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Wikipedia

Jose W. Diokno

Jose Wright Diokno GCrL (February 26, 1922 – February 27, 1987), also known as "Ka Pepe", was a Filipino nationalist, lawyer, and statesman.[4] Regarded as the "Father of Human Rights,"[5] he served as Senator of the Philippines, Secretary of Justice, founding chair of the Commission on Human Rights, and founder of the Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG), the premier group of Filipino human rights lawyers. Diokno is the only person to top both the Philippine Bar Examination and the board exam for Certified Public Accountants (CPA). His career was dedicated to the promotion of human rights, the defense of Philippine sovereignty, and the enactment of pro-Filipino economic legislation.

Jose W. Diokno
Senator of the Philippines
In office
December 30, 1963 – September 23, 1972[1]
Secretary of Justice
In office
January 2, 1962 – May 19, 1962
PresidentDiosdado Macapagal
Preceded byAlejo Mabanag
Succeeded byJuan Liwag
Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Human Rights
In office
March 18, 1986[2] – January 23, 1987
Personal details
BornFebruary 26, 1922
Manila, Philippine Islands
DiedFebruary 27, 1987(1987-02-27) (aged 65)
New Manila, Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Political partyNacionalista (1945-August 31, 1971)[3]
SpouseCarmen Reyes "Nena" Icasiano-Diokno
RelationsRamón Diokno (father)
Jose Lorenzo "Pepe" Diokno (grandson)
Children10 (including Chel and Maris)
Alma materDe La Salle University (BComm)
University of Santo Tomas (LL.B)
OccupationPublic official, Lawyer, Journalist, Accountant, Activist
Website

In 2004, Diokno was posthumously conferred the Order of Lakandula with the rank of Supremo—the Philippines' highest honor.[6] February 27, a day after his birthday, is celebrated in the Philippines as Jose W. Diokno Day.[7]

Early life and education

 
1922 Baptismal Certificate of Diokno issued in Ermita, Manila

Jose W. Diokno was born in Manila on February 26, 1922, to Ramón Diokno y Marasigan, a former senator and Justice of the Supreme Court from Taal, Batangas, and Leonor May Wright y Garcia, an American mestiza.

 
Diokno with wife Carmen

Diokno was the youngest son and the sixth of eight children, and had three half-siblings from Ramón's first spouse, Martha Fello Diokno, who passed away years ago. Diokno grew up at 48 Alhambra Street, Ermita, Manila[8][a][9] and was baptized at Ermita Church on September 3, 1922.[10] Ramón Diokno was considered an anti-imperialist nationalist as senator and was one of four senators to oppose the American Parity Rights Amendment. Jose W. Diokno's grandfather was Ananías Diokno, a navy general and governor in the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine–American War in Visayas.[11] Ananías's great-great grandfather was Félix Berenguer de Marquina y Fitzgerald, the namesake of Marikina who was viceroy of New Spain and governor-general of the Philippines from 1788 to 1793. Berenguer de Marquina had an extramarital affair with a Chinese mestiza from Cagsawa, Albay named Demetria Sumulong y Lindo and sired one daughter. He abandoned his family to repatriate to Spain and later became the lieutenant-general of the navy in 1799. He was said to be an incompetent but persevering governor.[12] Despite his mixed ancestry, Diokno would later often say that he was "100% Filipino".[13]

As a young 12-year-old boy, Diokno would go with his father to trials in the provinces. He would carry his father’s bag, and sit on a small chair reserved for him behind the counsel’s table. He learned English through a private tutor during the American Commonwealth period, as the family usually spoke in Spanish. Growing up, Diokno relished having Spanish dishes at home, namely tapas or side dishes such as angulas, white embutido, galantina, and chorizos. He liked Filipino food as well and enjoyed rice mixed with gatas ng kalabaw (carabao’s milk), raw eggs, and tapang usa (cured venison).[14]

In 1937, after repeated acceleration Diokno graduated high school as the valedictorian at De La Salle College, now called De La Salle University (DLSU), and went on to take a bachelor's degree in commerce, also at DLSU. He was an ROTC lieutenant, dramatist, writer, and leader. He later developed a skill in photography and owned a studio. Diokno initially wanted to study mechanical engineering, but eventually compromised with his parents to take up commerce since his parents wanted a major that featured legal studies. He realized he enjoyed the legal courses the most and decided to take up law once he finished his undergraduate studies.[15] He graduated from college summa cum laude.[16] Diokno took the CPA board examinations in 1940—for which he had to secure special dispensation, since he was too young. He topped the CPA with a grade of 91.18.[13] However, since Diokno was too young when he passed the CPA exam, he could not receive a proper license until he was twenty-one, which led him to continue his law studies like his half-brother.[17]

After Diokno enrolled at the University of Santo Tomas in 1940, his studies were interrupted by the outbreak of WWII in 1941 in his second year. When the war was over, he was granted a special dispensation by the Supreme Court of the Philippines and was allowed to take the Philippine Bar Examination despite having never completed his degree. He topped the 1944 bar exam (Roll No. 5, Diokno was the first Filipino lawyer to take his oath and appear on the post-war Roll of Attorneys on July 26, 1945)[18] together with a 24 year old future ally named Jovito Salonga with a score of 95.3, the highest since the language of instruction switched to English.[19][13][20] As a reward he took a solo vacation in the United States, where he would frequently call Carmen "Nena" Icasiano, a commerce student from Bulacan studying at Far Eastern University. They met in 1946 at a dinner party hosted by a future mayor named Arsenio Lacson, and Diokno started courting her, refusing to listen to his father to marry José Abad Santos's daughter. Diokno married Carmen at Ermita Church in 1949 immediately after Diokno returned from his shortened trip. He quickly proposed to her after he found out on the telephone that she had tuberculosis and had missed seeing him.[21]

Rising lawyer and Secretary of Justice years

 
Sec. Diokno speaking out at a televised conference

Immediately after topping the Bar exam, Diokno embarked on his law practice at his father's bupete or law office, handling and winning high-profile cases including Vera v. Avelino, G.R. L-543, on behalf of his father, Sen. Ramón Diokno, who let the young Diokno quickly take over the bupete. Diokno also successfully fought libel charges against radio personality and Manila Mayor Arsenio Lacson, who was a close friend and would often visit Diokno and his wife in the wee hours at their home in Parañaque to prepare them breakfast. Diokno would in turn edit Mayor Lacson's newspaper columns for Free Philippines. Historians learned a few years after Mayor Lacson's sudden passing that Lacson even intended for Diokno to be his running mate, as the Manila Mayor's fame made him the top presidential candidate for the 1965 election.[22] Diokno served in different committees under President Ramon Magsaysay, and by 1958, Diokno gained enough stature to be selected to join a special committee to investigate the Department of Finance.[23] He was later invited to return to investigate anomalies happening in the Bureau of Supply Corrections.[24]

With his reputation as a legal practitioner established and secured, in December 1961, Diokno found out through the news that he was to be appointed as Secretary of Justice by President Diosdado Macapagal through Mayor Lacson's influence.

In March 1962, Diokno ordered a raid on a firm owned by Harry S. Stonehill, an American businessman who was suspected of tax evasion and bribing public officials, among other crimes. Diokno's investigation of Stonehill further revealed corruption within government ranks, and as Secretary of Justice, he prepared to prosecute those involved. However, President Macapagal intervened, negotiating a deal that absolved Stonehill in exchange for his deportation, then ordered Diokno to resign. Diokno only learned of his resignation from the news and received death threats from supporters of the president, which prompted him to rely on Mayor Lacson's special security. Diokno questioned Macapagal's actions, saying, "How can the government now prosecute the corrupted when it has allowed the corrupter to go?" Macapagal would become unpopular and eventually lose the next election in 1965 to another controversial politician also connected with Stonehill named Ferdinand Marcos.[25][26]

Senator

 
Diokno billboard in 1963

In 1963, Diokno ran for senator under the Nacionalista Party and won with almost half of the popular vote.

His laws and bills were often considered nationalistic in essence, as he called for the creation of the Equal Pay for Equal Work Act, which would ban discrimination of Filipinos in American companies. The infamous ex-president of San Miguel Corp. named Andy Soriano of the Philippine Association and US Ambassador Bill Blair Jr. controversially fought to have the bill vetoed before they stepped down. Diokno often fought American policies that involved transfer pricing.

For his performance as legislator and fight for nationalism, Diokno was named Outstanding Senator by the Philippines Free Press from 1967 to 1970, making him the only legislator to receive the recognition for four successive years. In 1968, Diokno was awarded as the Outstanding CPA in Government Service by the Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants.[27] Diokno also served as the delegate for many commissions including the United Nations General Assembly in the middle of the 1960s.[24] Diokno was also honored as the most outstanding senator by the Philippine Government Employees Association (PGEA) with a PGEA Plaque of Honor in December 1971, among other awards.[28]

Chairmanship of the Economic Affairs Committee

 
The Board of Investments was created by Sen. Diokno's Investment Incentives Act in 1967.

Senator Diokno became chairman of the Senate Economic Affairs Committee, and worked for the passage of pro-Filipino legislation, including what is considered to be the most important incentive law in the country, RA 5186, also known as the Investment Incentives Act of 1967, which provides incentives to mostly Filipino investors and entrepreneurs that would place control of the Philippine economy predominantly in the hands of Filipinos.[29] The law would also be the first groundbreaking initiative of the Philippine economy to gradually step out of its import substitution mindset.[30] It also led to the foundation of the Board of Investments, the premier government agency responsible for propagating investments in the Philippines.

