LEGAZPI CITY—Campus journalists of the Bicol University (BU) joined the nationwide commemoration of the 10th year of the Maguindanao Massacre, recreating the ghastly scene that shocked the nation 10 years ago—a shrub-filled land littered with more than 50 bodies with blood dripping from these, victims of the country’s most heinous political crime.
The BU students lit candles, offered prayers and used their imaginations to recreate a scene that is forever etched in the memories of relatives of those who were murdered—banana leaves stood for corpses, circular objects stood for human heads and white sheets splashed with red ink representing human blood.
“Justice is still not given until now and it seems like we should keep on asking for it instead of them giving it to us,” said Mary Joy Balunso, president of Bicol Organization of Neo-journalist (Bonjour), an organization of journalism students in BU’s College of Arts and Letters.
Among the dead were Mangudadatu’s wife, two sisters, journalists, lawyers, aides and motorists who happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.
Mangudadatu was challenging Datu Unsay Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr., heir to the then powerful Ampatuan clan which had been tapped by the government at that time to help in the fight against Moro rebels and had been allowed to amass an armory of high-powered firearms, some of which were used on the massacre victims. Mark Francis Banay