Martial law a dark chapter in PH history -- Pangilinan


Opposition Senator Francis ‘’Kiko’’ N. Pangilinan said on Monday that the Martial law declared on September 21, 1972 is a dark chapter in Philippine history.

Senator Francis Pangilinan (Senate of the Philippines / MANILA BULLETIN)

“Many were arrested without charges, tortured, dispossessed of their properties, killed. It wasn’t the progressive and orderly 'new society' bannered in the newspapers, radio, and television,’’ Pangilinan pointed out.

“The true face of martial law became clear to me when an opposition leader was killed. I started to examine our people’s condition and ask why there was so much poverty while (then President Ferdinand E.) Marcos the dictator, his family, and his cronies lived in opulence,’’ he said.

Pangilinan, then a student leader, said the Martial Law period shaped him ‘’to the need to struggle in solidarity with others toward a victory not simply to oust the dictator, but to extricate the tentacles of I and my fellow activists were pushed to fight for our fellow men and women, for ourselves, and for the future. We were pushed by those dark times when the law was about one man, to serve as inspiration. We were pushed by the need to be brave and to serve,’’ he said.

“As before, that is the challenge of today: Examine and question. Serve as an inspiration. Be brave and serve the people,’’ he added.