Diokno then authored RA 6173 or the Oil Industry Commission Act of 1971, which created the Oil Industry Commission (OIC) to regulate oil pricing in different companies. This eventually led to the dominance of three oil companies in Caltex, the alternative name of the American corporation Chevron, Petron, a local partner of Middle-Eastern Saudi Aramco and is owned by the monopoly brewery San Miguel Corporation, and Shell based in the Netherlands.[31]

Laws and bills authored

  • Investment Incentives Act, RA 5186;
  • Export Incentives Act, RA 6135;
  • Oil Industry Commission Act, RA 6173;
  • Joint Resolution No. 2;
  • Revised Election Law;
  • An Act Further Amending the Armed Forces Retirement Act, RA 4902;
  • Equal Pay for Equal Work Act;[31]
  • Movie Industry Bill;
  • Bill to Streamline the Appeals Process at the Court of Agrarian Relations;
  • Bill to Provide Benefits to Municipal and City Judges;
  • Bill to Create Circuit Criminal Courts;
  • Bill to Nationalize Domestic Credit Usage;[27]

Civil rights activism

 
Diokno making a speech

When Marcos suspended the fundamental legal right of the writ of habeas corpus following the bombing of the Plaza Miranda gathering of Liberal Party members, Diokno resigned from the Nacionalista Party in protest and took to the streets.[32] Sen. Diokno called on students to start protesting against the administration, anticipating that Marcos, who was nearing the end of his last term, would declare martial law and change the constitution to give himself absolute power.[13][33]

Previously, Marcos began building notoriety following the Jabidah massacre, where an estimated 14 to as much as 68 alleged Muslim youths were gunned down in Corregidor by unknown armed men in 1968.[34] Following this event, a Moro insurgency would quickly develop, starting in Mindanao; it would evolve into a widespread armed-conflict that would engulf the nation decades after Marcos's lifetime.[35] Marcos tried to suppress the media and block coverage of the event, but it was too late. Diokno and many other senators sensed Marcos might have developed a hidden agenda.[36] From then on, Diokno began to put greater emphasis on human rights in public speeches and events. In an oft-quoted 1981 speech, he would declare, "No cause is more worthy than the cause of human rights. Human rights are more than legal concepts: they are the essence of man. They are what makes a man human. That is why they are called human rights: deny them and you deny man's humanity."[37]

He was the leader of the Movement of Concerned Citizens for Civil Liberties (MCCCL), which organized a series of rallies from 1971 to 1972.[38] The most massive of these rallies involved 50,000 protestors and was held on September 21, 1972, shortly before the imposition of martial law by the Marcos dictatorship.[39] During this rally, protestors denounced the infamous Oplan Sagittarius, the devious operation plan by Marcos to declare martial law. Sen. Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr. exposed the Oplan Sagittarius scandal earlier in a September 13 speech, and spoke to the Senate on September 21, the same day that the MCCCL held their exceptionally large rally at Plaza Miranda. Marcos reacted with fear of deposition and immediately finalized Proclamation No. 1081, which declared nationwide martial law at 8:00 p.m. later that evening. Exactly the next day on September 22, 1972, at 8:00 p.m., Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile was told to exit his car near Wack-Wack village.[40] Another vehicle carrying gunmen arrived and stopped near an electrical post, right beside Enrile's vehicle. They then alighted from their vehicle and began to fire at the large sedan of Enrile to give an impression of a terrorist ambush, setting the stage for Marcos's theatrical television announcement.[41][42][43]

Martial law years

Imprisonment and organized coalitions

On September 23, 1972, Diokno's second term as senator was officially cut short when Marcos announced martial law on television at 7:17 p.m.

At 1:00 a.m. before the announcement, Diokno was arrested by the dictatorship. After cutting communication lines in multiple neighborhoods, including Diokno's home, six carloads carrying forty armed soldiers visited Diokno at his home at 12 Margarita Street, Magallanes Village, Makati to "invite" him for questioning. He changed from his pajamas and was sent to Camp Crame. They had no warrant.[13]

 
A wax figure of the late Sen. Diokno in the Delta Room at Fort Magsaysay, where he was confined for thirty days and banned from keeping any items

After Diokno was brought to Camp Crame, he was transferred to Fort Bonifacio, where he was detained along with other opposition members such as Aquino and Chino Roces, the founder and head of The Manila Times, the leading newspaper at the time. The military's Defense Minister Enrile offered a security detail to Diokno "to protect (him) from Communist assassins," to which Diokno laughed and responded that he really needed protection from the military.[44]

Diokno and Aquino, whom the dictatorship considered their foremost opponents, were later handcuffed, blindfolded, and transferred via a chopper to solitary confinement at Fort Magsaysay, located in the municipality of Laur, Nueva Ecija. They remained confined to Fort Magsaysay for exactly thirty days. They both learned of each other's presence through singing. One of them would frequently sing the national anthem Lupang Hinirang or "Chosen Land," to which the other would reply by singing Bayan Ko or "My Country" to prove he was still alive.[45] From the fish being served by the cook Aling Cely, who later became the museum curator of the converted national memorial called the "Aquino-Diokno Memorial," Diokno was able to correctly deduce that he was detained in Nueva Ecija, particularly in Fort Magsaysay.[46]

To tally the number of days, Diokno used rope knots from his mosquito net as well as the back of a soap packaging box and crossed out each day in the manner of a calendar. His visiting family members were often strip-searched by soldiers. They would sneak in books in French and Spanish for him to read, and he would converse to his wife in Spanish for only them to comprehend. Diokno would tell his family not to weep in front of the sadistic soldiers. Only his godmother Paz Wilson, a nonagenarian and a mother figure since his mother's passing, would frequently cry during every visit. She continued to visit despite also undergoing strip searches. The family would be in tears once they left the prison, where the Aquino family would see them. This helped the Aquinos prepare themselves emotionally since they never saw the Diokno family manifest much pain before. Nena Diokno, suspicious of Marcos, took most of her husband's books at the library of his bupete on M.H. del Pilar and brought them home before the military burned down the building. Jose would thank her as he was very familiar with the library and memorized the location of each shelf and book he read.[47] Outside the prison, Marcos announced at his executive mansion, Malacañang Palace that September 21 would be known as "National Thanksgiving Day," the same day Diokno led his biggest Plaza Miranda rally. This declaration has led to a general confusion about the true date of the public announcement of martial law, which was actually on September 23, two days after Proclamation No. 1081 was signed.

 
Sen. Diokno celebrating with Carmen their silver wedding anniversary while he was still under custody on March 28, 1974

Diokno spent 718 days, or nearly two years in detention, mainly at the maximum security compound of Fort Bonifacio. While Aquino was charged with subversion, no charge was ever filed against Diokno. Diokno was released arbitrarily on September 11, 1974—Marcos's 57th birthday.[48] After his release, Sen. Diokno mentioned in an interview with videographer Andrew Pearson that he served as an instructor teaching law courses at the University of the Philippines (UP) at their request after he was released from Fort Bonifacio. This continued until Marcos found out and had him banned, though Diokno continued returning for speeches and conferences, and was later honored with a mural of him and other martial law heroes at the school's main college of Palma Hall.

A year later, in 1975, Diokno was chosen as chairman of the Civil Liberties Union, a position he held until 1982. Later in March 1983, Diokno founded the Kilusan sa Kapangyarihan at Karapatan ng Bayan (Movement for People's Sovereignty and Democracy) Organization or KAAKBAY, which was ideologically independent of beliefs like Marxism but was joined by fellow Marxists and Capitalists. KAAKBAY influenced the public and fought hard against the Marcos administration using non-violent activism or "pressure politics."[49] KAAKBAY later elevated pressure politics as an important principle for post-democracy through its publication called "The Plaridel Papers."[50] The August 1984 edition of The Plaridel Papers popularized the concept of pressure politics and introduced a political system that would involve the "parliament-of-the-streets" in building a "popular democracy."[51] KAAKBAY was also one of the main member organizations of the Justice for Aquino, Justice for All (JAJA) coalition, which was founded by Diokno on August 25, 1983, following Ninoy Aquino's assassination for returning to the country to face Marcos. JAJA was the first united front against Marcos, but it did not last long. KAAKBAY served as the main coalition that kept the other extreme groups from leaving JAJA. Unfortunately, JAJA was later replaced by the relatively leftist Coalition of Organizations for the Restoration of Democracy (CORD) in mid-1984, which had almost the same members. Before the creation of CORD, many former JAJA members who disagreed with the communists also organized a much wider alliance called the Kongreso ng Mamamayang Pilipino (KOMPIL) or the Congress of the Filipino People, and was mainly headed by Diokno.[52]

From January 7 to 8, 1984, 2,300 delegates representing all sectors gathered at the KOMPIL congress to vote on multiple issues. One of the decisions voted by 60% of the attendees was to establish a new Commission on Elections (COMELEC). Elected leaders included statesmen such as Diokno, Lorenzo Tañada, Aquilino Pimentel, Cecilia Muñoz-Palma, Ambrosio Padilla, Salvador Laurel, and Jovito Salonga. Others came from non-political sectors, including Makati's Enrique Zobel, who was related to Andy Soriano and due to consanguinity was part of the Ayala Corporation. Another leader was Jaime Cardinal Sin, who would play an important role two years later for the opposition. Of all the issues, the largest was concerning a letter they made called the Call for Meaningful Elections (CAMEL). Some including Diokno and Aquino's brother Butz preferred to boycott any election to avoid legitimizing the Marcos rule. On the other hand, some of the other signatories preferred to participate in the elections, including Ninoy Aquino's widow, Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino.[53]

Diokno was a part of multiple organizations and alliances that fought the administration and foreign intervention. He continued to attack the different policies of the Marcos administration, such as their controversial nuclear programs that led to the sabotaged construction of the costly Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, thereby infuriating Marcos.[54] Diokno continued to serve as the leader behind ceasing Marcos's numerous incomplete projects.

