and government exemptions, all of which allowed Lucio Tan to have a “virtual monopoly for over 40 years in the Philippine Market”.[23]

Fortune Tobacco Corp, founded in 1966 (FTC), is the epicenter of Lucio Tan’s fortune. While it is unclear how much of the market FTC cornered in 1980, estimates range from 60% to 77%.[10] This outright dominance of the cigarette trade in just 14 short years can be attributed to the massive tariffs on imported cigarettes that Tan enjoyed. The nominal rate of protection for cigarettes was at 182% while the Effective Rate of Protection (ERP) was at a colossal rate of 18,758%. This, coupled with the fact that, according to Manapat, during the Martial Law years Lucio Tan regularly evaded taxes, as much as $50 million per year. In addition to this, Fortune Tobacco Corp lawyers were the brains behind the tax laws concerning cigarettes that allowed Tan to completely dominate the cigarette industry.[10]

Lucio Tan’s virtual monopoly on cigarettes afforded him all the advantages in the world, to the detriment of the consumers and buyers and therefore, made the cigarette industry a supplier-driven industry.

Geronimo Velasco

Velasco was the first chief of the Philippine Ministry of Energy, which was established by Marcos in 1979. The Ministry of Energy sought to remedy the skyrocketing oil and power rates brought by the 1973 global oil crisis, by building power plants from natural energy sources.[24] During his appointment, 20 power plants using hydroelectric, thermal, geothermal energy were completed. A major controversy in his career were the government-imposed levies and taxes on the retail price of gasoline. The gross price of regular gasoline per liter was Php 2.20. After taxes it totaled to Php5.05, making taxes more than 50% of the retail cost.

During the government’s corruption probe during the Marcos regime, it was found that Velasco’s net worth was estimated to be around $50 million by 1986. He had several million-dollar real estate properties around the world, such as a $1.5 million mansion, a $675,000 condominium both in California, several houses around Metro-Manila, and a reported resort house on the Bataan peninsula only reachable by helicopter or boat. Apart from these properties, Velasco also chaired several government and private corporations, in many petroleum, coal mining, transportation, mineral exploration, and shipping businesses. During the probe, Velasco claimed that he earned his wealth before his appointment under the Marcos administration. However, probers discovered that his net worth was $5.4 million before he joined the government and it ballooned to $50 million, an 825% increase in only 13 years.[10]

Roman "Jun" Cruz

Cruz served as Undersecretary of Finance from 1968 to 1970, but he is more well known for his bankrolling Imelda Marcos’ trips abroad using Philippine Air Lines (PAL) funds, which he also managed.[25] Cruz took over PAL after the former owners, Benigno Toda, was forced out through a Presidential Order in 1977. This was a result of Toda falling out with the Marcoses as the former charged Imelda $6 million for her overseas junkets.[26]

Throughout his chairmanship, the airline was poorly managed and steadily lost venture. This is due to First Lady Imelda Marcos’ indiscriminate international trips,[21] Cruz’s mismanagement, misuse of funds, and his lack of experience. In 1979, PAL lost $33 million, and by 1983, the airline had already lost $63 million. In order to minimize the losses, Cruz asked help from Malacañan. The government increased PAL’s capitalization from $127 million to $380 million, and $63 million from the National Development Corp. was given to PAL. Despite these additions of government money, PAL continued to suffer loses due to Cruz’s mismanagement and lack of experience.

Cruz also served as president and general manager of the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS).[27] GSIS was originally established for financial aid of low-salaried government employees, providing investments, pensions, and housing loans. In 1980, under Cruz’s administration, house loans were phased out. Instead, the GSIS funded Marcos-connected companies and Imelda-inspired projects. Of GSIS’ total budget of $1.3 billion, 65% or $843 million went into Imelda’s lucrative projects, such as luxury hotels made to impress delegates of the IMF-World Bank conference.[10]

Cruz allocated GSIS funds to support Imelda's hotel building plans locally and overseas. There was an allocation of US$ 202 million to build Kanlaon Towers, Philippine Village Hotel, Philippine Plaza, and Manila Hotel. Cruz also worked with Imelda's brother, Amb. Benjamin Romualdez and organized the Phil-China Friendship Hotels Corp. using GSIS funds in 1980, where the plan was to build two 500-room hotels in Guangzhou and Beijing.[26]

Controversially, Cruz also was accused of using PAL and GSIS funds to acquire real estate in California.[26]

