The Car Leaves Las Piñas: Off to Camp Crame!
As the car moved, our captors
told us to crouch low, obviously to keep us from knowing where we were going.
They were probably not sure if the blindfolds were totally covering our vision.
At this point, I had not discounted
the possibility that the agents would summarily execute or “salvage” us. Another
prospect was being brought to a safe house where we would be interrogated and
tortured indefinitely. I also wondered if we were going to be held in single
place or in multiple places.
Some ten minutes into this early morning ride , the Ford Escort stopped,
after which I felt it going down a steep grade. I surmised that the stop was
the tollgate of the South Expressway, and that the incline was the short spur
road that led to the expressway.
As the car regained speed, I imagined that we
were already cruising on the said road. The two agents at the front were
calm and did not talk to each other. There was no radio chatter in the car
either. I did not sense any traffic stops. After about 30 minutes or so into
the ride, I sensed that daylight was breaking.
A Large
Parking Lot, and an Ironing Board
About 45 minutes after we left
Las Piñas, I felt the car stop. I instinctively raised my head, and from the teensy
peephole of my blindfold, I saw that we had pulled into a large parking lot.
I was hugely relieved at this
sight, because it told me we were in some kind of urban facility, certainly not
the kind of remote place where people were finished-off. My projections of our
group not being “salvaged” were further buoyed when we were led out of the car
and ushered into what I sensed was a good-sized building.
Inside the building, they made
me sit behind something I could lay my head and my weary, cuffed arms on. I then
realized that the platform was nothing else but an ironing board! Horror of
horrors, I thought they were going to torture me with an electric iron, like
what I had read in a Task Force Detainees (TFD) publication.
Dreadful visions of other
detainees being ironed at the soles of their feet came to my mind. I quickly
grit my teeth and prepared for that eventuality. Perhaps it added to my fears
that I was barefoot, having left my just-bought Otto shoes in Las Piñas. While pretending to sleep, I nudged my
blindfold upwards a bit, so I could survey the surroundings.
It helped that my blindfold was
very loose now. In fact, I had practically achieved unobstructed vision in my
left eye. I just had to hide it from the agents.
Our
Detention Room: Handcuffed to Iron Beds at Night
From my “sleeping” position, I
saw the room. It was about 15 meters long and 10 meters wide. There was a single
door, to my left, and in front of me were about 3 large windows with steel bars
placed vertically.
It did not look like a prison cell
at all, more like a dormitory. There were 2 to 3 kapok cushioned beds, an
upholstered couch, and some chairs. It was well lit, both by fluorescent
lights, and sunshine, which the windows allowed generously.
My companions were already
there, seated, blindfolded and handcuffed. We were placed randomly and evenly
across the room. I distinctly remember seeing Judith Reyes Fabic in one corner.
In that instant, I thought of Judith’s 2-year old daughter Tala, who was not
with us in Las Piñas.
Save for several escorted trips
to the bathroom, I was to remain in this position until noontime, when someone woke
me up and placed food on the ironing board. Lunch consisted of rice and sautéed sayote or
upo. They were placed separately in two plastic bags.
Lunch was an opportunity to
completely uncover my eyes and survey our detention place. I do not remember
now if my companions did the same. I remember finishing my lunch in no time,
which I ate by hand straight from the plastic bags. After this, an agent
blindfolded me again.
|
Most of the time detainees while away their time gazing into emptiness and avoiding depression.Photo from Raissa Robles, Tortured Art: Martial Law Detainees Sketch Out Their Pain and Defiance, https://
www.raissarobles.com/2011/09/23/tortured-art-martial-law-detainees-sketch-out-their-pain/ |
Mug
Shot, Ome Candazo
Shortly after lunchtime, it was
mug shot taking time. Someone took me to a small room. I read the chalk writing
on the small, rectangular blackboard they made me hold. It said: “REYES, R E 14
JUNE ’79 RSU-4.
