Preserve the Truth: Historical Books, Documents in Danger as Marcos Family Returns to Power

As the son of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr. infamous for massive corruption and human rights abuses takes back control of the Philippines, historians, academics, book publishers and authors have vowed to “protect the truth.”

When 31 million Filipinos elected Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. as president in May’s election, they also voted for the powerful and influential Marcos family’s narrative surrounding the brutal and corrupt regime of the senior Marcos.

Marcos and his wife, Imelda, whose name has become synonymous with extravagance, plunged the country into debt and deep poverty while their family and cronies amassed billions of dollars of wealth.

The Marcos regime also saw the killing, arrest, torture and disappearance of thousands of victims, according to records of human rights organizations. But these facts do not matter to the supporters of the Marcos family.

Critics say the electoral victory of Marcos Jr., who is set to formally assume office June 30, is partly attributed to his family’s decadeslong distortion efforts. Now that the family is back in power, they fear that they will use their overwhelming mandate to erase historical truths about the period of martial law under the elder Marcos.

Books on martial law have been selling fast in the weeks after Marcos Jr. was elected president over fear that these will be banned or purged. Some titles, including the popular “The Conjugal Dictatorship of Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos” by Primitivo Mijares, have been sold out.

Journalist Raissa Robles, author of the 2016 book that examined the events during martial law from the perspective of victims and military officials, is alarmed that the government is already “red-tagging” or blacklisting, books critical of the Marcoses.

“It’s possible that there will be a purging. Will my book be banned? It’s possible,” Robles told VOA in an interview.

“Actually, Marcos supporters have already been trying to ban my book. They claim online that my book is banned, that there was a court order that was issued in 2016 banning my book. I wouldn’t be surprised,” she added.

Robles published her book titled “Marcos Martial Law: Never Again” in 2016 and has since sold thousands of copies. Interest in her book climbed after Marcos Jr. was elected and her publisher is planning a sixth edition of the book.

Robles said she delivered copies of her book to the vice-presidential candidates’ offices in 2016, including Marcos Jr. In a chance encounter with him on the campaign trail later that year, she asked if he had received and read her book.

“Oh, yes, thank you very much. But you know, I haven’t been able to read it because I’ve been so busy,” Marcos told her.

Red-tagged

During the heated presidential campaign in March, independent bookstores that carry a rare selection of Filipino historical books were spray-painted in red. The finger of blame was pointing at the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), a heavily funded government agency formed by President Rodrigo Duterte in 2018 to respond to a communist rebellion.

The door of Popular Bookstore, known as the bookstore for intellectuals, was spray-painted with “NPA Terrorista” a common phrase tagging an individual or organization as communist and terrorist.

“With the previous incidents [in mind], after red-tagging violence follows,” Geraldine Po, general manager of Popular Bookstore, told VOA when asked what her reaction was when she saw the vandalism.

“It is important to know and to preserve the truth because from history, we should learn our lessons,” Po said. “They say we should move on because Bongbong is now the president. If we just do that, we will just be going backward instead of moving forward.”

In May, the head of the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency red-tagged Adarna House, publisher of children’s books, over books about the martial law period that supposedly “subtly radicalize” children against the government.

Preserve the truth

Michael Pante, a professor of history at the Ateneo de Manila University, believes books will not be physically burned or banned, but he warned of a climate of fear that will prohibit Filipinos from seeking the truth.

“I’m thinking not of a literal book burning, not of forcibly pulling books out of library shelves, but more of creating that atmosphere of fear – fearing for your life that merely holding a copy of certain books would merit you condemnation,” Pante told VOA.

“It’s a more insidious form of quote unquote book burning,” he added.

Last month, about 1,700 historians and academics released a manifesto calling for the defense of historical truth and academic freedom for fear of intensified historical distortion and disinformation now that the Marcoses are back in power.

Marcos Jr.’s choice of education secretary, incoming Vice President Sara Duterte, also raised concerns that the whitewashed version of history will be legitimized through the schools.

In 2020, Marcos Jr. called for the revision of history textbooks, claiming that these are teaching children “lies.” But historians like Pante believe history education has been inadequate since the country adopted the K-12 curriculum.

“We will not revise anything, all we will do is to also make known, make public what we know, our side of the story, which we have perhaps been remiss in not telling simply because we were scared of the traditional media, of all the abuse, diatribe, the insult,” Senator Imee Marcos, sister of the incoming president, said in a TV interview.

A group of young people is working double-time to digitize documents and materials including thousands of pages of newspapers that chronicled the abuses of the Marcoses.

In advance of another Marcos presidency, Pante stressed the need for historians and academics like him to think of creative ways to seek out the truth and preserve it.

“We need to break away from this academic stereotype and engage with popular media, to speak using the language of the ordinary Filipino so that we can bridge that gap, that very huge gap that we see nowadays,” he said.

Source: Voice of America

Singapore Reports 2,969 New COVID-19 Cases

SINGAPORE, Singapore reported 2,969 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, bringing the total tally to 1,335,625.

Of the new cases, 325 cases were detected through polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests, and 2,644 through antigen rapid test (ART), according to statistics released by the Ministry of Health.

Among the PCR cases, 304 were local transmissions and 21 were imported cases.

Among the ART cases, with mild symptoms and assessed to be of low risk, 2,510 were local transmissions and 134 were imported cases.

A total of 224 cases are currently warded in hospitals, with three cases in intensive care units.

No death was reported from COVID-19 yesterday, keeping the total death toll at 1,396, according to the ministry.

