From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Mar 19): In the Know: Jabidah Massacre
Out of the roughly 27 Muslim youth allegedly summarily executed in 1968 in
what is known as the Jabidah Massacre, only Jibin Arula survived to tell the
tragedy.
Arula recounted the alleged massacre in interviews with the Inquirer in March
2008 and March 2009.
In his account, Arula said he was among those who were brought to Corregidor
island on Jan. 3, 1968, to train on guerrilla tactics in preparation for
“Operation Merdeka,” an alleged top-secret plan of the Marcos administration to
invade Sabah in Malaysia.
Named after a beautiful woman in Muslim lore, Jabidah was the commando group
that was to carry out the operation.
“Malaysia was the target of our mission. We were to invade Sabah. If Malaysia
would file a formal complaint in the United Nations, the government was to deny
us. It (the government) would claim that we were members of the private army of
Sultan Kiram (of the sultanate of Sulu),” Arula said.
“We were promised P50 allowance per month but we received not a centavo. We
were fed dried fish, and for coffee, we would use rice leftovers. The commanders
were living in luxury while we were living with almost nothing at all,” Arula
added.
To air their grievances, the trainees wrote a secret petition to President
Ferdinand Marcos. But the letter most likely was intercepted by their training
officers, which led to the tragedy, he said.
Before dawn on March 18, 1968, the training officers fired at them on
Corregidor’s airstrip, Arula said.
Arula, who was wounded by a bullet in his left knee, swam for his life on
Manila Bay, only to be fished out of the waters off Cavite province the next
morning.
On March 28, 1968, opposition Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. delivered an
exposé speech titled “Jabidah: Special Forces of Evil?” in which he alleged that
aside from the recruitment of Muslims to infiltrate North Borneo, former
convicts and former members of the Hukbalahap had also been enlisted to wipe out
the opposition in 1969, an election year.
Aquino said: “I charge President Marcos with building a secret strike force
under his personal command, to form the shock troops of his cherished garrison
state.”
Marcos dismissed the accusations as an opposition plot to discredit the
administration.
The Jabidah Massacre inspired Nur Misuari, then a political science professor
at the University of the Philippines, to establish the Moro National Liberation
Front, which fought for a separate Moro homeland in Mindanao.
Arula died in a vehicular accident in 2010. Inquirer Research
Sources: Inquirer Archives; Official Gazette of the Philippines; Kasaysayan
The Story of the Filipino People
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/69541/in-the-know-jabidah-massacre
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