Human rights work

 
Diokno at the lower left of a painting at UP holding a microphone

Immediately after his release, Diokno set up the Free Legal Assistance Group or FLAG in 1974, which gave free legal services to the victims of martial law. It was the first and largest association of human rights attorneys ever assembled in the nation. In court, Diokno personally defended tribal groups, peasants, social workers threatened by exploitation, and military atrocities, which he represented pro-bono. FLAG popularized developmental legal aid and even doled out allowances to its clients. This has led to new laws requiring newly sworn in lawyers to provide free legal assistance for a certain amount of time.[55] FLAG handled 90 percent of human rights cases in the country as well as built programs to educate citizens about human rights.[56][24] Diokno was also involved in documenting cases of torture, summary execution, and disappearances under the Marcos regime.[13]

Diokno had no fear of being arrested again, and went around and outside the Philippines, spreading a message of hope and democracy. In another oft-quoted speech, he once quipped:

And so law in the land died. I grieve for it but I do not despair over it. I know, with a certainty no argument can turn, no wind can shake, that from its dust will rise a new and better law: more just, more human, and more humane. When that will happen, I know not. That it will happen, I know.[37]

Diokno also held an important role in Southeast Asia leading a group of senior human rights lawyers from Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines in forming the Regional Council on Human Rights in Asia. The group was one of the first non-governmental organizations (NGOs) built to promote human rights in Southeast Asia. On December 9, 1983, in Manila, the Regional Council formalized the first human rights declaration of Southeast Asia called the Declaration of the Basic Duties of ASEAN Peoples and Governments.[57][58] Although the council paved the way for future human rights declarations by other organizations like the United Nations, their momentum gradually declined decades after the Marcos regime ended.[59] Diokno was also, inter alia, the chairman of the first Human Rights Information and Documentation Systems, International (HURIDOCS) assembly in Strasbourg, France, which was a historic event that involved over two hundred representatives.[60][61][62] HURIDOCS founder Hans Thoolen said years later in a tribute to Diokno that he witnessed Diokno present novel ideas on practical ways to defend human rights victims at the 1983 SOS-Torture constituent assembly held in Geneva, Switzerland, and that Diokno frequently disseminated human rights primers published in the common vernacular for mass audiences.[63][64]

Later years and legacy

 
Detail of Jose W. Diokno's name in the Wall of Remembrance at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani

People Power and final years

After founding JAJA together with friend and former Sen. Lorenzo M. Tañada, Diokno was chosen to serve as chairman of its executive committee.[65] The two leaders were the only members to call for a boycott in the upcoming, nationwide Batasan Elections, predicting that it would be fixed.[66]

Eventually public outcries after the election results came out with Marcos winning led to the 1986 People Power Revolution that peacefully ousted the Marcos family out of the country. Diokno was appointed by the new President Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino or Cory, wife of the slain Ninoy Aquino and mother of the future 15th president, Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino, to serve as founding chairman of the Presidential Committee on Human Rights, now the Commission on Human Rights (CHR), and tasked to lead a government panel to negotiate for the return of rebel forces to the government folds. Diokno helped write the 1987 Constitution, particularly Article XIII defining social justice and human rights.[67] Diokno was also the principal negotiator in peace talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines, the main leftist coalition founded during martial law.[68]

In May 1984, even before People Power and its preceding, rigged Batasan Elections, Diokno had been diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. He obtained a high fever and was brought to the Stanford University Medical Center where he learned of his disease. He had smoked all his adult life. Diokno visited the San Francisco University Hospital to have a brain scan and found a brain tumor. He would return to the motherland and on July 4, 1986, which was the U.S. independence day, had a series of debates with Minister Enrile, convincing him that U.S. bases should be removed from the country. Enrile, who betrayed Marcos and joined the new administration, was inspired by this debate and would later become senator and help vote to oust the American military from the country. Diokno returned to the United States on September 3, 1986 for treatment. Eventually after having a transfusion a month later at Manila Doctors Hospital, Diokno decided to stop all treatments and returned to his final residence at 55 3rd St., New Manila, Quezon City, to spend his days reading and writing cases. This was after he had to shave his hair off and already experienced a declining vision. He continued to work all out for four more months, despite his illness, until his passing on February 27, 1987, at 2:40 a.m.—one day after his 65th birthday at home in New Manila. Diokno had spent the last decade of his life making documentaries and speeches, and leading different coalitions and rallies on the streets. His funeral was held at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel in New Manila, and he was buried at Manila Memorial Park - Sucat but later reinterred in a Metro Manila park on October 6, 1996.[69][21][70]

Honors, awards, and historical reputation

Following Diokno's passing, President Cory Aquino declared March 2–12, 1987 as a period of national mourning, with flags flown at half-staff. Expressing her grief, Aquino said, "Pepe braved the Marcos dictatorship with a dignified and eloquent courage our country will long remember."[71] She quoted what her husband Ninoy would often tell his friends that Diokno was "the one man he would unquestioningly follow to the ends of the earth," and that he was "the most brilliant Filipino." As part of KAAKBAY's group of intellectuals, UP Professor Randy David admired Diokno and called him the "best president we did not have," while London's Amnesty International called him the "champion of justice and human rights in Asia." Diokno became famous in the United Kingdom after creating a martial law documentary called "To Sing Our Own Song" with the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1982.[72] Out of frustration, Marcos subpoenaed Diokno and interviewee Cardinal Sin to testify before the Supreme Court regarding their roles in the documentary and connection with another involved human rights hero named Horacio Morales, who used the documentary as trial evidence against the military. Marcos even threatened the British embassy and gave them an order to cancel the documentary, which the British decidedly ignored.[73]

 
J.W. Diokno Boulevard along the Bay City coastline

Diokno's nationalist legacy made further headlines when on February 12, 1983, former Supreme Court Justice J.B.L. Reyes, UP President Salvador P. Lopez, and former senators Tañada and Diokno formed the Anti-Bases Coalition (ABC), with Diokno voted as the secretary general or the chairman of the coalition.[74] The influence of the ABC eventually led to the end of American military presence in the Philippines, notably in Subic Bay and Clark, Pampanga. The historic turnover ceremony transpired on November 24, 1992, under then-Philippine President Fidel Ramos. Diokno also had a reputation for philanthropy as one of the Board of Directors at the Philippine Tuberculosis Society, Inc. (PTSI).[75]

In 2004, Diokno was posthumously conferred the Order of Lakandula with the rank of Supremo—the Philippines' highest honor, which was signed by former Pres. Diosdado Macapagal's daughter, the 14th president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. Diokno was the first recipient of this honor.[76][77] By virtue of a presidential proclamation signed by Gloria Arroyo, February 27 is perennially celebrated in the country as Jose W. Diokno Day.[78]

In 2005, the De La Salle Professional Schools, Inc. Graduate School of Business (DLS-PSI-GSB) handed out the inaugural "Ka Pepe Diokno Human Rights Award" as a champion of human rights. This was established along with another milestone, the establishment of the Jose W. Diokno Distinguished Professorial Chair in Business Law and Human Rights.[79] The first ever Ka Pepe Diokno award as a Champion of Human Rights was given to Voltaire Y. Rosales, Executive Judge of Tanauan, Batangas for his effort in protecting the downtrodden, even giving up his life for the cause. Subsequent annual awards have been given to worthy candidates such as Maria Ressa and Bishop Pablo Virgilio "Ambo" David, who in life or death, fulfilled the values of protecting human rights just as Senator Diokno did.[80][81] He has received praise in other sectors, as Rappler has called him the "country's greatest lawyer."[82] Diokno also received a Doctor of Laws Honoris Causa from the UP College of Law.[83]

In 2007, by virtue of RA 9468, Bay Boulevard, a 4.38 km road along the Bay City coastline, or Pasay and Parañaque City was renamed J.W. Diokno Boulevard in his honor.

In 2017, the CHR erected a nine foot statue of Diokno at the center of the CHR compound entrance in Diliman, Quezon City, and the surrounding park was named Liwasang Diokno or the Diokno Freedom Park. The hall inside the compound is called Bulwagang Diokno or the Diokno Hall and features a bust and an accompanying mural of the late chairman.

Personal life and descendants

 
Chel Diokno seen honoring heroes at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani
 
Carmen Diokno
 
Grandson Pepe Diokno

Sen. Diokno was married to Carmen Reyes "Nena" Icasiano on March 28, 1949, at Ermita Church, with whom he had ten (10) children mostly named after St. Jude Thaddeus, the saint of lost causes: Carmen Leonor or Mench, who was born a year after the marriage and became college valedictorian, then first joined the garment industry with husband Emil Escay before working for NGOs; Jose Ramon or Popoy, who joined the Lopez Group of Companies that established the ABS-CBN Corporation; Maria Paz Tadea or Pat, who joined banking companies in Europe and domestically such as ComBank; Maria Serena Encarnacion or Maris, who is a nationally recognized historian; Maria Teresa Tadea or Maitet, who is a UP cum laude graduate of Economics and was executive director of a non-profit institution called IBON Foundation; Ma. Socorro Tadea or Cookie, who was secretary general of the Regional Council on Human Rights in Asia and secretary general at FLAG since 1976; Jose Miguel Tadeo or Mike, who is a US-based lawyer; Jose Manuel Tadeo or Chel, who is a dean and lawyer; Maria Victoria Tadea or Maia, also a lawyer and her father's CHR secretary; and Martin Jose Tadeo, who is a Singapore-based architect from UST and was adopted when he was two weeks old. Diokno also has at least 18 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren.[31] His children all excelled in their studies, but Diokno would often chide his children about their lack of perfect scores, to which Maris would reply that studying in schools like the American-founded UP (which is the official public national university and where Sen. Diokno wished to enroll in but was banned by his politically-moderate parents) made very good scores the equivalent to perfect scores at DLSU, a private, sectarian Catholic university.[84] They were quite devout, as they frequently had nightly rosary prayers and were devotees of St. Joseph and St. Thaddeus, with Diokno often carrying a rosary in his pocket, which he practiced since his elementary days at De La Salle College.[13]

Maris Diokno, a renowned historian, is the former chair of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, and former Vice President for Academic Affairs at UP. She studied at the University of London and graduated UP magna cum laude.