Rodolfo Cuenca

Cuenca was a college dropout who campaigned and raised funds for Marcos during the 1965 presidential elections and later became Marcos’ close friend and golf partner.[28] He later became the head of Construction and Development Corporation of the Philippines (CDCP) which built many of the country’s dams, highways, and bridges, including the San Juanico Bridge, which was a major project that connected Leyte and Samar. CDCP also built many lucrative projects at the behest of the first lady Imelda Marcos, such as a land-reclamation project to create a 240-hectare while beach, a huge complex of native-style pavilions, all to impress foreign delegates of international events and conferences.[29] Government probes have found documents that suggested Marcos received millions of dollars in kickbacks in government construction projects from Cuenca’s company. CDCP experienced remarkable growth and a sudden collapse.[28] This is due to great amounts of foreign loans, dependence on the government, purchases of heavy equipment even when unnecessary, and high debt to equity ratio. In 1978, CDCP accumulated a staggering $158 million debt, which steadily rose to $650 million by 1980.[10]

Manuel Elizalde Jr.

Manuel Elizalde was a minister who was also put in charge of protecting ethnic minorities.[30] He was chief of steel companies that were favored through funding and regulations that ensured lucrative markets. He was also given permission to borrow rifle stocks from the Armed Forces of the Philippines, which he sold back to the Philippine Constabulary for a profit.[31] Elizalde left the Philippines in 1983, reportedly with millions of dollars in funds raised for the protection of the Tasadays.[30]

Ricardo Silverio

Herminio Disini

Disini was married to Imelda's first cousin, Dr. Paciencia Escolin, who served as her personal physician. He was also known to be one of the golfing buddies of Ferdinand. In 1970, Disini established Philippine Tobacco Filters Corporation (PTFC). While the investment was minimal, Disini's big break came when Marcos issued Presidential Decree 750 on July 21, 1975, where it increased the tariff on raw materials imported by the competitor by a 100%. This forced the competitor out of business.[32]

Disini became infamous for brokering the deal for the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant. The PCGG would later order Disini to return US$50.6 million in commissions he earned from the deal. Marcos allegedly received US$80 million in kickbacks from the project.[33] The Office of the Solicitor General would also file that Marcos return PHP22.2 billion to the government for his conspiracy with Disini to defraud the government.[34]

Peter Sabido

Enriquez and Panlilio families

Trinidad Diaz Enriquez hails from the province of Leyte, and as such cultivated her relationship with Imelda. The family had humble beginnings with their D&E Restaurant in Quezon City. Winning favor from Imelda and receiving favorable treatment and loans from the government, the family was able to put up Sulo Hotel, Philippine Village Hotel, and Silahis International Hotel. Enriquez's catering business expanded due to the contracts received from Imelda. Enriquez was also able to gain contracts with Philippine Airlines through Roman Cruz.[35]

Trinidad's son-in-law Rebecco Panlilio would later lead the construction of the largest tourism investment in the Philippines at that time, Puerto Azul, at the mouth of Manila Bay in Ternate, Cavite. The said resort expropriated more than 3,000 hectares of land from residents who have been living at the site for generations.

Suspected role in Marcos' "techniques of plunder"

According to Jovito Salonga in his book "Presidential Plunder", which details Salonga's time as head of the Presidential Commission on Good Government, the cronies helped the Marcoses amass their wealth by aiding in one or more of what Salonga called "Marcos' Techniques of Plunder."[4]

These techniques,[4] says Salonga, were:

  1. Creating monopolies and putting them under the control of cronies;
  2. Awarding loans to cronies from government banking and/or financial institutions;
  3. Forced takeovers of various public or private enterprises, with a nominal amount as payment;
  4. Direct raiding of the public treasury and government financing institutions;
  5. Issuance of Presidential decrees or orders, enabling cronies to amass wealth;
  6. Kickbacks and commissions from enterprises doing business in the Philippines;
  7. Use of shell corporations and dummy companies to launder money overseas;
  8. Skimming of foreign aid and other forms of international assistance; and
  9. Hiding wealth in overseas bank accounts using pseudonyms or code names.

