Talambuhay ni ferdinand marcos posts
The Wall Street Journal The son of former Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos has won the right to formally protest the results of last year’s vice-presidential election, giving him another chance at achieving his political goals.
100 months ago
The Wall Street Journal Burying someone accused of massive rights violations and widespread corruption at the Heroes’ Cemetery has long been an emotional and divisive issue in the Philippines, where Marcos was ousted by a largely nonviolent army-backed uprising in 1986.
103 months ago
The Wall Street Journal “This is a very divisive ruling. It makes a mockery of all the people who stood up against Marcos in the People Power revolution in 1986.”
103 months ago
The New York Times She was sexually molested, given electric shocks and subjected to Russian roulette during the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos. "Now they want to make him a hero."
103 months ago
The Wall Street Journal The Philippine president’s bid to bury former dictator Ferdinand Marcos in Heroes’ Cemetery highlights parallels between the two men.
105 months ago
The Wall Street Journal Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has fashioned himself a strongman leader in the mold of Ferdinand Marcos, heartening many Filipinos who adored him but alarming many others concerned with human rights and growing divisiveness in the country.
105 months ago
Washington Post World Duterte’s decision to allow the burial on the rationale that Marcos was a “soldier” during World War II and a former president, though not necessarily a “hero,” has sparked protests and an appeal to the Philippine Supreme Court from human r
Read more ... ights victims of Marcos’s 20-year rule.
106 months ago
The Wall Street Journal Ferdinand Marcos ran the Philippines with his wife Imelda for two decades until the People Power Revolution of 1986 led by former President Corazon Aquino.
106 months ago
CNN International It's been 30 years since a people's revolution ousted Ferdinand Marcos from power -- now his son "Bongbong" is making a comeback.
109 months ago
The Economist Imelda Marcos's jewellery is going up for auction. She and her husband, Ferdinand Marcos, are thought to have stolen more than $10 billion. Her son, Bongbong Marcos, is standing in the country's upcoming elections
112 months ago
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