Chel Diokno is a human rights lawyer, Chairman of FLAG, head of the Diokno Law Center and member of the Jose W. Diokno Foundation, founding Dean of the DLSU Tañada-Diokno School of Law, and former Special Counsel of the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee. Chel Diokno ran for Senator twice and nearly secured enough votes to obtain a seat. He joined the "Otso Diretso" (Direct Eight Candidates to the Senate) coalition and Leni Robredo's coalition, which opposed the Rodrigo Duterte administration. Duterte has been compared to the Marcos family without the privileged background or American ties of Marcos, but instead he has been seen currying favor with the Chinese Communist Party.[85][86] Duterte has also committed human rights violations and like Marcos shut down the media corporation of ABS-CBN. FLAG has represented Rappler founder Maria Ressa, during court hearings filed against her by the Duterte administration for Rappler's reports on Duterte's War on Drugs and Murder of Drug Addicts.[87][88]

Sen. Diokno's grandson and Chel's firstborn child, Jose Lorenzo "Pepe" Diokno is the executive director of alternative education group Rock Ed Philippines.[89] He is best known as a motion picture director, producer, and screenwriter whose debut film, "Engkwentro" won the Venice Film Festival’s Lion of the Future Award in 2009, as well as Venice’s Orizzonti Prize, the NETPAC Award for Best Asian Film, and the Gawad Urian for Best Editing. Pepe used commercials and short films to market his father Chel during his election campaigns.[90][91] Pepe Diokno is also the director of Kwentong Jollibee and other commercials that have gained popularity among netizens.

Public image

 
Diokno at a hearing

Diokno is generally seen as the intellectual leader contrasted to the fierceness of Ninoy Aquino in opposing the perversion of the Marcos Administration.[92][93] He managed to have the ability to lead rival political factions together. As senator, Diokno had a strong relationship with technocrats such as Cesar E.A. Virata, Placido Mapa Jr., and Vicente Paterno, all of whom joined Marcos's administration during martial law. According to these economists and technocrats, Diokno did not carry preconceived notions of others provided that nationalist goals could be met. His willingness to work with people of contrasting ideologies allowed him to adopt the Investment Incentives Act of 1967.[94] Diokno was also popular among all social classes and became a liaison between Pres. Aquino's new government and the communists, whom he led in different coalitions in the past.[95] Despite Diokno's seemingly stoic demeanor and very simple lifestyle, Diokno was also known to be quite eloquent and was completely blunt with his opinions, as he usually avoided any sugarcoating. One instance was when he addressed an affluent American audience at the Westchester Country Club in New York:

"Let us do it as we believe it must be done, not as you would do it in our place. Let us make our mistakes, not suffer yours… With your help or despite your hindrance, Philippine nationalism will do the job. No one else can."

The audience fell completely silent after his address.[96]

Diokno was also well-respected by his peers, and he carried the same stature as other talented and brilliant scholar-activists in history, including Jose Rizal and Apolinario Mabini.[97][98][99]

Publications

 
Diokno statue at the Bulwagang Ka Pepe, CHR Central Office

Among his works are Diokno on Trial: Techniques and Ideals of the Filipino Lawyer - the Complete Guide to Handling a Case in Court, which was compiled and posthumously published by the Diokno Law Center in 2007. A Nation for Our Children, a collection of Jose W. Diokno’s essays and speeches on human rights, nationalism, and Philippine sovereignty, was published in 1987 by the Diokno Foundation. The collection is named after Diokno's popular speech, in which he says,

There is one dream that all Filipinos share: that our children may have a better life than we have had. So there is one vision that is distinctly Filipino: the vision to make this country, our country, a nation for our children.[100]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ The family also owned property at No. 8 Calle Real (now M.H. Del Pilar St.), Ermita, Manila based on a complaint filed by Leonor W. Diokno against the city (G.R. No. L-24433).

References

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Further reading

  • Alfreðsson, Guðmundur S. (1995). On the Eve of Dictatorship and Revolution. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-9-041-10094-8.
  • Celoza, Albert F. (1997). Ferdinand Marcos and the Philippines: The Political Economy of Authoritarianism. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780275941376.
  • Daroy, Petronilo Bn. (1988). On the Eve of Dictatorship and Revolution. Conspectus Foundation.
  • Diokno, Jose Manuel I. (2020). The Model Pleadings of Jose W. Diokno. Quezon City: Diokno Law Center.
  • Diokno, Jose Manuel I. (2007). Diokno on Trial: Techniques and Ideals of the Filipino Lawyer : the Complete Guide to Handling a Case in Court. University of Michigan: Diokno Law Center. ISBN 978-9719378709.
  • Garcia, Ed (1993). Six Modern Filipino Heroes. Pasig, Metro Manila: Anvil Publishing. ISBN 978-9-712-70325-6.
  • George, T.J.S. (1980). Terrorism and Violence in Southeast Asia: Transnational Challenges to States and Regional Stability. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-195-80429-4.
  • Kahl, Colin H. (2008). States, Scarcity, and Civil Strife in the Developing World. Princeton University: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691138350.
  • Manalang, Priscila S. (1987). A Nation for Our Children: Selected Writings of Jose W. Diokno. Quezon City: Jose W. Diokno Foundation. ISBN 978-9-719-10880-1.
  • Mijares, Primitivo (2017). The Conjugal Dictatorship of Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-9715507813.
  • Republic of the Philippines Congressional Record: Senate, Volume 4. California: Bureau of Print. 1965.
  • Smith, Paul J. (2004). Revolt in Mindanao: The Rise of Islam in Philippine Politics. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-1-317-45886-9.

External links

  • Bantayog ng mga Bayani December 17, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Asia-Pacific Human Rights Information Center