In popular culture

  • In the film Citizen Jake, the titular character's father, Senator Jacobo Herrera is explicitly referred to as a "Marcos crony" who had to leave the Philippines after the Marcoses were deposed in 1986, but had returned to the Philippines and successfully reestablished himself in Philippine politics.[36]

See also

References

  1. ^ Joaquin L. Gonzalez III (1997). "Political economy of Philippine development: past issues and current reforms". Humboldt Journal of Social Relations. 23 (1/2 ASIA): 91–119. JSTOR 23263491. Marcos set forth to create his own prviate sector oligarchy made up of loyal relatives and friends. This grand coalition of elites were notoriously called Marcos cronies. His legion of cronies included...
  2. ^ a b c d Ricardo., Manapat (1991). Some are smarter than others : the history of Marcos' crony capitalism. New York: Aletheia Publications. ISBN 9719128704. OCLC 28428684.
  3. ^ Hutchcroft, Paul D. (April 1991). "Oligarchs and Cronies in the Philippine State the Politics of Patrimonial Plunder". World Politics. 43 (3): 414–450. doi:10.2307/2010401. ISSN 1086-3338. JSTOR 2010401. S2CID 154855272.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g R., Salonga, Jovito (2000). Presidential plunder : the quest for the Marcos ill-gotten wealth. [Quezon City]: U.P. Center for Leadership, Citizenship and Democracy. ISBN 9718567283. OCLC 44927743.
  5. ^ Lustre, Philip M. , Jr. (2016-02-25). "Search for Marcos' wealth: Compromising with cronies". Rappler. Retrieved 2018-05-26.
  6. ^ Davies, Nick (2016-05-07). "The $10bn question: what happened to the Marcos millions?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2018-05-26.
  7. ^ Research, Inquirer. "True or false: Was 1972 Enrile ambush faked?". Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  8. ^ "PressReader.com - Connecting People Through News". www.pressreader.com. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  9. ^ . www.manilatimes.net. Archived from the original on 2018-08-11. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ricardo., Manapat (1991). Some are smarter than others : the history of Marcos' crony capitalism. New York: Aletheia Publications. ISBN 9719128704. OCLC 28428684.
  11. ^ INQUIRER.net. "Navigating the crimes of the plunder mastermind". Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  12. ^ "2012 YEARENDER: The San Miguel-coco levy saga". Rappler. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  13. ^ "Coco levy fund scam: Gold for the corrupt, crumbs for farmers". Rappler. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  14. ^ News, Gerry Lirio, ABS-CBN. "Encounters with a dictator". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2018-05-23. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  15. ^ Kamm, Henry. "CREATING A DYNASTY IN THE PHILIPINES [sic]". Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  16. ^ "Marcos owns Tadeco - The Manila Times Online". www.manilatimes.net. 12 June 2017. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  17. ^ Hays, Constance L. "The 'Simple' $4.5 Million Marcos House". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  18. ^ "Ninong Danding said I can woo NPC members to my side—Bongbong Marcos". GMA News Online. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  19. ^ "Danding Cojuangco and the coco levy funds". GMA News Online. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  20. ^ Burgonio, Michael Lim Ubac, TJ. "Aquino urged to speak up on coco levy fund, or else". Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  21. ^ a b c "Marcos Graft Staggering". tribunedigital-chicagotribune. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  22. ^ "Behind many great success stories are tales of struggle and adversity | Philstar.com". philstar.com. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  23. ^ abs-cbnNEWS.com/Newsbreak, By Lala Rimando. "Philip Morris and its Philippine saga". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  24. ^ "Minister Geronimo Z. Velasco | DOE | Department of Energy Portal". www.doe.gov.ph. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  25. ^ . asiatravel.com. Archived from the original on 2018-05-23. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  26. ^ a b c Manapat, Ricardo (1991). Some are Smarter Than Others: The History of Marcos' Crony Capitalism. New York: Aletheia Publications. pp. 368–376. ISBN 971-91287-0-4.
  27. ^ "SC tells PCGG to substantiate alleged Marcos links in multi-billion graft case". GMA News Online. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  28. ^ a b "PressReader.com - Connecting People Through News". www.pressreader.com. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  29. ^ "Excerpts from Builder of Bridges: The Rudy Cuenca Story". 2016-12-29. Retrieved 2018-05-23.
  30. ^ a b Bolando, AJ. "The Stone Age tribe that never was | 31 years of amnesia". Philippine Star. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  31. ^ "ML@50: "Oligarchy"". Now You Know PH. 2022-09-22. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  32. ^ Manapat, Ricardo (1991). Some are smarter than others : the history of Marcos' crony capitalism. New York: Aletheia Publications. pp. 317–343. ISBN 971-91287-0-4.
  33. ^ Butterfield, Fox (1986-03-07). "Filipinos say Marcos was given millions for '76 nuclear contract". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  34. ^ Salaverria, Leila B. (2012-05-11). "Nuke plant bribery: PCGG wants Marcos, not just Disini, to pay". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  35. ^ Manapat, Ricardo (1991). Some are smarter than others : the history of Marcos' crony capitalism. New York: Aletheia Publications. pp. 377–379. ISBN 971-91287-0-4.
  36. ^ Patag, Kristine Joy (2018-05-02). "'Citizen Jake' gets nationwide release". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2018-05-26.

