AFP public affairs office chief Lt. Col. Ramon Zagala. From the official Twitter account of the Armed forces of the Philippines @TeamAFP
The unlikely heartthrob in the Zamboanga siege received the third-highest military award on Monday.
Lt. Col. Ramon Zagala, the Armed Forces of
the Philippines public affairs office chief, received the Distinguished Service
Star medal from President Aquino.
AFP Chief of
Staff Gen. Emmanuel Bautista ordered Zagala to go to Zamboanga City in September
to handle the public and media communication aspect of
the military operations against Moro rebels threatening the city.
Little did Bautista know that his strategy
would turn Zagala, a Special Forces airborne officer, into a celebrity.
Two weeks of media exposure resulted in
the creation of a Facebook fan page by Zamboanga residents, the manufacture of
T-shirts with Zagala’s face on them and photo opportunities for starstruck city
residents.
‘An excellent job’
Zagala also had gushing fans on Twitter,
who congratulated him for his award yesterday.
“LTC Zagala did an excellent job bridging
the @TeamAFP and the civilian community during the crisis. As to why he deserves
the fans’ club, he has the charm and the looks too. That’s how an Army wife will
say it,” tweeted @PinkOliveDrab, also a military wife.
Zagala is the son of the late Army Chief
Maj. Gen. Rafael Zagala. He and his wife, Nenita, have two sons.
A graduate of the Army’s Officers’
Candidate School, Zagala was astonished by the public’s response to him while he
was just doing, he said, the task assigned to him by his commander.
On his award,
Zagala said: “I was more on the crisis and strategic communications of the
military to show the bigger audience that the threat was contained within the
city.
“I tried to give timely information
without compromising the troops’ security and our mission. Maybe that’s why I
was given the award,” he said.
Forgotten soldiers?
Ironically, none of yesterday’s awardees
were from Zamboanga City or from Basilan province.
The first responders in the Zamboanga
siege were actually soldiers from the 32nd Infantry Battalion, who were on a
“retraining program” in Zamboanga, and the 7th Scout Ranger Company from
Basilan.
Lt. Gen. Rey Ardo, chief of the Western
Mindanao Command, said he learned of the award ceremony only on Sunday.
Col. Johnson Jemar Aseron of the 32nd
Infantry Battalion and Capt. Arvin Llenaresas of the 7th Scout Ranger Company
said they were not informed either.
“It’s OK if we were not recognized. If we
were recognized, we would want it on Dec. 21, during AFP Day,” Aseron said.
“We respect the judgment of our superiors.
In the Army, whoever is recognized, is considered an honor for all of us,” he
added.
Llenaresas said he received no prior
advice, “not even a radio message.” But he said he did not mind.
“What’s important is we did our best to
secure Zamboanga and gave the place back to its people,” he said.
Zamboanga City Mayor Maria Isabelle
Climaco-Salazar said she would look into why the troops who responded first to
the crisis and were the last to leave the city were not recognized during the
awards ceremony.
“I will raise this matter with General
Bautista,” she said.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/520607/afp-spokesman-gets-service-star-medal
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