At about mid-afternoon, someone
led me to another place in the room and made me sit on a chair. I then sensed
that people other than from our group were in the room. Without warning,
someone sat next to me.
That person whispered: “Brod,
huli nanaman tayo,” (Brother, we have been arrested again). Immediately I recognized the voice as that of
Romeo “Ome” Candazo, a fraternity brother from the UP Alpha Sigma Fraternity.
Ome Candazo said that jestingly,
as was his wont. We had been arrested together 4 years earlier, in the summer of
1975. We were detained with 6 others at Recad 6, Camp Crame. The charge was something like “Public Alarm and Scandal,” stemming from our alleged participation in a fraternity
rumble inside UP campus.
I acknowledged Ome’s greeting,
and from behind our blindfolds, we jokingly chatted, albeit in whispers. The
light tone helped ease our worries a lot.
Mar
Galang
The next person who approached
me I did not recognize by voice, but he introduced himself as Mar Galang. I
would later learn from Ome Candazo that Mar Galang was another Alpha Sigma
brother. Mar Galang asked me where I was arrested, and I quickly told him:
“Princess Plume, Talon Village.” He was surprised to learn that we had been
arrested in the same neighborhood.
Up to this time, I had not been
able to talk to any person belonging to our group. After my chat with Mar
Galang, I remained seated on the chair. It was here that I had dinner, at about
7:30 pm. It consisted, again, of rice
and vegetables.
When bedtime came at about 10
pm, someone led me to lie on a familiar steel-frame bed with a kapok mattress.
Someone then uncuffed my left hand, and fastened the freed handcuff to the
steel bed. I was now effectively fastened to the green bed.
There was not a pillow, nor a
blanket. I assumed a fetal position, not minding that I had not brushed my teeth, nor washed my
face. It was in this basic position that I slept all night, because the handcuffed right hand kept me from turning. I assumed my companions
were also handcuffed to their beds.
In the morning of our 2nd
day, with the blindfolds gone, we were allowed to move freely in the detention
room, though still handcuffed. We were so glad and excited to be able to talk
to each other at last.
Two
Groups Meet
All of us were there: Geoffrey
“Jun” Fabic, Judith Fabic, Elorde “Eloy” Calimoso, Augusto “Augut” Añonuevo,
Jeremias “Jerem” Celestino, Sylvia “Ibyang” Flores, Avelina “Ave” Enrile, Ruth
Santos, Rolando Marañon, and myself.
The other group of detainees was
also allowed to loosen up in the room. After initially meeting Ome Candazo and
Mar Galang, I finally met the rest of them. I had suspected all along that the
June 14, 1979 arrest bagged not just 1, but 2 groups of activists.
One by one, I saw them, as they
entered the room. Some of them washed up
at the single sink and faucet in the room. They were: Edgar “Edjop” Jopson,
Winifred “Wingie” Villamin, Josefina “Jocabs” Cabuniag, Oscar “Oca” Armea, and
Caridad “Caring” Magpantay.
Edgar
Jopson
Edgar Jopson greeted me by my nickname.
He then told our group to tell as many relatives and friends who would visit that
he had been arrested. He even pronounced, with his slightly baritone voice, his
first name, middle name, and surname as he sought our help.
This was a huge change for me
because, the past 3 years since I first met him in 1976, he had always
prudently assumed various aliases, like “Archie” and “Lem.” However, these
aliases were futile, because almost everybody in the underground knew his real
name, he being a famous student leader in the golden years of the Philippine
student movement.
The latter codename, to me, was
the most memorable. “Lem” was short for “Golem” which, in turn, was a name
given to giants in Philippine lore. Edgar Jopson was a diminutive man even by
Philippine standards, and “Lem,” of course, was used humorously.
We always assumed that the
military also knew him, and tried our best to avoid being with him in public
places. And here he was, almost shouting, virtually announcing to the world,
that Edgar Gil Jopson had been captured!
