Fast Facts: The Marcos martial law regime | Inquirer News

Fast Facts: The Marcos martial law regime

/ 04:30 AM September 22, 2019

Sept. 21, 1972: Date of   Proclamation No. 1081 placing the Philippines under martial law.

49: Persons from the Greater Manila Area immediately arrested on Sept. 22, 1972, by the military, among them three senators, three congressmen, two provincial governors, four delegates to the Constitutional Convention and eight newsmen. First on the list was opposition senator and main political rival Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr.

Sept. 23, 1972: Press Secretary Francisco Tatad announces the imposition of martial law and reads the Marcos proclamation in a nationwide televised broadcast. Marcos himself went on air at 7 p.m. to formally announce the proclamation.

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12-4 a.m. – Curfew in place

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Jan. 17, 1981: Marcos signs Proclamation No. 2045 lifting the implementation of martial law ahead of the first papal visit of Pope John Paul II in February.

107,240: Primary victims of human rights violations during martial law

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70,000 people arrested, mostly arbitrarily without warrants of arrests*

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34,000 people tortured*

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3,240 killed by the military and the police*

*Amnesty International

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464: Closed  media outlets after declaration of martial law

8 major English newspapers

18 vernacular, Spanish and English language dailies

60 community newspapers

66 TV channels

20 radio stations

292 provincial radio stations

$683 million: Worth of Marcos assets in various Swiss banks declared as ill-gotten based on a July 2003 the Supreme Court ruling

$5-10 billion: Estimated alleged ill-gotten wealth plundered by the Marcoses during two decades in Malacañang

6,281: Number of Marcos laws from September 1972 to February 1986

2,036 presidential decrees

61 general orders

1,093 executive orders

1,409 proclamations and other issuances

1,525 letters of instructions

157 letters of implementation

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Sources: Inquirer Archives, Official Gazette, “The Marcos Regime: Rape of the Nation” by Filemon Rodriguez

TAGS: fast facts, Ferdinand Marcos

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