jose, diokno, this, philippine, name, middle, name, maternal, family, name, wright, surname, paternal, family, name, diokno, jose, wright, diokno, gcrl, february, 1922, february, 1987, also, known, pepe, filipino, nationalist, lawyer, statesman, regarded, fath. In this Philippine name the middle name or maternal family name is Wright and the surname or paternal family name is Diokno Jose Wright Diokno GCrL February 26 1922 February 27 1987 also known as Ka Pepe was a Filipino nationalist lawyer and statesman 4 Regarded as the Father of Human Rights 5 he served as Senator of the Philippines Secretary of Justice founding chair of the Commission on Human Rights and founder of the Free Legal Assistance Group FLAG the premier group of Filipino human rights lawyers Diokno is the only person to top both the Philippine Bar Examination and the board exam for Certified Public Accountants CPA His career was dedicated to the promotion of human rights the defense of Philippine sovereignty and the enactment of pro Filipino economic legislation The HonorableJose W DioknoGCrLSenator of the PhilippinesIn office December 30 1963 September 23 1972 1 Secretary of JusticeIn office January 2 1962 May 19 1962PresidentDiosdado MacapagalPreceded byAlejo MabanagSucceeded byJuan LiwagChairman of the Presidential Committee on Human RightsIn office March 18 1986 2 January 23 1987Personal detailsBornFebruary 26 1922Manila Philippine IslandsDiedFebruary 27 1987 1987 02 27 aged 65 New Manila Quezon City Metro Manila PhilippinesPolitical partyNacionalista 1945 August 31 1971 3 SpouseCarmen Reyes Nena Icasiano DioknoRelationsRamon Diokno father Jose Lorenzo Pepe Diokno grandson Children10 including Chel and Maris Alma materDe La Salle University BComm University of Santo Tomas LL B OccupationPublic official Lawyer Journalist Accountant ActivistWebsiteDiokno SiteIn 2004 Diokno was posthumously conferred the Order of Lakandula with the rank of Supremo the Philippines highest honor 6 February 27 a day after his birthday is celebrated in the Philippines as Jose W Diokno Day 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Rising lawyer and Secretary of Justice years 3 Senator 3 1 Chairmanship of the Economic Affairs Committee 3 1 1 Laws and bills authored 3 2 Civil rights activism 4 Martial law years 4 1 Imprisonment and organized coalitions 4 2 Human rights work 5 Later years and legacy 5 1 People Power and final years 5 2 Honors awards and historical reputation 6 Personal life and descendants 7 Public image 8 Publications 9 Ancestry 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life and education EditSee also Philippine Bar Examination 1922 Baptismal Certificate of Diokno issued in Ermita ManilaJose W Diokno was born in Manila on February 26 1922 to Ramon Diokno y Marasigan a former senator and Justice of the Supreme Court from Taal Batangas and Leonor May Wright y Garcia an American mestiza Diokno with wife CarmenDiokno was the youngest son and the sixth of eight children and had three half siblings from Ramon s first spouse Martha Fello Diokno who passed away years ago Diokno grew up at 48 Alhambra Street Ermita Manila 8 a 9 and was baptized at Ermita Church on September 3 1922 10 Ramon Diokno was considered an anti imperialist nationalist as senator and was one of four senators to oppose the American Parity Rights Amendment Jose W Diokno s grandfather was Ananias Diokno a navy general and governor in the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine American War in Visayas 11 Ananias s great great grandfather was Felix Berenguer de Marquina y Fitzgerald the namesake of Marikina who was viceroy of New Spain and governor general of the Philippines from 1788 to 1793 Berenguer de Marquina had an extramarital affair with a Chinese mestiza from Cagsawa Albay named Demetria Sumulong y Lindo and sired one daughter He abandoned his family to repatriate to Spain and later became the lieutenant general of the navy in 1799 He was said to be an incompetent but persevering governor 12 Despite his mixed ancestry Diokno would later often say that he was 100 Filipino 13 As a young 12 year old boy Diokno would go with his father to trials in the provinces He would carry his father s bag and sit on a small chair reserved for him behind the counsel s table He learned English through a private tutor during the American Commonwealth period as the family usually spoke in Spanish Growing up Diokno relished having Spanish dishes at home namely tapas or side dishes such as angulas white embutido galantina and chorizos He liked Filipino food as well and enjoyed rice mixed with gatas ng kalabaw carabao s milk raw eggs and tapang usa cured venison 14 In 1937 after repeated acceleration Diokno graduated high school as the valedictorian at De La Salle College now called De La Salle University DLSU and went on to take a bachelor s degree in commerce also at DLSU He was an ROTC lieutenant dramatist writer and leader He later developed a skill in photography and owned a studio Diokno initially wanted to study mechanical engineering but eventually compromised with his parents to take up commerce since his parents wanted a major that featured legal studies He realized he enjoyed the legal courses the most and decided to take up law once he finished his undergraduate studies 15 He graduated from college summa cum laude 16 Diokno took the CPA board examinations in 1940 for which he had to secure special dispensation since he was too young He topped the CPA with a grade of 91 18 13 However since Diokno was too young when he passed the CPA exam he could not receive a proper license until he was twenty one which led him to continue his law studies like his half brother 17 After Diokno enrolled at the University of Santo Tomas in 1940 his studies were interrupted by the outbreak of WWII in 1941 in his second year When the war was over he was granted a special dispensation by the Supreme Court of the Philippines and was allowed to take the Philippine Bar Examination despite having never completed his degree He topped the 1944 bar exam Roll No 5 Diokno was the first Filipino lawyer to take his oath and appear on the post war Roll of Attorneys on July 26 1945 18 together with a 24 year old future ally named Jovito Salonga with a score of 95 3 the highest since the language of instruction switched to English 19 13 20 As a reward he took a solo vacation in the United States where he would frequently call Carmen Nena Icasiano a commerce student from Bulacan studying at Far Eastern University They met in 1946 at a dinner party hosted by a future mayor named Arsenio Lacson and Diokno started courting her refusing to listen to his father to marry Jose Abad Santos s daughter Diokno married Carmen at Ermita Church in 1949 immediately after Diokno returned from his shortened trip He quickly proposed to her after he found out on the telephone that she had tuberculosis and had missed seeing him 21 Rising lawyer and Secretary of Justice years EditSee also Stonehill investigation Sec Diokno speaking out at a televised conference Immediately after topping the Bar exam Diokno embarked on his law practice at his father s bupete or law office handling and winning high profile cases including Vera v Avelino G R L 543 on behalf of his father Sen Ramon Diokno who let the young Diokno quickly take over the bupete Diokno also successfully fought libel charges against radio personality and Manila Mayor Arsenio Lacson who was a close friend and would often visit Diokno and his wife in the wee hours at their home in Paranaque to prepare them breakfast Diokno would in turn edit Mayor Lacson s newspaper columns for Free Philippines Historians learned a few years after Mayor Lacson s sudden passing that Lacson even intended for Diokno to be his running mate as the Manila Mayor s fame made him the top presidential candidate for the 1965 election 22 Diokno served in different committees under President Ramon Magsaysay and by 1958 Diokno gained enough stature to be selected to join a special committee to investigate the Department of Finance 23 He was later invited to return to investigate anomalies happening in the Bureau of Supply Corrections 24 With his reputation as a legal practitioner established and secured in December 1961 Diokno found out through the news that he was to be appointed as Secretary of Justice by President Diosdado Macapagal through Mayor Lacson s influence In March 1962 Diokno ordered a raid on a firm owned by Harry S Stonehill an American businessman who was suspected of tax evasion and bribing public officials among other crimes Diokno s investigation of Stonehill further revealed corruption within government ranks and as Secretary of Justice he prepared to prosecute those involved However President Macapagal intervened negotiating a deal that absolved Stonehill in exchange for his deportation then ordered Diokno to resign Diokno only learned of his resignation from the news and received death threats from supporters of the president which prompted him to rely on Mayor Lacson s special security Diokno questioned Macapagal s actions saying How can the government now prosecute the corrupted when it has allowed the corrupter to go Macapagal would become unpopular and eventually lose the next election in 1965 to another controversial politician also connected with Stonehill named Ferdinand Marcos 25 26 Senator EditSee also Philippines Free Press Diokno billboard in 1963 In 1963 Diokno ran for senator under the Nacionalista Party and won with almost half of the popular vote His laws and bills were often considered nationalistic in essence as he called for the creation of the Equal Pay for Equal Work Act which would ban discrimination of Filipinos in American companies The infamous ex president of San Miguel Corp named Andy Soriano of the Philippine Association and US Ambassador Bill Blair Jr controversially fought to have the bill vetoed before they stepped down Diokno often fought American policies that involved transfer pricing For his performance as legislator and fight for nationalism Diokno was named Outstanding Senator by the Philippines Free Press from 1967 to 1970 making him the only legislator to receive the recognition for four successive years In 1968 Diokno was awarded as the Outstanding CPA in Government Service by the Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants 27 Diokno also served as the delegate for many commissions including the United Nations General Assembly in the middle of the 1960s 24 Diokno was also honored as the most outstanding senator by the Philippine Government Employees Association PGEA with a PGEA Plaque of Honor in December 1971 among other awards 28 Chairmanship of the Economic Affairs Committee Edit See also Philippines United States relations The Board of Investments was created by Sen Diokno s Investment Incentives Act in 1967 Senator Diokno became chairman of the Senate Economic Affairs Committee and worked for the passage of pro Filipino legislation including what is considered to be the most important incentive law in the country RA 5186 also known as the Investment Incentives Act of 1967 which provides incentives to mostly Filipino investors and entrepreneurs that would place control of the Philippine economy predominantly in the hands of Filipinos 29 The law would also be the first groundbreaking initiative of the Philippine economy to gradually step out of its import substitution mindset 30 It also led to the foundation of the Board of Investments the premier government agency responsible for propagating investments in the Philippines Diokno then authored RA 6173 or the Oil Industry Commission Act of 1971 which created the Oil Industry Commission OIC to regulate oil pricing in different companies This eventually led to the dominance of three oil companies in Caltex the alternative name of the American corporation Chevron Petron a local partner of Middle Eastern Saudi Aramco and is owned by the monopoly brewery San Miguel Corporation and Shell based in the Netherlands 31 Laws and bills authored Edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2023 Investment Incentives Act RA 5186 Export Incentives Act RA 6135 Oil Industry Commission Act RA 6173 Joint Resolution No 2 Revised