Berliner Boersenzeitung - Misinformation shrouds Philippine martial law era horrors

EUR -
AED 4.057284
AFN 75.682141
ALL 98.698696
AMD 427.691234
ANG 1.990051
AOA 1054.37354
ARS 1071.767362
AUD 1.604172
AWG 1.991097
AZN 1.879118
BAM 1.951437
BBD 2.229445
BDT 131.95501
BGN 1.956135
BHD 0.416393
BIF 3195.143899
BMD 1.104631
BND 1.422906
BOB 7.629702
BRL 6.011346
BSD 1.104197
BTN 92.74373
BWP 14.556996
BYN 3.613589
BYR 21650.759002
BZD 2.225654
CAD 1.492013
CDF 3169.739152
CHF 0.93888
CLF 0.036497
CLP 1007.058884
CNY 7.775502
CNH 7.773423
COP 4620.791147
CRC 570.51942
CUC 1.104631
CUP 29.27271
CVE 110.739126
CZK 25.349045
DJF 196.314914
DKK 7.458929
DOP 66.885012
DZD 146.994252
EGP 53.431201
ERN 16.569458
ETB 133.5456
FJD 2.424112
FKP 0.841241
GBP 0.832753
GEL 3.010082
GGP 0.841241
GHS 17.508287
GIP 0.841241
GMD 77.324059
GNF 9539.039486
GTQ 8.535918
GYD 230.906485
HKD 8.575242
HNL 27.494572
HRK 7.510395
HTG 145.594519
HUF 400.108369
IDR 16906.481204
ILS 4.178193
IMP 0.841241
INR 92.703634
IQD 1447.066035
IRR 46504.947078
ISK 149.512008
JEP 0.841241
JMD 174.244949
JOD 0.782849
JPY 161.89742
KES 142.497615
KGS 93.233168
KHR 4487.562569
KMF 491.946853
KPW 994.166879
KRW 1463.237963
KWD 0.337818
KYD 0.920114
KZT 533.540348
LAK 24381.721314
LBP 98974.898609
LKR 325.738851
LRD 214.049814
LSL 19.209183
LTL 3.261687
LVL 0.66818
LYD 5.230421
MAD 10.777332
MDL 19.317204
MGA 5020.546108
MKD 61.60109
MMK 3587.796974
MNT 3753.534598
MOP 8.829981
MRU 43.925633
MUR 51.08891
MVR 16.967109
MWK 1916.533965
MXN 21.446458
MYR 4.64111
MZN 70.564007
NAD 19.209103
NGN 1845.550429
NIO 40.595443
NOK 11.682783
NPR 148.389568
NZD 1.765319
OMR 0.425295
PAB 1.104197
PEN 4.107569
PGK 4.332085
PHP 62.152006
PKR 306.751883
PLN 4.294421
PYG 8603.494001
QAR 4.022016
RON 4.977131
RSD 117.036743
RUB 105.655071
RWF 1473.024854
SAR 4.145613
SBD 9.160219
SCR 14.63841
SDG 664.436528
SEK 11.342147
SGD 1.427332
SHP 0.841241
SLE 25.237829
SLL 23163.544876
SOS 630.744345
SRD 34.208222
STD 22863.622379
SVC 9.661096
SYP 2775.417354
SZL 19.077261
THB 36.397412
TJS 11.73776
TMT 3.866207
TND 3.365784
TOP 2.587153
TRY 37.820065
TTD 7.48919
TWD 35.303549
TZS 3010.118156
UAH 45.570282
UGX 4055.804605
USD 1.104631
UYU 45.997172
UZS 14078.516544
VEF 4001582.239565
VES 40.730541
VND 27245.712795
VUV 131.143959
WST 3.090163
XAF 654.473166
XAG 0.034692
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.985319
XDR 0.814871
XOF 651.187489
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.516631
ZAR 19.168201
ZMK 9943.001783
ZMW 28.901474
ZWL 355.69059
  • RBGPF

    -1.3000

    59.5

    -2.18%

  • BCC

    -1.8600

    139.53

    -1.33%

  • SCS

    -0.3300

    12.87

    -2.56%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.93

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    -1.2700

    68.78

    -1.85%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    24.78

    +0.04%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    34.44

    -1.13%

  • JRI

    -0.1500

    13.38

    -1.12%

  • RIO

    -0.3400

    70.82

    -0.48%

  • GSK

    -0.8500

    39.45

    -2.15%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    47.29

    -0.11%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    6.9

    -0.43%

  • BTI

    -0.4800

    35.97

    -1.33%

  • BP

    0.2800

    32.37

    +0.86%

  • VOD

    -0.2100

    9.74

    -2.16%

  • AZN

    0.9100

    79.58

    +1.14%

Misinformation shrouds Philippine martial law era horrors
Misinformation shrouds Philippine martial law era horrors / Photo: JAM STA ROSA - AFP

Misinformation shrouds Philippine martial law era horrors

American lawyer Thomas Jones still remembers the scars of Philippine torture victims he interviewed for Amnesty International inside the country's detention centres in 1975 during the rule of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

Text size:

But Marcos, who presided over widespread abuses and corruption during his 20 years in power, denied the lawyer's visit to the Philippines ever happened.