cronies, ferdinand, marcos, certain, associates, former, philippine, president, ferdinand, marcos, historically, referred, using, catchphrase, marcos, cronies, benefited, from, their, friendship, with, marcos, whether, terms, legal, assistance, political, favo. Certain associates of former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos historically referred to using the catchphrase Marcos cronies 1 2 3 benefited from their friendship with Marcos whether in terms of legal assistance political favors or facilitation of business monopolies during his administration 4 5 6 Marcos critics and the local and international press began referring to these individuals as cronies during the latter days of the Marcos dictatorship 2 and the Philippine government especially the Presidential Commission on Good Government PCGG continued using the term after the ouster of Marcos in 1986 4 These cronies were awarded government commissions projects and funds many of which were later investigated for corruption misuse of funds and disregard of the Constitution of the Philippines Marcos cronies were given strategic positions both in the government and in private sectors in order for the Marcoses to seize control of the major industries of the country 2 4 Contents 1 Individuals regarded as cronies 1 1 Juan Ponce Enrile 1 2 Antonio Floirendo Sr 1 3 Eduardo Danding Cojuangco 1 4 Roberto Benedicto 1 5 Lucio Tan 1 6 Geronimo Velasco 1 7 Roman Jun Cruz 1 8 Rodolfo Cuenca 1 9 Manuel Elizalde Jr 1 10 Ricardo Silverio 1 11 Herminio Disini 1 12 Peter Sabido 1 13 Enriquez and Panlilio families 2 Suspected role in Marcos techniques of plunder 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 ReferencesIndividuals regarded as cronies EditJuan Ponce Enrile Edit Main article Juan Ponce Enrile Enrile served the Marcos Administration under many positions He was Commissioner of Customs in 1965 and rose to become Defense Minister in 1970 He resigned a year later to run unsuccessfully for the Senate but was quickly reinstated in 1972 The Marcos administration also fabricated an ambush of Enrile s car claiming it was perpetrated by militants 7 This staged act served as justification for the declaration of martial law Enrile later revealed in a 1985 interview that the attack on his car had been faked 8 For the majority of the martial law period Enrile was in charge of all the armed forces which were responsible for many human rights abuses and summary executions 9 Enrile was also involved with many cases of corruption namely involvement in the smuggle of goods during his appointment at the Bureau of Customs particularly several shiploads of imported rice in La Union 10 with Marcos gave concessions to politically favored logging companies such as to Juan Tuvera the presidential assistant and a nephew of Isabela governor Faustino Dy a close Marcos associate Publicly Enrile made pronouncements against illegal logging yet allowed logging concessions to their associates Alfonso Lim another close associate of the Marcoses was allowed seven logging concessions with a total area of 600 000 hectares a number far from the 100 000 hectare constitutional limit to any one family Enrile also owns San Jose Lumber which is a 95 777 hectare logging concession 11 involvement with the Coconut Levy Fund scam which was originally a tax plan for coconut farmers which will give them opportunities to invest stocks and buy industry related businesses for their benefit However Enrile with Danding Cojuangco allegedly used the earnings of the Fund for his own personal and business affairs 2 Cojuangco allegedly used the levy earnings to purchase San Miguel Corporation the biggest food and beverage conglomerate in the Philippines 12 The Philippine Commission on Good Government stated that nearly P9 8 billion was collected from farmers from 1971 1983 Current coconut levy assets amount to P93 billion 13 Antonio Floirendo Sr Edit Main article Antonio Floirendo Sr Banana magnate Floirendo began his business career in Davao City in the 1940s when he found it favorable to cultivate relationships with running politicians He contributed to Marcos 1965 and 1969 presidential campaign funds and it was in his Davao estate where Marcos launched his 1969 presidential campaign in southern Philippines 14 Under the Marcos administration Floirendo s company Tagum Agricultural Development Company Inc TADECO leased 6 000 hectares of prime fertile government land and employed prison labor from the neighboring prisons 15 This project was formerly halted during the Macapagal Administration It violated the 1935 Constitution of the Philippines and Philippine corporate law which permitted only up to 1 024 land acquisition Sen Lorendo Tanada chaired a Blue Ribbon Committee investigation into the matter which caused Floirendo to retreat the plan to wait for a more favorable political climate His plan finally came into fruition after Marcos second term 10 Floirendo also served as a front for the Marcoses in purchasing