Election Law An Act Further Amending the Armed Forces Retirement Act RA 4902 Equal Pay for Equal Work Act 31 Movie Industry Bill Bill to Streamline the Appeals Process at the Court of Agrarian Relations Bill to Provide Benefits to Municipal and City Judges Bill to Create Circuit Criminal Courts Bill to Nationalize Domestic Credit Usage 27 Civil rights activism Edit See also Movement of Concerned Citizens for Civil Liberties and Proclamation No 1081 Diokno making a speech When Marcos suspended the fundamental legal right of the writ of habeas corpus following the bombing of the Plaza Miranda gathering of Liberal Party members Diokno resigned from the Nacionalista Party in protest and took to the streets 32 Sen Diokno called on students to start protesting against the administration anticipating that Marcos who was nearing the end of his last term would declare martial law and change the constitution to give himself absolute power 13 33 Previously Marcos began building notoriety following the Jabidah massacre where an estimated 14 to as much as 68 alleged Muslim youths were gunned down in Corregidor by unknown armed men in 1968 34 Following this event a Moro insurgency would quickly develop starting in Mindanao it would evolve into a widespread armed conflict that would engulf the nation decades after Marcos s lifetime 35 Marcos tried to suppress the media and block coverage of the event but it was too late Diokno and many other senators sensed Marcos might have developed a hidden agenda 36 From then on Diokno began to put greater emphasis on human rights in public speeches and events In an oft quoted 1981 speech he would declare No cause is more worthy than the cause of human rights Human rights are more than legal concepts they are the essence of man They are what makes a man human That is why they are called human rights deny them and you deny man s humanity 37 He was the leader of the Movement of Concerned Citizens for Civil Liberties MCCCL which organized a series of rallies from 1971 to 1972 38 The most massive of these rallies involved 50 000 protestors and was held on September 21 1972 shortly before the imposition of martial law by the Marcos dictatorship 39 During this rally protestors denounced the infamous Oplan Sagittarius the devious operation plan by Marcos to declare martial law Sen Benigno Ninoy Aquino Jr exposed the Oplan Sagittarius scandal earlier in a September 13 speech and spoke to the Senate on September 21 the same day that the MCCCL held their exceptionally large rally at Plaza Miranda Marcos reacted with fear of deposition and immediately finalized Proclamation No 1081 which declared nationwide martial law at 8 00 p m later that evening Exactly the next day on September 22 1972 at 8 00 p m Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile was told to exit his car near Wack Wack village 40 Another vehicle carrying gunmen arrived and stopped near an electrical post right beside Enrile s vehicle They then alighted from their vehicle and began to fire at the large sedan of Enrile to give an impression of a terrorist ambush setting the stage for Marcos s theatrical television announcement 41 42 43 Martial law years EditImprisonment and organized coalitions Edit See also Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos On September 23 1972 Diokno s second term as senator was officially cut short when Marcos announced martial law on television at 7 17 p m At 1 00 a m before the announcement Diokno was arrested by the dictatorship After cutting communication lines in multiple neighborhoods including Diokno s home six carloads carrying forty armed soldiers visited Diokno at his home at 12 Margarita Street Magallanes Village Makati to invite him for questioning He changed from his pajamas and was sent to Camp Crame They had no warrant 13 A wax figure of the late Sen Diokno in the Delta Room at Fort Magsaysay where he was confined for thirty days and banned from keeping any itemsAfter Diokno was brought to Camp Crame he was transferred to Fort Bonifacio where he was detained along with other opposition members such as Aquino and Chino Roces the founder and head of The Manila Times the leading newspaper at the time The military s Defense Minister Enrile offered a security detail to Diokno to protect him from Communist assassins to which Diokno laughed and responded that he really needed protection from the military 44 Diokno and Aquino whom the dictatorship considered their foremost opponents were later handcuffed blindfolded and transferred via a chopper to solitary confinement at Fort Magsaysay located in the municipality of Laur Nueva Ecija They remained confined to Fort Magsaysay for exactly thirty days They both learned of each other s presence through singing One of them would frequently sing the national anthem Lupang Hinirang or Chosen Land to which the other would reply by singing Bayan Ko or My Country to prove he was still alive 45 From the fish being served by the cook Aling Cely who later became the museum curator of the converted national memorial called the Aquino Diokno Memorial Diokno was able to correctly deduce that he was detained in Nueva Ecija particularly in Fort Magsaysay 46 To tally the number of days Diokno used rope knots from his mosquito net as well as the back of a soap packaging box and crossed out each day in the manner of a calendar His visiting family members were often strip searched by soldiers They would sneak in books in French and Spanish for him to read and he would converse to his wife in Spanish for only them to comprehend Diokno would tell his family not to weep in front of the sadistic soldiers Only his godmother Paz Wilson a nonagenarian and a mother figure since his mother s passing would frequently cry during every visit She continued to visit despite also undergoing strip searches The family would be in tears once they left the prison where the Aquino family would see them This helped the Aquinos prepare themselves emotionally since they never saw the Diokno family manifest much pain before Nena Diokno suspicious of Marcos took most of her husband s books at the library of his bupete on M H del Pilar and brought them home before the military burned down the building Jose would thank her as he was very familiar with the library and memorized the location of each shelf and book he read 47 Outside the prison Marcos announced at his executive mansion Malacanang Palace that September 21 would be known as National Thanksgiving Day the same day Diokno led his biggest Plaza Miranda rally This declaration has led to a general confusion about the true date of the public announcement of martial law which was actually on September 23 two days after Proclamation No 1081 was signed Sen Diokno celebrating with Carmen their silver wedding anniversary while he was still under custody on March 28 1974 Diokno spent 718 days or nearly two years in detention mainly at the maximum security compound of Fort Bonifacio While Aquino was charged with subversion no charge was ever filed against Diokno Diokno was released arbitrarily on September 11 1974 Marcos s 57th birthday 48 After his release Sen Diokno mentioned in an interview with videographer Andrew Pearson that he served as an instructor teaching law courses at the University of the Philippines UP at their request after he was released from Fort Bonifacio This continued until Marcos found out and had him banned though Diokno continued returning for speeches and conferences and was later honored with a mural of him and other martial law heroes at the school s main college of Palma Hall A year later in 1975 Diokno was chosen as chairman of the Civil Liberties Union a position he held until 1982 Later in March 1983 Diokno founded the Kilusan sa Kapangyarihan at Karapatan ng Bayan Movement for People s Sovereignty and Democracy Organization or KAAKBAY which was ideologically independent of beliefs like Marxism but was joined by fellow Marxists and Capitalists KAAKBAY influenced the public and fought hard against the Marcos administration using non violent activism or pressure politics 49 KAAKBAY later elevated pressure politics as an important principle for post democracy through its publication called The Plaridel Papers 50 The August 1984 edition of The Plaridel Papers popularized the concept of pressure politics and introduced a political system that would involve the parliament of the streets in building a popular democracy 51 KAAKBAY was also one of the main member organizations of the Justice for Aquino Justice for All JAJA coalition which was founded by Diokno on August 25 1983 following Ninoy Aquino s assassination for returning to the country to face Marcos JAJA was the first united front against Marcos but it did not last long KAAKBAY served as the main coalition that kept the other extreme groups from leaving JAJA Unfortunately JAJA was later replaced by the relatively leftist Coalition of Organizations for the Restoration of Democracy CORD in mid 1984 which had almost the same members Before the creation of CORD many former JAJA members who disagreed with the communists also organized a much wider alliance called the Kongreso ng Mamamayang Pilipino KOMPIL or the Congress of the Filipino People and was mainly headed by Diokno 52 From January 7 to 8 1984 2 300 delegates representing all sectors gathered at the KOMPIL congress to vote on multiple issues One of the decisions voted by 60 of the attendees was to establish a new Commission on Elections COMELEC Elected leaders included statesmen such as Diokno Lorenzo Tanada Aquilino Pimentel Cecilia Munoz Palma Ambrosio Padilla Salvador Laurel and Jovito Salonga Others came from non political sectors including Makati s Enrique Zobel who was related to Andy Soriano and due to consanguinity was part of the Ayala Corporation Another leader was Jaime Cardinal Sin who would play an important role two years later for the opposition Of all the issues the largest was concerning a letter they made called the Call for Meaningful Elections CAMEL Some including Diokno and Aquino s brother Butz preferred to boycott any election to avoid legitimizing the Marcos rule On the other hand some of the other signatories preferred to participate in the elections including Ninoy Aquino s widow Corazon Cojuangco Aquino 53 Diokno was a part of multiple organizations and alliances that fought the administration and foreign intervention He continued to attack the different policies of the Marcos administration such as their controversial nuclear programs that led to the sabotaged construction of the costly Bataan Nuclear Power Plant thereby infuriating Marcos 54 Diokno continued to serve as the leader behind ceasing Marcos s numerous incomplete projects Human rights work Edit Main article Human rights abuses of the Marcos dictatorship See also Free Legal Assistance Group FLAG Human rights in the Philippines and Human rights in Asia Diokno at the lower left of a painting at UP holding a microphone Immediately after his release Diokno set up the Free Legal Assistance Group or FLAG in 1974 which gave free legal services to the victims of martial law It was the first and largest association of human rights attorneys ever assembled in the nation In court Diokno personally defended tribal groups peasants social workers threatened by exploitation and military atrocities which he represented pro bono FLAG popularized developmental legal aid and even doled out allowances to its clients This has led to new laws requiring newly sworn in lawyers to provide free legal assistance for a certain amount of time 55 FLAG handled 90 percent of human rights cases in the country as well as built programs to educate citizens about human rights 56 24 Diokno was also involved in documenting cases of torture summary execution and disappearances under the Marcos regime 13 Diokno had no fear of being arrested again and went around and outside the Philippines spreading a message of hope and democracy In another oft quoted speech he once quipped And so law in the land died I grieve for it but I do not despair over it I know with a certainty no argument can turn no wind can shake that from its dust will rise a new and better law more just more human and more humane When that