The ministry also said yesterday that, Singapore will update its COVID-19 Safe Management Measures, vaccination programme and COVID-19 subsidy policy

Source: Nam News Network

Vietnam Reports 961 New COVID-19 Cases

HANOI, Vietnam recorded 961 new COVID-19 cases yesterday, up by 162 from Thursday, according to its Ministry of Health.

All the new infections were domestically transmitted in 42 provinces and cities.

The Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, was the pandemic hotspot with 181 new cases recorded yesterday, followed by the northern Bac Ninh province, with 77 and the northern Phu Tho province, with 66.

The infections brought the total tally to 10,729,681, with 43,082 deaths. Nationwide, 9,540,598 COVID-19 patients, or nearly 89 percent of the infections, have recovered.

More than 223.1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in the country, including about 200.4 million shots on people aged 18 and above, said the ministry.

Vietnam has gone through four coronavirus waves of increasing scale, complication and infectivity. As of yesterday, it has registered more than 10.7 million locally transmitted COVID-19 cases, since the start of the current wave of infections in Apr, 2021, said the health ministry

Source: Nam News Network

Austin, Chinese Minister Meet Asian Leaders Amid Diplomatic Rivalry

The Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore is Asia’s most prominent security summit, in addition to being a hotspot of diplomatic competition.

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and several other American officials have been engaged in sideline talks with leaders of Asian countries aimed at weaning them away from both Russia and China.

Chinese officials, led by China’s Defense Minister General Wei Fenghe, also have been actively meeting with other Asian leaders to put across their points of view. Wei had separate meetings with the leaders of Singapore and South Korea. China’s main plank is Asia Pacific unity, without permitting an outside force like the U.S. to “interfere” in their internal affairs.

Secretary Austin met separately with Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and the Indonesian Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto on Friday. After the meeting, Singapore’s defense ministry issued a significant statement indicating the island nation would continue its close alliance with the U.S.

“They exchanged views on geopolitical developments and regional security issues and agreed on the importance of the U.S.’s continued engagement of the region. PM Lee expressed appreciation for the U.S.’s long-standing support for the Singapore Armed Forces’ training in the U.S.,” the statement read.

In his meeting with the Indonesian minister, Austin thanked Indonesia for condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine at the U.N. General Assembly. The two leaders discussed new initiatives, such as cybersecurity training and Indonesia’s interest in participating in the Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness, which was announced at the Quad Summit in Tokyo last month.

The meetings have started producing results. Southeast Asian nations that had earlier refused to pick sides against Russia are now rethinking their options, U.S. State Department Counselor Derek Chollet said in an interview.

“For a lot of countries, that’s not an easy decision to make because they may have relationships with Russia, and for many, many years,” Chollet said, without naming the countries. “But I found that many of those countries are questioning that future.”

China’s defense minister told the Singapore leader the two countries should “strengthen mutual support on issues concerning each other’s core interests and major concerns, so as to inject positive energy into regional peace and stability.”

China regards Taiwan as a matter of its “core interest” and sovereignty, and it wants Asian countries to respect its “territorial integrity.” General Wei told U.S. Secretary Austin on Friday that China was prepared to fight with anyone trying to separate China from Taiwan.

During his meeting with South Korean Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup, Wei reiterated China’s position of maintaining peace on the Korean Peninsula, according to China’s state-run Global Times newspaper. He referred to North Korea, saying that China and South Korea should cooperate on realizing the denuclearization of the peninsula.

Speaking to South Korean television, Xing Haiming, China’s ambassador to South Korea, said China respects South Korea’s traditional alliance with the U.S., but only if such relations do not target China. “The Asia-Pacific should be a high ground for peaceful development, not a geopolitical arena.”

Source: Voice of America

19th Shangri-La Dialogue Kicked Off In Singapore

SINGAPORE, The 19th Shangri-La Dialogue, hosted by International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), opened here last night, after a two-year COVID-19 pandemic hiatus.

Leading the Chinese delegation to the dialogue, Chinese State Councillor and Minister of National Defence, Wei Fenghe, will address a plenary session tomorrow.

He is expected to introduce China’s policy, principles and actions on safeguarding true multilateralism, regional peace and stability, and building a shared future for humanity.

Wei, on the sidelines of the dialogue, will meet heads of other delegations, on international and regional situation, as well as, bilateral cooperation on defence and security.

Important topics on the agenda of the dialogue include China’s vision on regional order, geopolitical competition control, and climate and maritime security.

Since its launch in 2002 by the British think-tank, IISS, with support of the Singapore government, the Shangri-La Dialogue, officially known as the Asia Security Summit, has been held annually except for 2020 and 2021

Source: Nam News Network

Muslims must unite over insults against Prophet Muhammad – Malaysian minister

KOTA BHARU (Kelantan, Malaysia), The Malaysian government has urged Muslims in the country to unite against two politicians from India who insulted Prophet Muhammad.

Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Religious Affairs) Ahmad Marzuk Shaary said the insults were considered an act of extremism and unacceptable.

He said Muslims must rise and act in solidarity as a show of strength and togetherness to ensure no one repeats such acts in the future.

“The Prophet did not teach Muslims to insult other religions fearing how non-Muslims would react and insult Islam. That is why if there are people who try to insult the Prophet, we consider that an act of extremism.

“In fact, we should learn from this incident that Muslims must rise and be united, only then will they realise that they cannot simply insult Islam and the Prophet and at the same time be cautious when they see Muslims unite because if we are divided, they can do as they please,” he said at a press conference here Friday.

Media outlets had earlier reported that Malaysia along with Indonesia, Qatar, Kuwait, Iran, Saudi Arabia and other Islamic countries condemned the statements of two politicians from India that insulted Islam recently.

Source: Nam News Network