Decades later the dictator's claim -- debunked by AFP and others -- has resurfaced on social media sites popular among Filipinos.

Amnesty estimates thousands of people were killed and tens of thousands tortured and imprisoned after Marcos imposed martial law on September 21, 1972.

Under legislation signed in 2013 by former president Benigno Aquino, 11,103 victims of torture, killings, enforced disappearances and other abuses have been officially recognised and compensated.

In the run-up to Wednesday's 50th anniversary of the start of martial law, pro-Marcos posts have flooded Facebook and TikTok with false and misleading claims that cast doubt on Amnesty's findings and downplay the abuses.

AFP has fact-checked multiple posts that carried footage of Marcos addressing US media in 1982.

Marcos -- father of current Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr who has defended martial law -- accused Amnesty of relying on "hearsay" for their findings. And he falsely claimed the rights group "never" visited the country.

The clip resurfaced on TikTok in March after an anti-Marcos Senate candidate running in May 9 elections cited Amnesty for figures showing the horrors of martial law.

"Amnesty International (said) 3,257 were killed during Marcos's time, 35,000 were tortured... 70,000 were imprisoned. It's a matter of record," Luke Espiritu said in a debate.

Within hours of that livestreamed event, the Marcos footage had been stitched with the Espiritu video and circulated on TikTok and Facebook.

It received more than 900,000 views, according to analysis by AFP's Fact Check team.

One post drew more than 3,000 comments that questioned Amnesty's numbers and described the dictator as "a great leader destroyed by black propaganda".

Jones said Marcos lied about the Amnesty visit and martial law abuses, and decades later Filipinos were being deceived by his son.

"People of the Philippines, they still don't know the facts," the 81-year-old told AFP from his home in Wisconsin.

Jones and a colleague interviewed Marcos, members of his cabinet and 107 detainees during their visit.

Marcos admitted about 50,000 people had been arrested in the first few years of martial law, while 71 detainees told them they had been tortured, Jones said.

Amnesty published their findings in 1976, with their conclusion that "torture was used freely and with extreme cruelty, often over long periods".

The Marcos government denied torture was "widely used" and said Amnesty's report was "based on fabrications, biased, and without factual foundations".

- 'Short memories' -

Josefina Forcadilla, 66, one of the detainees mentioned in the Amnesty report, remembers being interviewed by Jones and his colleague while she was imprisoned.

"I was hesitant to talk to them at first, until they said they wanted to document what my family went through at the time," she told AFP.

Forcadilla was 17 when police raided their house in search of her elder brother in April 1973.

She said an officer boxed her ears, fondled her breasts and played Russian roulette with a gun while interrogating her about his whereabouts.

"I was in shock. I couldn't cry. I knew then that their purpose was really to kill," she said.

She and three other siblings were eventually arrested.

Her elder sister was assaulted and died in detention, while her brother was tortured and another sister gave birth in prison.

"My family can't help but ask, why do Filipinos have short memories?" she said.

Amnesty visited the Philippines again in 1981 to document abuses that took place from 1976 onwards.

In a 2018 statement, Amnesty said: "From 1972 to 1981, some 70,000 people were imprisoned and 34,000 were tortured; over 3,200 people were killed."

Marcos was toppled from power in 1986.

Rachel Chhoa-Howard, Amnesty researcher for Southeast Asia, defended the rights group's estimates, saying they were "based on our own field missions and documentation during the 80s and cross-referenced with other research at the time".

But she said the true scale of the abuses may never be known "given the immensity and pervasiveness of violations during that time".

- Denying atrocities -

Yet, the truth about what is known is itself under attack.

Filipinos worried about martial law violence being whitewashed or erased by the new Marcos administration have been digitising books, films and articles documenting the brutality.

One group is Project Gunita, which has been scanning and posting old newspaper and magazine reports on social media to educate users influenced by pro-Marcos misinformation.

"It's pointless to have our Google drives, it's pointless to have this database of information if it doesn't get to those people who need to read them," said co-founder Sarah Gomez.

Joel Ariate, a member of the University of the Philippines' Marcos Regime Research group, said denying Marcos atrocities "has become like a bloodsport online".

He said the key to fighting misinformation about martial law was to repeat the truth "as much as the lies".

Marcos Jr, who said earlier this year he had not seen Amnesty's figures and did not know how they were generated, last week acknowledged there had been "abuses" under martial law, "like in any war".

But martial law had been "necessary" to defend the country against communist and Muslim insurgencies, he told a local celebrity talk show host.

Carmelo Crisanto of the Human Rights Violations Victims' Memorial Commission, an independent government body, said in August the real number of victims could be much higher than the official figure.

"Many people in the fringes of our society -- Muslims, farmers, fisherfolk -- they didn't even hear that there was a process for filing claims," Crisanto said.

"So the effects of the regime could have touched them but they are not recorded."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)