Even My
Mother Recognized Edgar Jopson
Edgar Jopson was so well known
that even my mother recognized him when he knocked at the side door of our
house in Maysantol, Bulacan, Bulacan, sometime in 1977. He was then asking for
instructions regarding a meeting venue, which happened to be my grandfather’s 19th century house. My mother noted that he was very polite. My brother Luis Reyes, who went
to Ateneo, also recognized him when he returned to our house a few months
after.
That same house, by the way, was the site of many Katipunan meetings during the Philippine Revolution.
Edgar Jopson was 30 years old
when we were arrested. He had large bags under his round eyes, a greatly
receded hairline, a bald pate more than 2 inches across, and a bushy moustache.
He was wearing a “sando” undershirt.
The 1970 Ten Outstanding Young Men (TOYM) awardee was wiping
his face and underarms with a wet face-towel or “bimpo” as he spoke to us. His
persona radiated calmness and self-confidence, which blended well with his
exclusive boys’ school demeanor.
Edgar Jopson’s group stayed in
the room for almost an hour. The males and females from the two groups huddled
separately. I chatted lengthily with Winifred Villamin, Oscar Armea, Ome
Candazo, and Mar Galang. I asked them such things as if they were tortured, have
they been visited by relatives, and how they were coping with the situation.
Regional
Security Unit-4
From them I learned such details
as our detention place, which was Camp Came, and the intelligence unit that
apprehended us. Our arresting unit was “Regional Security Unit-4” or RSU-4. Its
head was Col. Ishmael Rodrigo, while the one who commanded the operation was
Capt. Robert Delfin.
Another person who they thought
mattered was bald and bespectacled Atty. Virgilio Saldajeno, who, we later
learned, was attached to the Judge Advocate General’s Office (JAGO), but who,
for some reason, participated in intelligence work.
I further learned from Ome
Candazo that RSU-4 was the new name of the infamous Constabulary Security Unit
(CSU), that dreaded unit prominent for its extra-judicial killings of political
captives.
Edgar Jopson’s group then
returned to their separate detention place, which I did not get to see during
our entire stay in Camp Crame. They would, however, be allowed to stay in our
room every day, starting in the morning, but for only a few hours. This would
be the basic pattern in our more than 2-week stay at Camp Crame.
Oscar
Armea is Tortured in the Genitals with Electric Current
One morning, at about 7 am, a
shaken Oscar Armea had a terrifying story to tell. He only shared it with us
male detainees. It must have been our 6th day in Camp Crame. He had been woken at about 2 am and
interrogated by 4 or 5 agents in a small room. During the questioning, which
lasted more than hour, Oscar told us the agents had repeatedly applied an
electric current on his genitals.
Oscar Armea showed us his penis
and it was bleeding. Displaying his working class grit, and his story over, Oscar
Armea nonchalantly covered his genitals and started eating breakfast. But the scary
message had been communicated: starting that day, anybody among us could be
roused from sleep at the most unholy hour and be interrogated and tortured. The
terror was palpable, although we only spoke about it in whispers.
|
This is how Oscar Armea looked when he came out of the interrogation room. For two weeks, we were handcuffed day and night. At night, the handcuffs were fastened to the steel beds, called "tarima." Photo from Raissa Robles, Tortured Art: Martial Law Detainees Sketch Out Their Pain and Defiance, https://www.raissarobles.com/2011/09/23/tortured-art-martial-law-detainees-sketch-out-their-pain/
The next morning, it was Mar
Galang’s turn to tell a story. He too, had been interrogated early at dawn and
for more than hour. But this time, he told us, the goons had made him lean,
shirtless, against a functioning window air conditioner. I do not remember now
if Mar got pneumonia or influenza, or a cold, or if he passed out because of
this horrific cruelty. But I do remember it terrified us even more.
|
On another morning, Geoffrey Fabic returned from a 3 am to 7 am interrogation with a terrifying story to tell. He related to us that during the interrogation, agents forced him to play "Russian Roulette." He told us that when the agents had run out of questions, or just to scare the wits out of him, they loaded just one round into a revolver, spun it, handed it to him, and compelled him, under pain of physical torture, to squeeze the trigger.