international properties With former First Lady Imelda Marcos he purchased three condominium apartments in Olympic Tower in New York City 16 He purchased two expensive units at the St James Towers in Manhattan He purchased a 1 35 million mansion in Makiki Heights in Hawaii The mansion known as the Helen Knudsen estate sits directly across the Tantoco house where the Marcoses lived in exile He purchased the 4 5 million Lindenmere estate in Long Island New York 17 and a 2 5 million Beverly Hills property 4 Floirendo escaped the Philippines a day before Ferdinand Marcos was exiled to Hawaii In 1987 Floirendo turned over PHP 70 million in cash to the Presidential Commission on Good Government as well as titles for the Lindenmere Estate the Olympic Towers apartments and the Makiki Heights Drive property He admitted transferring amounts of 600 000 2 million and 4 million to George Hamilton an American actor involved in the Marcos business ties and federal fraud and racketeering cases They were supposedly loans from Imelda Marcos who he alleges to have ordered him these transfers He also admitted that the Marcos tied corporations of Ancor Calno Kuodo and Camelton belonged to him 4 Eduardo Danding Cojuangco Edit Main article Eduardo Cojuangco Jr Eduardo Danding Cojuangco kept close familial ties with the Marcoses Aside from business and political dealings Cojuanco and Marcos are godfathers to each other s children Cojuangco to Marcos junior nicknamed Bongbong and Marcos to Cojuangco s son which he named Marcos 18 Cojuangco with Juan Ponce Enrile were involved with the Coco Levy Fund Scam which taxed small farmers with the promise of shares in the coconut investment company Cocofund However farmers benefitted nothing from this levy as the middle men did not return receipts that proved they paid the coconut levy and were entitled to equity in the company 10 Due to the sudden surge of the price of coconuts in the world market this fund became extremely profitable amounting to as much as 785 million total profits These funds were channeled to the private financial interests of Marcos and cronies and was consolidated in the United Coconut Planters Bank UCPB 19 With the backing of the Marcos government and the wealth from the levy fund Cojuangco was able to completely vertically integrate the coconut trade industry by controlling the financing through UCPB and by buying out Unicom which was the entity in charge of manufacturing and trading of coconut and coconut by products Cojuangco s wealth increased rapidly and by the peak of martial law the value of all the assets he controlled was 1 5 billion or 25 of the GNP 10 Cojuangco then used the windfalls from the coconut levy fund and United Coconut Planters Bank to finance his purchase of the enormously profitable San Miguel Corporation 20 The Marcos government gave favors to San Miguel Corporation SMC For example when taxes for liquor and cigarettes were raised in January 1986 excise taxes on beer nevertheless decreased beer being one of the main products of SMC The tax cut gave SMC 40 million worth of savings that year Roberto Benedicto Edit Main article Roberto Benedicto Roberto Benedicto was Marcos former classmate and fraternity brother at the UP Law School 21 When Marcos was president Benedicto became part of his small circle in Malacanan one of the few with full access even to private quarters Under the Marcos administration he served as Ambassador to Japan and Chief of the Philippine National Bank which was the largest state owned bank at the time He permitted huge loans for business of other cronies and associates He used PNB to grant loans for his shipping company Northern Lines and his sugar business His election as Japanese Ambassador allowed him to develop high level contacts in Japan Working with President Marcos they ratified the Treaty of Amity Commerce and Navigation between Japan and the Philippines which gave Japan a most favored nation status This agreement gave Japan undue advantage in using the country s natural resources which was the primary reason the Philippine Senate did not ratify the treaty for 13 years Benedicto understanding the business interests of the Japanese arranged lucrative joint venture operations between Japanese corporations and his own His role as Ambassador also gave him control of the 550 million Japanese war reparations money 21 At the prime of his career Benedicto s empire consisted of 85 corporations 106 sugar farms 14 haciendas other agricultural lands 17 radio stations 16 television stations 2 telecommunications networks 7 buildings 10 vessels and 5 aircraft 10 He also owned 14 hectares of real estate in Bacolod City 13 5 billion shares in Oriental Petroleum and membership shares in golf and country clubs estimated at 491 000 10 Overseas he owned a sugar mill in Venezuela a trading company in Madrid bank deposits mansions and limousines in California Marcos executive secretary estimated that in 1983 Benedicto s net worth was 800 million 