Twenty-seven years after the murder of opposition leader and former senator Benigno âNinoy" Aquino Jr., his daughters say the search for the brains behind his assassination is over, and that the Aquino family has already achieved justice. Ma. Elena âBallsy" Cruz and Aurora âPinky" Abellada, elder sisters of President Benigno Aquino III, say itâs time to move on. The two, however, stressed that their brother may not necessarily share their views. âFor me, that's so long ago," said Abellada. âWe know who did it. Many of them are dead; letâs move forward. I donât know if human rights advocates will get angry, but for me, you cannot hold these ill feelings for long because in the end itâs you who will suffer."
The 15th President of the Republic of the Philippines Benigno Simeon Aquino III along with his siblings from left Viel, Ballsy, Pinky, and Kris at Malacañang after Aquino's inaugural at Quirino Grandstand on June 30. GMANews.TV
âFor me, itâs over. As far as Iâm concerned, it is a closed book already because we know whoâs behind it. I mean, Iâve made up my mind insofar as who planned it," adds Cruz, the eldest of the Presidentâs siblings. But for the rest of the country, the assassination of Ninoy Aquino will remain one of the countryâs biggest unsolved mysteries. Ninoy was shot and killed in broad daylight on August 21, 1983, at the then-Manila International Airport. He was in the custody of soldiers escorting him out of the China Airlines flight that brought him back home from three years of self-exile in the United States. The Aquino assassination sparked a series of events that brought down the government of then president Ferdinand Marcos, Ninoy Aquinoâs fiercest opponent, and catapulted his widow Cory to power in a peaceful revolution three years later. Their only son, Noynoy, was elected to office last May on the strength of his parentsâ image and reputation. But although Filipinos have elected two Aquinos to the presidency, they have yet to achieve closure as far as Ninoyâs assassination is concerned. This sentiment was expressed by national artist and Ramon Magsaysay awardee for journalism F. Sionil Jose. Through his column titled Hindsight, Sionil wrote Noynoy Aquino an open letter which contained some unsolicited advice: âNow that you have the muscle to do it, go after your fatherâs killers. Blood and duty compel you to do so. Cory was only his wifeâyou are the anointed and only son. Your regime will be measured by how you resolve this most blatant crime that robbed us of a true leader." The government has been trying to find the brains behind Ninoyâs murder for the past 26 years. In 1984, Marcos designated the Agrava Commission to investigate the assassination. The Commission blamed it on a military conspiracy led by then Armed Forces Chief of Staff and Marcos cousin Fabian Ver. In December 1985, the Sandiganbayan acquitted Ver and his 25 other co-accused. When Cory became president in 1986, the case was reopened and 16 soldiers were sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder. The mastermind was never identified. Three of the convicted soldiers died in prison while the rest were granted pardon by former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. In jail for 26 years, the soldiers have stuck to their original testimonies that Senator Aquino was shot by an assassin, Rolando Galman. Then a senator, Noynoy Aquino criticized the executive clemency that Arroyo had granted the soldiers, calling it an injustice. He saw it as part of a political vendetta. The Aquinos and Arroyos were allies until the âHello, Garci" scandal erupted and Cory Aquino supported calls for Arroyoâs resignation. Informed of the presidential pardon, Cory then issued a statement saying she had âpersonally pardoned and prayed" for the persons convicted for the murder of her husband. She, however, reiterated her wish to have the real principals of the crime identified, âeven if they could no longer be brought to justice." She said the Filipino people should know the whole truth, because such knowledge could help prevent a similar tragedy. But Cruz and Abellada, who were interviewed by The Probe Team before Noynoyâs inauguration, said they would rather see their brother dedicate his time and efforts to nation-building to improve the lives of the majority, rather than to finding their fatherâs killers. Cruz said the Aquinos could not ask for anything more from the Filipinos. The love the Filipino people showered on her parents, particularly during the wake and hours-long funeral processions of both Ninoy and Cory, were more than enough consolation in their time of bereavement, she added. With or without the conviction of the soldiers, Abellada said that her father got a more important reward for his martyrdom â the love of his countrymen. â
Parang tama na siguro âyun (I think that should be enough)," she said.
(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look into current issues. Vera is Latin for âtrue.") âJV, GMANews.TV