From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jul 27): WHAT WENT BEFORE: Oakwood Mutiny
Early on July 27, 2003, some 300 soldiers took over the Oakwood Premiere
serviced apartments in Ayala Center, Makati City, to demand the resignation of
certain officials and air their grievances against the military establishment.
Calling themselves the Magdalo group, the soldiers railed against alleged
anomalies in the Armed Forces of the Philippines Retirement and Separation
Benefits System, the military procurement system (including the purchase of
substandard equipment for soldiers) and the construction and repair of various
facilities at Marine Base, Cavite, as well as the alleged transfer of arms and
ammunition to unauthorized parties.
They also called for the resignation of then President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo, then Defense Secretary Angelo Reyes, then Philippine National
Police Director Gen. Hermogenes Ebdane, and Victor Corpus, then chief of the
AFP Intelligence Service.
The soldiers occupied Oakwood for at least 20 hours before emerging from
negotiations with the government and ending their mutiny. They were later
charged with coup d’etat.
Among those charged was Magdalo spokesperson Navy Lt. Antonio Trillanes IV. A
commission chaired by retired Supreme Court Justice Florentino Feliciano was
later formed to investigate the mutiny.
In its report issued in October 2003, the Feliciano Commission said the
mutiny was a “well-planned” power grab, and not a spontaneous protest.
Quoting facts it had gathered, the commission said the soldiers plotted to
take over the government and establish a 15-member council, but that the plot
was discovered, leading to an arrest order by then President Arroyo on the
evening of July 26.
But the commission conceded that some of the soldiers’ grievances were
legitimate, and that they were rooted in corruption in the military. The report
also underscored the need for modernization in the military establishment.
The report warned that the AFP “could implode and collapse with unpredictable
consequences” if the issues were not addressed.
The commission’s report identified the leaders of the Magdalo group as
Trillanes, Army Capt. Gerardo Gambala, Army Capt. Milo Maestrecampo, Navy Lt.
James Layug and Marine Capt. Gary Alejano.
Trillanes ran for senator in 2007 as guest candidate under the Genuine
Opposition ticket (which was, incidentally, not registered with the Commission
on Elections) and won while in detention. He was released in December 2010 after
more than seven years in detention, following President Aquino’s issuance of
Proclamation Order No. 75. The order granted amnesty to those who joined the
2003 Oakwood mutiny, the 2006 failed coup and Marine standoff, and the 2007
Peninsula hotel siege. In January 2011, Trillanes led 94 other former junior
military officers and enlisted personnel in retaking their oath of allegiance to
seal the amnesty granted them.
Trillanes ran for a second term in the May 2013 elections and won, garnering
more than
13.9 million votes.
In May 2008, Gambala and Maestrecampo were among the nine former Magdalo
rebel officers who were pardoned by President Arroyo and freed after nearly five
years in detention, following their admission of guilt. They were discharged
from military service by a military tribunal after pleading guilty to violating
the Articles of War.
Layug ran for congressman in the second district of Taguig City in the 2010
elections, but lost.
The party-list Magdalo Para sa Pilipino, composed of former mutineers, won in
the 2013 elections with its representatives Alejano and Francisco Ashley
Acedillo.
In March this year, former Army officers First Lieutenants Lawrence San Juan
and Rex Bolo were sentenced to long prison terms after spurning President
Aquino’s offer of pardon. They were found “guilty as participants of the coup,”
and were ordered to serve a maximum of 12 years in jail by Makati Regional Trial
Court Branch 148 Judge Andres Soriano.
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