10 Lucio Tan Edit Main article Lucio Tan Lucio Tan styles himself as a rags to riches self made millionaire who worked his way up 22 from sweeping and mopping floors to becoming one of the most influential people in Philippine history However a closer inspection at his history will reveal deep connections and cronyism to President Ferdinand Marcos who was able to launch Tan s immense wealth through sky high tariff rates on imported cigarettes under the table tax breaks and government exemptions all of which allowed Lucio Tan to have a virtual monopoly for over 40 years in the Philippine Market 23 Fortune Tobacco Corp founded in 1966 FTC is the epicenter of Lucio Tan s fortune While it is unclear how much of the market FTC cornered in 1980 estimates range from 60 to 77 10 This outright dominance of the cigarette trade in just 14 short years can be attributed to the massive tariffs on imported cigarettes that Tan enjoyed The nominal rate of protection for cigarettes was at 182 while the Effective Rate of Protection ERP was at a colossal rate of 18 758 This coupled with the fact that according to Manapat during the Martial Law years Lucio Tan regularly evaded taxes as much as 50 million per year In addition to this Fortune Tobacco Corp lawyers were the brains behind the tax laws concerning cigarettes that allowed Tan to completely dominate the cigarette industry 10 Lucio Tan s virtual monopoly on cigarettes afforded him all the advantages in the world to the detriment of the consumers and buyers and therefore made the cigarette industry a supplier driven industry Geronimo Velasco Edit Velasco was the first chief of the Philippine Ministry of Energy which was established by Marcos in 1979 The Ministry of Energy sought to remedy the skyrocketing oil and power rates brought by the 1973 global oil crisis by building power plants from natural energy sources 24 During his appointment 20 power plants using hydroelectric thermal geothermal energy were completed A major controversy in his career were the government imposed levies and taxes on the retail price of gasoline The gross price of regular gasoline per liter was Php 2 20 After taxes it totaled to Php5 05 making taxes more than 50 of the retail cost During the government s corruption probe during the Marcos regime it was found that Velasco s net worth was estimated to be around 50 million by 1986 He had several million dollar real estate properties around the world such as a 1 5 million mansion a 675 000 condominium both in California several houses around Metro Manila and a reported resort house on the Bataan peninsula only reachable by helicopter or boat Apart from these properties Velasco also chaired several government and private corporations in many petroleum coal mining transportation mineral exploration and shipping businesses During the probe Velasco claimed that he earned his wealth before his appointment under the Marcos administration However probers discovered that his net worth was 5 4 million before he joined the government and it ballooned to 50 million an 825 increase in only 13 years 10 Roman Jun Cruz Edit Cruz served as Undersecretary of Finance from 1968 to 1970 but he is more well known for his bankrolling Imelda Marcos trips abroad using Philippine Air Lines PAL funds which he also managed 25 Cruz took over PAL after the former owners Benigno Toda was forced out through a Presidential Order in 1977 This was a result of Toda falling out with the Marcoses as the former charged Imelda 6 million for her overseas junkets 26 Throughout his chairmanship the airline was poorly managed and steadily lost venture This is due to First Lady Imelda Marcos indiscriminate international trips 21 Cruz s mismanagement misuse of funds and his lack of experience In 1979 PAL lost 33 million and by 1983 the airline had already lost 63 million In order to minimize the losses Cruz asked help from Malacanan The government increased PAL s capitalization from 127 million to 380 million and 63 million from the National Development Corp was given to PAL Despite these additions of government money PAL continued to suffer loses due to Cruz s mismanagement and lack of experience Cruz also served as president and general manager of the Government Service Insurance System GSIS 27 GSIS was originally established for financial aid of low salaried government employees providing investments pensions and housing loans In 1980 under Cruz s administration house loans were phased out Instead the GSIS funded Marcos connected companies and Imelda inspired projects Of GSIS total budget of 1 3 billion 65 or 843 million went into Imelda s lucrative projects such as luxury hotels made to impress delegates of the IMF World Bank conference 10 Cruz allocated GSIS funds to support Imelda s hotel building plans locally and overseas There was an allocation of US 202 million to build Kanlaon Towers Philippine Village Hotel Philippine Plaza and Manila Hotel Cruz also worked with Imelda s brother Amb Benjamin Romualdez