THE USS ASHEVILLE, a Los Angeles-class submarine, docks in Subic on Saturday. The US sub has a top speed of 32 knots underwater. It has its home port in San Diego, California. ROBERT GONZAGA/INQUIRER CENTRAL LUZON
SUBIC BAY FREEPORT—While Aetas watched on
the sidelines, the US submarine USS Asheville docked here on Saturday to
replenish provisions.
Some of the Aetas said it was like old
times, as the submarine crew disembarked for rest and recreation at the former
American naval base.
“There was a time when we could roam
inside the [US naval] base, and go in and out without IDs (identification
cards). But others needed an escort or an ID to get in here,” Rommel Abueng
recalled. This was because the Americans respected the Aetas, he said.
Abueng was with a group of Aetas as well
as employees who stood in front of the administration building of the Subic Bay
Metropolitan Authority to await the arrival of an official delegation from
Timor-Leste.
Timor-Leste Prime Minister Kay Rala Xanana
Gusmão was received by President Benigno Aquino in Malacañang on Wednesday prior
to the President’s state visit to Burma (Myanmar).
Curious tribe
But when the US submarine arrived at Subic
Bay, most of the Aetas and employees rushed to the Alava Pier here to watch two
tugboats guide the US vessel to the dock. The USS Asheville (SSN 758) and the
submarine tender USS Frank Cable (AS 40), which assists the undersea vessel,
will stay in Subic for a few days for routine port calls.
Abueng said the Americans used to consult
their elders and men of the villages, asking to be taught about jungle survival.
The requests sometimes came from the US Marines, he said. “We taught them how to
survive in the jungle because we live there,” he said.
Because of these engagements, some of the
Aetas learned to speak fluent English, he said. Whenever the American soldiers
encountered them at the base before the 1990s, they gave the Aetas food and
candies.
The bases were pulled out in 1991 and the
Aetas’ privileges were lost with them, Abueng said. He said the Aetas had to
find work in the business community
that replaced the Americans in Subic.
Souvenirs
An Aeta woman said her village still
interacted with the Americans whenever they were in Subic. “But now we sell them
our handicraft … They bring [these products] home as souvenirs,” she said.
A statement from the American Embassy said
the port call of the
two vessels would “highlight the strong historic community and military
relations between the Philippines and the United States.”
While in Subic, the Frank Cable and the
Asheville will refuel and receive
supplies, and the crew will undertake community service in nearby areas, the
statement added.
The US submarine, named after the city of
Asheville in North Carolina, was commissioned in 1991. It is 91 meters long and
has a top
speed of 32
knots underwater. The USS Frank Cable was commissioned in 1980. It is nearly 200
meters long and has a crew of 1,500.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/423049/us-subs-visit-reminds-aetas-of-bases-days
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