Marcos, political detainees after a jog, with the two ladies as visitors:  Three of these were members of the Communist Party’s Executive Committee, its highest commanding body, who were released after at least two years.  In the photo is one who is now a ranking executive of PLDT-Smart, another a top Singapore-based executive of the French news agency, Agence France Presse; and another a top negotiator for the Communist Party in the peace talks with the government. Several of them now live comfortable, middle-class lives in North America and Europe.
Marcos, political detainees after a jog, with the two ladies as visitors:  Three of these were members of the Communist Party’s Executive Committee, its highest commanding body, who were released after at least two years.  In the photo is one who is now a ranking executive of PLDT-Smart, another a top Singapore-based executive of the French news agency, Agence France Presse; and another a top negotiator for the Communist Party in the peace talks with the government. Several of them now live comfortable, middle-class lives in North America and Europe.

For instance, in Marcos’ Five Years of the New Society (published in May 1978), obviously to debunk claims of military abuses,  the strongman stated that that 2,083 members of the AFP had been “dismissed and penalized for various abuses, including torture and ill-treatment of detainees and 322 had been sentenced to disciplinary punishment.” General Espino as well as Jose Crisol, Deputy Defense Secretary in charge of civilian relations had also reported that 2,500 to 2,900 military personnel were discharged as a result of complaints by detainees. In a speech marking the lifting of martial law in January 1981, Marcos claimed that more than 8,800 officers and men had been dismissed from the AFP during the period of martial law, because of human-rights accusations against them.

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