and organized the Phil China Friendship Hotels Corp using GSIS funds in 1980 where the plan was to build two 500 room hotels in Guangzhou and Beijing 26 Controversially Cruz also was accused of using PAL and GSIS funds to acquire real estate in California 26 Rodolfo Cuenca Edit Main article Rodolfo Cuenca Cuenca was a college dropout who campaigned and raised funds for Marcos during the 1965 presidential elections and later became Marcos close friend and golf partner 28 He later became the head of Construction and Development Corporation of the Philippines CDCP which built many of the country s dams highways and bridges including the San Juanico Bridge which was a major project that connected Leyte and Samar CDCP also built many lucrative projects at the behest of the first lady Imelda Marcos such as a land reclamation project to create a 240 hectare while beach a huge complex of native style pavilions all to impress foreign delegates of international events and conferences 29 Government probes have found documents that suggested Marcos received millions of dollars in kickbacks in government construction projects from Cuenca s company CDCP experienced remarkable growth and a sudden collapse 28 This is due to great amounts of foreign loans dependence on the government purchases of heavy equipment even when unnecessary and high debt to equity ratio In 1978 CDCP accumulated a staggering 158 million debt which steadily rose to 650 million by 1980 10 Manuel Elizalde Jr Edit Main article Manuel ElizaldeManuel Elizalde was a minister who was also put in charge of protecting ethnic minorities 30 He was chief of steel companies that were favored through funding and regulations that ensured lucrative markets He was also given permission to borrow rifle stocks from the Armed Forces of the Philippines which he sold back to the Philippine Constabulary for a profit 31 Elizalde left the Philippines in 1983 reportedly with millions of dollars in funds raised for the protection of the Tasadays 30 Ricardo Silverio Edit Herminio Disini Edit Disini was married to Imelda s first cousin Dr Paciencia Escolin who served as her personal physician He was also known to be one of the golfing buddies of Ferdinand In 1970 Disini established Philippine Tobacco Filters Corporation PTFC While the investment was minimal Disini s big break came when Marcos issued Presidential Decree 750 on July 21 1975 where it increased the tariff on raw materials imported by the competitor by a 100 This forced the competitor out of business 32 Disini became infamous for brokering the deal for the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant The PCGG would later order Disini to return US 50 6 million in commissions he earned from the deal Marcos allegedly received US 80 million in kickbacks from the project 33 The Office of the Solicitor General would also file that Marcos return PHP22 2 billion to the government for his conspiracy with Disini to defraud the government 34 Peter Sabido Edit Enriquez and Panlilio families Edit Trinidad Diaz Enriquez hails from the province of Leyte and as such cultivated her relationship with Imelda The family had humble beginnings with their D amp E Restaurant in Quezon City Winning favor from Imelda and receiving favorable treatment and loans from the government the family was able to put up Sulo Hotel Philippine Village Hotel and Silahis International Hotel Enriquez s catering business expanded due to the contracts received from Imelda Enriquez was also able to gain contracts with Philippine Airlines through Roman Cruz 35 Trinidad s son in law Rebecco Panlilio would later lead the construction of the largest tourism investment in the Philippines at that time Puerto Azul at the mouth of Manila Bay in Ternate Cavite The said resort expropriated more than 3 000 hectares of land from residents who have been living at the site for generations Suspected role in Marcos techniques of plunder EditSee also Stolen wealth of the Marcos family According to Jovito Salonga in his book Presidential Plunder which details Salonga s time as head of the Presidential Commission on Good Government the cronies helped the Marcoses amass their wealth by aiding in one or more of what Salonga called Marcos Techniques of Plunder 4 These techniques 4 says Salonga were Creating monopolies and putting them under the control of cronies Awarding loans to cronies from government banking and or financial institutions Forced takeovers of various public or private enterprises with a nominal amount as payment Direct raiding of the public treasury and government financing institutions Issuance of Presidential decrees or orders enabling cronies to amass wealth Kickbacks and commissions from enterprises doing business in the Philippines Use of shell corporations and dummy companies to launder money overseas Skimming of foreign aid and other forms of international assistance and Hiding wealth in overseas bank accounts using pseudonyms or code names In popular culture