will happen I know not That it will happen I know 37 Diokno also held an important role in Southeast Asia leading a group of senior human rights lawyers from Thailand Indonesia Malaysia and the Philippines in forming the Regional Council on Human Rights in Asia The group was one of the first non governmental organizations NGOs built to promote human rights in Southeast Asia On December 9 1983 in Manila the Regional Council formalized the first human rights declaration of Southeast Asia called the Declaration of the Basic Duties of ASEAN Peoples and Governments 57 58 Although the council paved the way for future human rights declarations by other organizations like the United Nations their momentum gradually declined decades after the Marcos regime ended 59 Diokno was also inter alia the chairman of the first Human Rights Information and Documentation Systems International HURIDOCS assembly in Strasbourg France which was a historic event that involved over two hundred representatives 60 61 62 HURIDOCS founder Hans Thoolen said years later in a tribute to Diokno that he witnessed Diokno present novel ideas on practical ways to defend human rights victims at the 1983 SOS Torture constituent assembly held in Geneva Switzerland and that Diokno frequently disseminated human rights primers published in the common vernacular for mass audiences 63 64 Later years and legacy Edit Detail of Jose W Diokno s name in the Wall of Remembrance at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani People Power and final years Edit See also Commission on Human Rights Philippines Mendiola Massacre and People Power Revolution After founding JAJA together with friend and former Sen Lorenzo M Tanada Diokno was chosen to serve as chairman of its executive committee 65 The two leaders were the only members to call for a boycott in the upcoming nationwide Batasan Elections predicting that it would be fixed 66 Eventually public outcries after the election results came out with Marcos winning led to the 1986 People Power Revolution that peacefully ousted the Marcos family out of the country Diokno was appointed by the new President Corazon Cojuangco Aquino or Cory wife of the slain Ninoy Aquino and mother of the future 15th president Benigno Noynoy Aquino to serve as founding chairman of the Presidential Committee on Human Rights now the Commission on Human Rights CHR and tasked to lead a government panel to negotiate for the return of rebel forces to the government folds Diokno helped write the 1987 Constitution particularly Article XIII defining social justice and human rights 67 Diokno was also the principal negotiator in peace talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines the main leftist coalition founded during martial law 68 In May 1984 even before People Power and its preceding rigged Batasan Elections Diokno had been diagnosed with terminal lung cancer He obtained a high fever and was brought to the Stanford University Medical Center where he learned of his disease He had smoked all his adult life Diokno visited the San Francisco University Hospital to have a brain scan and found a brain tumor He would return to the motherland and on July 4 1986 which was the U S independence day had a series of debates with Minister Enrile convincing him that U S bases should be removed from the country Enrile who betrayed Marcos and joined the new administration was inspired by this debate and would later become senator and help vote to oust the American military from the country Diokno returned to the United States on September 3 1986 for treatment Eventually after having a transfusion a month later at Manila Doctors Hospital Diokno decided to stop all treatments and returned to his final residence at 55 3rd St New Manila Quezon City to spend his days reading and writing cases This was after he had to shave his hair off and already experienced a declining vision He continued to work all out for four more months despite his illness until his passing on February 27 1987 at 2 40 a m one day after his 65th birthday at home in New Manila Diokno had spent the last decade of his life making documentaries and speeches and leading different coalitions and rallies on the streets His funeral was held at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Mt Carmel in New Manila and he was buried at Manila Memorial Park Sucat but later reinterred in a Metro Manila park on October 6 1996 69 21 70 Honors awards and historical reputation Edit See also Order of Lakandula J W Diokno Boulevard U S Naval Base Subic Bay and Clark Air Base Following Diokno s passing President Cory Aquino declared March 2 12 1987 as a period of national mourning with flags flown at half staff Expressing her grief Aquino said Pepe braved the Marcos dictatorship with a dignified and eloquent courage our country will long remember 71 She quoted what her husband Ninoy would often tell his friends that Diokno was the one man he would unquestioningly follow to the ends of the earth and that he was the most brilliant Filipino As part of KAAKBAY s group of intellectuals UP Professor Randy David admired Diokno and called him the best president we did not have while London s Amnesty International called him the champion of justice and human rights in Asia Diokno became famous in the United Kingdom after creating a martial law documentary called To Sing Our Own Song with the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1982 72 Out of frustration Marcos subpoenaed Diokno and interviewee Cardinal Sin to testify before the Supreme Court regarding their roles in the documentary and connection with another involved human rights hero named Horacio Morales who used the documentary as trial evidence against the military Marcos even threatened the British embassy and gave them an order to cancel the documentary which the British decidedly ignored 73 J W Diokno Boulevard along the Bay City coastline Diokno s nationalist legacy made further headlines when on February 12 1983 former Supreme Court Justice J B L Reyes UP President Salvador P Lopez and former senators Tanada and Diokno formed the Anti Bases Coalition ABC with Diokno voted as the secretary general or the chairman of the coalition 74 The influence of the ABC eventually led to the end of American military presence in the Philippines notably in Subic Bay and Clark Pampanga The historic turnover ceremony transpired on November 24 1992 under then Philippine President Fidel Ramos Diokno also had a reputation for philanthropy as one of the Board of Directors at the Philippine Tuberculosis Society Inc PTSI 75 In 2004 Diokno was posthumously conferred the Order of Lakandula with the rank of Supremo the Philippines highest honor which was signed by former Pres Diosdado Macapagal s daughter the 14th president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Diokno was the first recipient of this honor 76 77 By virtue of a presidential proclamation signed by Gloria Arroyo February 27 is perennially celebrated in the country as Jose W Diokno Day 78 In 2005 the De La Salle Professional Schools Inc Graduate School of Business DLS PSI GSB handed out the inaugural Ka Pepe Diokno Human Rights Award as a champion of human rights This was established along with another milestone the establishment of the Jose W Diokno Distinguished Professorial Chair in Business Law and Human Rights 79 The first ever Ka Pepe Diokno award as a Champion of Human Rights was given to Voltaire Y Rosales Executive Judge of Tanauan Batangas for his effort in protecting the downtrodden even giving up his life for the cause Subsequent annual awards have been given to worthy candidates such as Maria Ressa and Bishop Pablo Virgilio Ambo David who in life or death fulfilled the values of protecting human rights just as Senator Diokno did 80 81 He has received praise in other sectors as Rappler has called him the country s greatest lawyer 82 Diokno also received a Doctor of Laws Honoris Causa from the UP College of Law 83 In 2007 by virtue of RA 9468 Bay Boulevard a 4 38 km road along the Bay City coastline or Pasay and Paranaque City was renamed J W Diokno Boulevard in his honor In 2017 the CHR erected a nine foot statue of Diokno at the center of the CHR compound entrance in Diliman Quezon City and the surrounding park was named Liwasang Diokno or the Diokno Freedom Park The hall inside the compound is called Bulwagang Diokno or the Diokno Hall and features a bust and an accompanying mural of the late chairman Personal life and descendants Edit Chel Diokno seen honoring heroes at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani Carmen Diokno Grandson Pepe Diokno Sen Diokno was married to Carmen Reyes Nena Icasiano on March 28 1949 at Ermita Church with whom he had ten 10 children mostly named after St Jude Thaddeus the saint of lost causes Carmen Leonor or Mench who was born a year after the marriage and became college valedictorian then first joined the garment industry with husband Emil Escay before working for NGOs Jose Ramon or Popoy who joined the Lopez Group of Companies that established the ABS CBN Corporation Maria Paz Tadea or Pat who joined banking companies in Europe and domestically such as ComBank Maria Serena Encarnacion or Maris who is a nationally recognized historian Maria Teresa Tadea or Maitet who is a UP cum laude graduate of Economics and was executive director of a non profit institution called IBON Foundation Ma Socorro Tadea or Cookie who was secretary general of the Regional Council on Human Rights in Asia and secretary general at FLAG since 1976 Jose Miguel Tadeo or Mike who is a US based lawyer Jose Manuel Tadeo or Chel who is a dean and lawyer Maria Victoria Tadea or Maia also a lawyer and her father s CHR secretary and Martin Jose Tadeo who is a Singapore based architect from UST and was adopted when he was two weeks old Diokno also has at least 18 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren 31 His children all excelled in their studies but Diokno would often chide his children about their lack of perfect scores to which Maris would reply that studying in schools like the American founded UP which is the official public national university and where Sen Diokno wished to enroll in but was banned by his politically moderate parents made very good scores the equivalent to perfect scores at DLSU a private sectarian Catholic university 84 They were quite devout as they frequently had nightly rosary prayers and were devotees of St Joseph and St Thaddeus with Diokno often carrying a rosary in his pocket which he practiced since his elementary days at De La Salle College 13 Maris Diokno a renowned historian is the former chair of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines and former Vice President for Academic Affairs at UP She studied at the University of London and graduated UP magna cum laude Chel Diokno is a human rights lawyer Chairman of FLAG head of the Diokno Law Center and member of the Jose W Diokno Foundation founding Dean of the DLSU Tanada Diokno School of Law and former Special Counsel of the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee Chel Diokno ran for Senator twice and nearly secured enough votes to obtain a seat He joined the Otso Diretso Direct Eight Candidates to the Senate coalition and Leni Robredo s coalition which opposed the Rodrigo Duterte administration Duterte has been compared to the Marcos family without the privileged background or American ties of Marcos but instead he has been seen currying favor with the Chinese Communist Party 85 86 Duterte has also committed human rights violations and like Marcos shut down the media corporation of ABS CBN FLAG has represented Rappler founder Maria Ressa during court hearings filed against her by the Duterte administration for Rappler s reports on Duterte s War on Drugs and Murder of Drug Addicts 87 88 Sen Diokno s grandson and Chel s firstborn child Jose Lorenzo Pepe Diokno is the executive director of alternative education group Rock Ed Philippines 89 He is best known as a motion picture director producer and screenwriter whose debut film Engkwentro won the Venice Film Festival s Lion of the Future Award in 2009 as well as Venice s Orizzonti Prize the NETPAC Award for Best Asian