People Power Movement
People Power Movement, four-day protest in
1986 in Manila, that forced Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos into exile
and ended his 14-year dictatorship of the Republic of the Philippines. Although
worldwide coverage of the event portrayed it as a spontaneous uprising, its
origins lay in years of rising resentments among military officers and growing
protests by Manila’s middle class. Benigno Aquino (“Ninoy” Aquino) was the
chief opposition leader in the Philippine Senate when Marcos declared martial
law in 1972. He was imprisoned until 1980 and then went into political exile in
the United States. Aquino flew back to the Philippines in 1983, but his
military escort shot him in the back of the head as he stepped from the
aircraft. The brutal assassination made him an instant martyr to those opposed
to the Marcos regime. Many among the millions who attended his funeral
procession later joined opposition groups to campaign for the restoration of
democracy.
As the economy collapsed, President Marcos tried to win a new
mandate by calling an unscheduled election for February 1986. Although deeply
divided, the opposition united behind the candidacy of Ninoy’s widow, Corazon
Aquino, who proved to be a dedicated campaigner. Simultaneously, a military
faction headed by Marcos’s ambitious defense minister, Juan Ponce Enrile, began
plotting a coup d’état.
Reports that Marcos won the February election by
fraud prompted Enrile’s loyal colonels to launch their coup. They staged a
mutiny with just 750 soldiers at two military camps in Manila. General Fidel
Valdez Ramos, chief of the Philippine Constabulary (now the Philippine National
Police), joined Enrile’s revolt and inspired defections among key units. When a
million citizens formed human barricades around the camps, Marcos’s troops
refused to fire on unarmed civilians. After four days of “people power,” as the
citizen revolt became known, Marcos fled to Hawaii and Corazon Aquino took
office as the new president.
Alfred W. McCoy
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Comments
Post a Comment