We
Lock Arms: Itigil ang Torture!
But these captive activists
would not simply grin and bear it. That morning, we dared lock arms inside the
room, all 17 of us, and shouted repeatedly something like “Itigil ang torture!”
After 5 to 7 tense minutes, some unidentified agents about our age entered the
room and told us to stop. One slightly older agent who displayed authority yelled
at us for 2 times: “We can salvage you
anytime we want!”
We decided not to push our luck.
We stopped the brief protest and settled down to our seats. We assessed the
situation and concluded that it was better that we conducted the protest than
we did nothing at all. It was a preemptive move, although a calculated one, we
told ourselves. After a few minutes, I was summoned by Captain Robert Delfin,
and we talked at the building's front entrance, which I was seeing for the first time.
I did not know why I was singled
out among the detainees. I surmised they must have thought I was the leader of the protest, because before we locked arms, I had angrily confronted an agent who had come into the room to give us a look. Captain Delfin was firm but conciliatory, and tried to
explain the military’s side. I told him we will continue the protest if they
keep up the torture.
Events would prove us right:
from then on, the interrogations continued, with each of us being grilled
separately. The difference was that they merely threatened to torture us (which
was nerve-wracking as it was) but did not actually do so.
Edgar
Jopson Escapes
On an unforgettable night, we
were awakened by shouting, lights being turned on, cars and motorcycles
starting, and frenzied activity by many people just outside our room. We even
heard a child crying. We did not mind the ruckus because it abated after about
30 minutes. When morning broke, we were surprised that Edgar Jopson’s group was
not allowed to enter our room and mingle with us.
We learned, that same morning,
from guards that we had befriended, that the unthinkable had happened: Edgar
Jopson had escaped. The commotion that ensued was nothing but startled RSU-4
operatives rushing off their posts to pursue Edgar Jopson.
|
This was Edgar Jopson during his student days at Ateneo. He headed the moderate National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP). During martial law, he was radicalized by his trade union activities and decided eventually to join the Leftist underground. His group occupied the other house, apart from that where we were captured, which the military raided in the dawn hours of June 14, 1979. Their house was just 10-15 meters away from us. |
The crying child, it turned out,
was Jopson’s son, Noy, who was left in Crame with his nanny. Apparently, and unbeknownst
to us, Edgar Jopson had arranged with our captors to have his boy sleep in the
stockade. I surmised the child was in the underground house when they were
captured. We never knew what happened to the child after this incident.
|
This was Edgar Jopson as the military took a mugshot of him at the Regional Security Unit (RSU) headquarters at Camp Crame after the June 14, 1979 arrests at Las Piñas. |
Although we were apprehensive about this event because of the possible repercussions, we silently rejoiced at Edgar
Jopson’s getaway. He had intimated to us his intentions to escape the first day
that we saw him in Camp Crame, but we never made much of it. We did not know
how serious he was.
More Activists Are Arrested and Tortured at the Las Piñas House
From one of the
visitors, we learned what had happened at the Las Piñas house after our
arrest. Another activist who was to attend our conference, whose name I cannot
reveal at this writing, arrived at the house at about 10 am.
When he knocked at the front door,
it opened, and he was met, to his face, by the muzzle of an M16. He thought it
was a prank. He jokingly told the wielder: “Kasama, masamang biro yata yan.”
(Comrade, I think that’s a cruel joke)
Instantly after he said that,
the door swung open. He was accosted by
more armed agents, who had been waiting. It was standard procedure. He was then
interrogated and tortured for quite a long time in the living room, reportedly
until late afternoon.
During one pause, he was brought
to an upstairs room. What he saw would have buckled weaker hearts.
Our Courier is Captured and Sexually Abused
Another activist, a courier named Doris, was also being interrogated and tortured.