Film and the Gawad Urian for Best Editing Pepe used commercials and short films to market his father Chel during his election campaigns 90 91 Pepe Diokno is also the director of Kwentong Jollibee and other commercials that have gained popularity among netizens Public image EditSee also Legal aid Diokno at a hearingDiokno is generally seen as the intellectual leader contrasted to the fierceness of Ninoy Aquino in opposing the perversion of the Marcos Administration 92 93 He managed to have the ability to lead rival political factions together As senator Diokno had a strong relationship with technocrats such as Cesar E A Virata Placido Mapa Jr and Vicente Paterno all of whom joined Marcos s administration during martial law According to these economists and technocrats Diokno did not carry preconceived notions of others provided that nationalist goals could be met His willingness to work with people of contrasting ideologies allowed him to adopt the Investment Incentives Act of 1967 94 Diokno was also popular among all social classes and became a liaison between Pres Aquino s new government and the communists whom he led in different coalitions in the past 95 Despite Diokno s seemingly stoic demeanor and very simple lifestyle Diokno was also known to be quite eloquent and was completely blunt with his opinions as he usually avoided any sugarcoating One instance was when he addressed an affluent American audience at the Westchester Country Club in New York Let us do it as we believe it must be done not as you would do it in our place Let us make our mistakes not suffer yours With your help or despite your hindrance Philippine nationalism will do the job No one else can The audience fell completely silent after his address 96 Diokno was also well respected by his peers and he carried the same stature as other talented and brilliant scholar activists in history including Jose Rizal and Apolinario Mabini 97 98 99 Publications Edit Diokno statue at the Bulwagang Ka Pepe CHR Central OfficeAmong his works are Diokno on Trial Techniques and Ideals of the Filipino Lawyer the Complete Guide to Handling a Case in Court which was compiled and posthumously published by the Diokno Law Center in 2007 A Nation for Our Children a collection of Jose W Diokno s essays and speeches on human rights nationalism and Philippine sovereignty was published in 1987 by the Diokno Foundation The collection is named after Diokno s popular speech in which he says There is one dream that all Filipinos share that our children may have a better life than we have had So there is one vision that is distinctly Filipino the vision to make this country our country a nation for our children 100 Ancestry EditAncestors of Jose W Diokno8 Angel Diokno4 Ananias Diokno18 Juan Noblejas9 Maria Andrea Noblejas y Sauza19 Restituta Maria del Carmen Sauza y Berenguer de Marquina2 Ramon Diokno5 Paulina Marasigan1 Jose W Diokno6 Roberto Wright3 Leonor Wright7 Irene GarciaNotes Edit The family also owned property at No 8 Calle Real now M H Del Pilar St Ermita Manila based on a complaint filed by Leonor W Diokno against the city G R No L 24433 References Edit Diokno s second Senate term was cut short when he was jailed without charges by Ferdinand Marcos immediately after the declaration of martial law Executive Order No 8 s 1986 March 18 1986 Kamm Henry September 4 1971 A FOE OF MARCOS ACCUSES MILITARY The New York Times manila Gavilan Jodesz September 21 2017 No cause more worthy Ka Pepe Diokno s fight for human rights Retrieved September 8 2020 Order of Lakandula award given to Diokno Manila Bulletin April 30 2004 Archived from the original on August 5 2012 Retrieved March 3 2011 Macariola Monica February 26 2004 Nation remembers EDSA Manila Bulletin Archived from the original on August 5 2012 Retrieved March 3 2011 Jose W Diokno Pamana February 2022 Ostrand James December 31 1925 G R No L 24433 G R No L 24433 Dumindin Arnaldo December 7 2020 Philippine American War 1899 1902 My Berenguer de Marquina Ancestry Retrieved July 20 2012 a b c d e f g Dalisay Jose Jr Jose W Diokno The Scholar Warrior Archived from the original on April 14 2013 Retrieved March 3 2011 Jose W Diokno Fleshing out a legend February 26 2012 Retrieved September 10 2020 Government is always and only an instrument of the people February 26 2018 Jose W Diokno Retrieved October 7 2020 DIOKNO Jose W October 15 2015 Archived from the original on August 5 2017 Retrieved October 20 2020 Lawyers List Supreme Court of the Philippines 2022 Bar Exams Trivia March 17 2022 Mendoza Mylene August 14 2020 Chel Diokno s Dad Was One Of Two Bar Topnotchers Without A Law Degree Retrieved March 8 2021 a b Carmen Diokno Remembering an unsung heroine Retrieved September 11 2020 Garcia 1993 pp 3 American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines a b c Diokno Jose W September 29 2015 The Philippines Smoke in Manila Time August 10 1962 Archived from the original on May 2 2009 Retrieved March 3 2011 De Guzman Sara Soliven May 26 2014 A ghost from the past the Stonehill scandal The Philippine STAR Retrieved October 3 2020 a b Sen Jose W Diokno Archived from the original on July 28 2019 Diokno 2007 p xxii Republic Act No 5186 Rodolfo Cherry Lyn Directions for Industrial Restructuring in the Twenty First Century The Philippine Case PDF UAP Retrieved September 30 2020 a b c Pepe Diokno when comes such another Archived from the original on March 30 2022 Orellana Faye August 21 2018 LP members remember 1971 Plaza Miranda bombing Retrieved October 1 2020 Socially Conscious Lasallian accounts of activism in the Marcos era April 2 2013 Retrieved September 30 2020 Smith 2004 p 5 George 1980 pp 10 11 Aquino Jr Benigno Jabidah Special Forces of Evil Retrieved September 30 2020 a b Manalang 1987 pp 1 Daroy 1988 pp 26 28 Daroy 1988 pp 1 25 Yamsuan Cathy September 30 2012 Enrile on fake ambush For real Retrieved October 1 2020 Enrile s ambush Real or not September 23 2018 Retrieved September 30 2020 Marcos and his men Who were the key Martial Law figures September 21 2020 Retrieved October 1 2020 Declaration of Martial Law Defense Chief Unharmed The New York Times September 23 1972 Cupin Bea February 25 2016 EDSA30 Remembering Alpha and Delta Aquino Diokno Memorial Nueva Ecija Outrigger Mariz Diokno remembers two Joses Xiao Time Adbokasiya ng abugadong si Jose Diokno February 26 2013 Government is always and only an instrument of the people February 26 2018 THE URBAN MASS MOVEMENT IN THE PHILIPPINES 1983 87 PDF Lane Max 1990 The Urban Mass Movement in the Philippines 1983 87 Political and Social Change Monograph Canberra Australia Australian National University Department of Political and Social Change 11 ISBN 9780731510245 ISSN 0727 5994 Abinales P N 1992 Jose Maria Sison and the Philippine Revolution A Critique of an Interface APPENDIX A HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINE POLITICAL PROTEST Retrieved September 28 2020 The Fall of the Dictatorship Te Theodore December 20 2018 ANALYSIS Deep Dive Community legal aid service Too much too soon Retrieved September 28 2020 Source Book on Human Rights PDF January 1 2006 Jones Sidney 1995 Regional Institutions for Protecting Human Rights in Asia Proceedings of the Annual Meeting American Society of International Law 89 475 480 doi 10 1017 S0272503700085074 JSTOR 25658967 Retrieved September 27 2020 Human Rights Declarations in Asia Pacific Retrieved September 28 2020 Alfredsson 1995 pp 8 14 Tribute to Jose Pepe W Diokno 1988 Retrieved October 6 2020 Thoolen Hans May 3 2002 Our History Crete Greece Retrieved October 7 2020 Miscellaneous Commonwealth Law Bulletin 9 279 327 1983 doi 10 1080 03050718 1983 9985708 Retrieved October 7 2020 Tribute to Jose Pepe W Diokno 1988 Retrieved October 7 2020 Letting in the light 30 years of Torture Prevention PDF Association for the Prevention of Torture Retrieved October 7 2020 Saguisag Rene April 8 2019 The Last Good Senator Lorenzo M Tanada and Jose Diokno Lorenzo M Tanada Retrieved September 23 2020 Nacional Katherine JOSE WRIGHT DIOKNO PDF Retrieved September 24 2020 Diokno Jose W September 29 2015 Jose W Pepe Diokno Find a Grave FAQS Mydans Seth March 1 1987 Jose W Diokno ex Senator Headed Manila Peace Panel The New York Times Retrieved January 8 2008 To Sing Our own Song Hollie Pamela G August 20 1982 MARCOS IRKED BY BBC FILM SHOWING CRITICS OF HIS RULE The New York Times Retrieved October 12 2020 Looking Beyond Marcos The New York Times Retrieved September 26 2020 Senators Profile Jose W Diokno 2022 Executive Order No 236 s 2003 Tomacruz Sofia Former diplomat Rod Severino gets posthumous Order of Lakandula honor Proclamation No 558 s 2004 Retrieved September 24 2020 Ramirez Joanne Mae M March 8 2005 Incorruptible judge gets Pepe Diokno Award The Philippine STAR Retrieved October 22 2020 Ramirez Joanne incorruptible judge gets Pepe Diokno Award Philippine Star Retrieved July 1 2011 There is no law when society is ruled not by reason but by will worse by the will of one man Sen Jose W Diokno May 11 2018 Retrieved February 28 2021 Gotinga JC Leonen s supporters slam impeachment complaint vouch for his integrity Diokno 2007 p xx Maris Diokno remembers two Joses Duterte It s Russia China PH against the world IS RODRIGO DUTERTE A RESURRECTED FERDINAND MARCOS BLUEBOARD BY CARMEL V ABAO Philippines Drop Sedition Cases Against Duterte Critics Philippines Continues March Towards Duterteship Gang Badoy host Lourd de Veyra host Pepe Diokno guest Cyrus Fernandez guest others November 4 2010 The Last Episode Rock Ed Radio Ortigas Center Pasig Progressive Broadcasting Corporation NU 107 Phaidon Press Take 100 The Future of Film Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved February 26 2012 Diokno at IMDB Marcos Said They Chose to Stay in Prison The New York Times Archived from the original on September 10 2020 Ka Pepe Diokno s spirit lives Encarnacion Tadem Teresa S Interpreting Marcos chief technocrat Retrieved September 26 2020 Diokno Jose Falk Richard 1984 On the Struggle for Democracy World Policy Journal 1 2 433 445 JSTOR 40209172 Retrieved September 23 2020 LOOKING BEYOND MARCOS The New York Times Retrieved September 23 2020 Vilchez Javier August 31 2019 Five forgotten heroes of the Philippine Senate Philippine Daily Inquirer Kahl 2008 pp 88 93 Garcia 1993 pp xviii Manalang 1987 pp 10 Further reading EditAlfredsson Gudmundur S 1995 On the Eve of Dictatorship and Revolution Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 978 9 041 10094 8 Celoza Albert F 1997 Ferdinand Marcos and the Philippines The Political Economy of Authoritarianism Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275941376 Daroy Petronilo Bn 1988 On the Eve of Dictatorship and Revolution Conspectus Foundation Diokno Jose Manuel I 2020 The Model Pleadings of Jose W Diokno Quezon City Diokno Law Center Diokno Jose Manuel I 2007 Diokno on Trial Techniques and Ideals of the Filipino Lawyer the Complete Guide to Handling a Case in Court University of Michigan Diokno Law Center ISBN 978 9719378709 Garcia Ed 1993 Six Modern Filipino Heroes Pasig Metro Manila Anvil Publishing ISBN 978 9 712 70325 6 George T J S 1980 Terrorism and Violence in Southeast Asia Transnational Challenges to States and Regional Stability Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 80429 4 Kahl Colin H 2008 States Scarcity and Civil Strife in the Developing World Princeton University Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691138350 Manalang Priscila S 1987 A Nation for Our Children Selected Writings of Jose W Diokno Quezon City Jose W Diokno Foundation ISBN 978 9 719 10880 1 Mijares Primitivo 2017 The Conjugal Dictatorship of Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 9715507813 Republic of the Philippines Congressional Record Senate Volume 4 California Bureau of Print 1965 Smith Paul J 2004 Revolt in Mindanao The Rise of Islam in Philippine Politics M E Sharpe ISBN 978 1 317 45886 9 External links EditBantayog ng mga Bayani Archived December 17 2021 at the Wayback Machine Asia Pacific Human Rights Information Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jose W Diokno amp oldid 1152580597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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