EditIn the film Citizen Jake the titular character s father Senator Jacobo Herrera is explicitly referred to as a Marcos crony who had to leave the Philippines after the Marcoses were deposed in 1986 but had returned to the Philippines and successfully reestablished himself in Philippine politics 36 See also EditMonopolies in the Philippines 1965 1986 References Edit Joaquin L Gonzalez III 1997 Political economy of Philippine development past issues and current reforms Humboldt Journal of Social Relations 23 1 2 ASIA 91 119 JSTOR 23263491 Marcos set forth to create his own prviate sector oligarchy made up of loyal relatives and friends This grand coalition of elites were notoriously called Marcos cronies His legion of cronies included a b c d Ricardo Manapat 1991 Some are smarter than others the history of Marcos crony capitalism New York Aletheia Publications ISBN 9719128704 OCLC 28428684 Hutchcroft Paul D April 1991 Oligarchs and Cronies in the Philippine State the Politics of Patrimonial Plunder World Politics 43 3 414 450 doi 10 2307 2010401 ISSN 1086 3338 JSTOR 2010401 S2CID 154855272 a b c d e f g R Salonga Jovito 2000 Presidential plunder the quest for the Marcos ill gotten wealth Quezon City U P Center for Leadership Citizenship and Democracy ISBN 9718567283 OCLC 44927743 Lustre Philip M Jr 2016 02 25 Search for Marcos wealth Compromising with cronies Rappler Retrieved 2018 05 26 Davies Nick 2016 05 07 The 10bn question what happened to the Marcos millions The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2018 05 26 Research Inquirer True or false Was 1972 Enrile ambush faked Retrieved 2018 05 23 PressReader com Connecting People Through News www pressreader com Retrieved 2018 05 23 Why not ask Ramos and Enrile about Martial Law abuses The Manila Times Online www manilatimes net Archived from the original on 2018 08 11 Retrieved 2018 05 23 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ricardo Manapat 1991 Some are smarter than others the history of Marcos crony capitalism New York Aletheia Publications ISBN 9719128704 OCLC 28428684 INQUIRER net Navigating the crimes of the plunder mastermind Retrieved 2018 05 23 2012 YEARENDER The San Miguel coco levy saga Rappler Retrieved 2018 05 23 Coco levy fund scam Gold for the corrupt crumbs for farmers Rappler Retrieved 2018 05 23 News Gerry Lirio ABS CBN Encounters with a dictator ABS CBN News Retrieved 2018 05 23 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help Kamm Henry CREATING A DYNASTY IN THE PHILIPINES sic Retrieved 2018 05 23 Marcos owns Tadeco The Manila Times Online www manilatimes net 12 June 2017 Retrieved 2018 05 23 Hays Constance L The Simple 4 5 Million Marcos House The New York Times Retrieved 2018 05 23 Ninong Danding said I can woo NPC members to my side Bongbong Marcos GMA News Online Retrieved 2018 05 23 Danding Cojuangco and the coco levy funds GMA News Online Retrieved 2018 05 23 Burgonio Michael Lim Ubac TJ Aquino urged to speak up on coco levy fund or else Retrieved 2018 05 23 a b c Marcos Graft Staggering tribunedigital chicagotribune Retrieved 2018 05 23 Behind many great success stories are tales of struggle and adversity Philstar com philstar com Retrieved 2018 05 23 abs cbnNEWS com Newsbreak By Lala Rimando Philip Morris and its Philippine saga ABS CBN News Retrieved 2018 05 23 Minister Geronimo Z Velasco DOE Department of Energy Portal www doe gov ph Retrieved 2018 05 23 Philippine Airlines asiatravel com Archived from the original on 2018 05 23 Retrieved 2018 05 23 a b c Manapat Ricardo 1991 Some are Smarter Than Others The History of Marcos Crony Capitalism New York Aletheia Publications pp 368 376 ISBN 971 91287 0 4 SC tells PCGG to substantiate alleged Marcos links in multi billion graft case GMA News Online Retrieved 2018 05 23 a b PressReader com Connecting People Through News www pressreader com Retrieved 2018 05 23 Excerpts from Builder of Bridges The Rudy Cuenca Story 2016 12 29 Retrieved 2018 05 23 a b Bolando AJ The Stone Age tribe that never was 31 years of amnesia Philippine Star Retrieved 2022 09 28 ML 50 Oligarchy Now You Know PH 2022 09 22 Retrieved 2022 09 28 Manapat Ricardo 1991 Some are smarter than others the history of Marcos crony capitalism New York Aletheia Publications pp 317 343 ISBN 971 91287 0 4 Butterfield Fox 1986 03 07 Filipinos say Marcos was given millions for 76 nuclear contract The New York Times Retrieved 8 June 2021 Salaverria Leila B 2012 05 11 Nuke plant bribery PCGG wants Marcos not just Disini to pay INQUIRER net Retrieved 8 June 2021 Manapat Ricardo 1991 Some are smarter than others the history of Marcos crony capitalism New York Aletheia Publications pp 377 379 ISBN 971 91287 0 4 Patag Kristine Joy 2018 05 02 Citizen Jake gets nationwide release Philstar com Retrieved 2018 05 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cronies of Ferdinand Marcos amp oldid 1129482300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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