She had arrived much earlier, at about 7 am, or 3 hours after we had been
hauled off.
In her early 20s, Doris was seated on a chair completely naked, with 5 or 6 agents questioning,
slapping, and touching her. Incredibly, Doris was keeping her composure,
answering the questions evasively, and outwitting the agents. Several times she
was on the verge of breaking down, but held on valiantly.
She told the agents to take it
easy with her, as she was having her monthly period. Instead of heeding her
plea, the agents took a bottle of ketchup from the kitchen, inserted the bottle
into her vagina, and let the red liquid flow, enough to cover her delicate area.
She took the mockery all in stride, with nary a trace of emotion.
After seeing this, the other
activist was taken back to the living room and the interrogation and torture
continued. He was reportedly released the next day and not detained ---- he struck
a deal with the military to be an asset within the underground movement: a deal
he did not keep.
As for the unflinching Doris, she was
detained for some time, and released. She went back to
the movement. I don't know what has happened to her ever since.
Sixto
Carlos Sr.
On another day, while we were
having lunch, our attention was called by a male person, just outside our door,
shouting: “Where is my son?” quite repetitively. We were already free from our
handcuffs, and allowed to roam freely in the room. Even the escorts to the bathroom were now gone. In other words, I was free to
open the lone door by myself, which was unlocked.
When I looked outside our room,
I saw a man, of average built and height, in his early sixties, and dressed in
light pants and polo-barong. With his gray hair, he looked very distinguished. He was walking
hurriedly up and down the corridor, looking into every cell. While I watched,
he must have twice shouted “Where is my son?”
The man was Sixto Carlos Sr.,
the father of long missing activist Sixto Carlos Jr. At that time, Sixto Carlos
Jr. had been missing for almost two months, and his family was afraid he might
have been “salvaged.” It turned out that he was arrested in Mandaluyong with no
witnesses, and kept in solitary confinement in a safehouse, and heavily
tortured. It took his family 4 months to find him. The fact that his father was
a former military man helped a lot.
We Meet Commander
Dante
Yet another notable experience
we had during our Camp Crame detention was when we were allowed to have 30
minutes of outside exposure or “sunning” as the agents would call it, in a
secured and sunlit courtyard in the building. It was our third time to do so,
with the first 2 outings being uneventful.
Suddenly, two hands began
reaching out behind a concrete wall, as if someone was jumping so we would see
his/her hands. Before we knew it, that someone had held on to the wall to
support himself, showed us half his body, and talked to us just long enough
before his arms grew weary, and he fell back again.
The man was the legendary
Commander Dante, aka Bernabe Buscayno, founder of the New People’s Army. His
arms and upper torso were thin and lithe, and his face was very ordinary
looking. He was captured in 1977, and had been detained in that building ever
since. In the 3 times that he popped up from his wall, he introduced himself,
commended us for what we were doing, and advised us to escape.
My Parents
Visit Me
The most touching part of my
detention at Camp Crame was when my parents, Domingo Coronel Reyes, and Eneida
Enriquez Reyes, visited me. At the time of my arrest, I had not been on
speaking terms with my father, over a very petty thing, like he did not
intervene when my younger brother got into a fight with a town toughie in
Bulacan. The spat had been going on for nearly two years, and it had gone into
a stalemate because two proud egos would not give in.
My eyes welled with tears as I
saw my parents sitting side-by-side in Atty. Virgilio Saldajeno’s office. I had
realized then how much my father and mother loved me. I had expected my mother
to visit me the first time she could. She tearfully told me that she had burned
all my “subversive” materials in my cabinet, and that she, at 56, wasn’t
getting any younger.
But with my father, who had Kapampangan
pride so tough, he would not sacrifice it for all the money or power in the
world, it was different. Here he was, humbling himself before me by being the
one to break the ice in our silly standoff. He spoke to me as if nothing had
happened between us. They even brought me two bags of groceries!
What is more, he whispered to me
that he and my mother were proud to have a son who was an activist! That day, I
was sure, I was a winner. Not only did I have parents who loved me, I had
parents who believed in me and supported my cause. Back in my bed, I cried like a child.
Atty. Virgilio Saldajeno and Col. Ishmael Rodrigo
Atty. Saldajeno informed my
parents that we would soon be moved to Bicutan Rehabilitation Center (BRC),
somewhere in Taguig, Metro-Manila. As he spoke, I looked at Atty. Saldajeno
with disguised but seething anger, because Oscar Armea had mentioned his name
as one of those who tortured him with electric current. Oscar even said that
Atty. Saldajeno even instructed his interrogators to increase the voltage when
it appeared he was withstanding it.
Two days before we were
transferred to BRC, both groups had a meeting with the head of RSU-4, Col.
Ishmael Rodrigo. He was a man in his mid-fifties, graying, but looked fit, as I
expected military people would look. He
was mild mannered, Chinese-looking, and spoke to us with respect. It was a great departure, I
thought, from the unnerving treatment we had been getting from his
subalterns.
I was to learn later that Col.
Ishmael Rodrigo was a WWII and Korean War veteran, and had been active in the anti-Huk
campaign during the Magsaysay administration.
It was mostly pleasantries that
we exchanged. Things like family and educational background, and what caused us
to join the movement. We were very kind and open to Col. Rodrigo, reciprocating
his civil treatment of us.
Someone from the group even
jokingly asked him about his anti-communism. We were, however, very careful,
lest we reveal delicate or operational information. He did not, to be fair,
appear to be fishing for information.
Rogue’s
Gallery
That night, at about 10 pm, we
encountered a final bout with psychological torture. We were all blindfolded,
and handcuffed, and led single file to someplace outside the room. Finally,
were made to sit at one end of a dimly lighted and long corridor. I assumed
Edgar Jopson’s group was with us, because of the familiar voices I heard.
They let us sit there for 5 to
10 minutes. They then removed our blindfolds. Suddenly, what seemed like a
hundred klieg lights opened up, from the other end of the corridor, blinding our
eyes. At the same time, we heard persons filing in, seemingly occupying both
sides of the hall, with the middle part left empty. All of us thought this was some kind of
macabre form of torture, or RSU-4’s version of a collective “third-degree”
interrogation.
At any rate, I told myself, if I
would hear rifles being cocked as in a firing squad, I would not be surprised. I
could have sworn I heard sobs and nervous shaking in our group. However,
everything remained eerily silent, and the people before us just stood there.
It was as if they were just observing us. But we were prepared for the worst.
Agents
Descend on RSU-4
After about 20 minutes, they
turned off the lights, led us out of that dark place, and back to our room.
Over breakfast the following morning, we talked about the experience and how
frightening it was. We were, however, totally clueless on what it was all
about.
Later, when we were already in BRC, the other detainees explained it to
us.
It was the military’s way of
letting other intelligence units identify us, or memorize our faces, and they
did it routinely. It was RSU-4 which arrested us, but other intelligence units, like
Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (ISAFP), National
Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA), and Military Intelligence Service
Group (MISG) were also interested in us, to add to their data base.
That encounter was some kind of
identification session, a rogue’s gallery if you will. The people whom we felt entered the room were sundry
agents representing these other intelligence units including their regional units. In all probability, they said, these observers included intelligence bigwigs like Col. Rodolfo Aguinaldo (RSU-4) and Col. Rolando Abadilla (MISG). It was an inter-agency coordination
thing. The lights were, of course, so we could
not see their faces.
Off to
Bicutan
We were detained at RSU-4 Camp
Crame for slightly more than 2 weeks. I would estimate it was around July 2 or
3 1979 when, handcuffed, we were loaded on an open military truck and
transported, with armed escorts, to BRC. I remember passing through what is now
Bonifacio Global City on the way to Taguig. Fort Bonifacio had many acacia
trees. It was a sunny day.