Berliner Boersenzeitung - Filipino mother's search for missing son in the spotlight

EUR -
AED 4.25674
AFN 73.599881
ALL 94.63924
AMD 426.786562
ANG 2.075229
AOA 1063.46406
ARS 1665.300658
AUD 1.638954
AWG 2.086353
AZN 1.969454
BAM 1.953264
BBD 2.335667
BDT 142.356387
BGN 1.959874
BHD 0.437095
BIF 3466.823235
BMD 1.159085
BND 1.485671
BOB 8.042557
BRL 5.900671
BSD 1.159694
BTN 109.603686
BWP 15.538824
BYN 3.210631
BYR 22718.066
BZD 2.332372
CAD 1.626057
CDF 2689.07734
CHF 0.919496
CLF 0.026086
CLP 1026.67098
CNY 7.832459
CNH 7.834968
COP 3981.456975
CRC 528.214147
CUC 1.159085
CUP 30.715753
CVE 110.518845
CZK 24.111344
DJF 205.992431
DKK 7.460034
DOP 67.922316
DZD 154.018025
EGP 57.847843
ERN 17.386275
ETB 183.570112
FJD 2.589049
FKP 0.862506
GBP 0.865176
GEL 3.065779
GGP 0.862506
GHS 13.094994
GIP 0.862506
GMD 84.612839
GNF 10173.867447
GTQ 8.839599
GYD 242.585018
HKD 9.08142
HNL 30.944321
HRK 7.534628
HTG 151.453347
HUF 348.47849
IDR 20572.136031
ILS 3.386568
IMP 0.862506
INR 109.312724
IQD 1518.40135
IRR 1593741.874933
ISK 144.109074
JEP 0.862506
JMD 183.411851
JOD 0.821813
JPY 185.758438
KES 150.124896
KGS 101.361707
KHR 4650.820524
KMF 492.610907
KPW 1043.176906
KRW 1752.38004
KWD 0.357112
KYD 0.966445
KZT 565.540801
LAK 25534.642323
LBP 103796.061813
LKR 388.508897
LRD 211.127136
LSL 18.771217
LTL 3.422477
LVL 0.701119
LYD 7.38919
MAD 10.715761
MDL 20.236724
MGA 4868.156941
MKD 61.531925
MMK 2433.437481
MNT 4146.424702
MOP 9.356651
MRU 46.456179
MUR 54.627955
MVR 17.919737
MWK 2012.171858
MXN 19.925262
MYR 4.711454
MZN 74.067971
NAD 18.779399
NGN 1575.335201
NIO 42.434218
NOK 11.018784
NPR 175.364787
NZD 1.99289
OMR 0.445666
PAB 1.159694
PEN 3.95539
PGK 5.085775
PHP 69.977449
PKR 322.571254
PLN 4.227959
PYG 7076.811199
QAR 4.219652
RON 5.224038
RSD 117.149943
RUB 84.580225
RWF 1724.71848
SAR 4.348764
SBD 9.343876
SCR 16.360628
SDG 696.029758
SEK 10.897891
SGD 1.485981
SHP 0.865374
SLE 28.687692
SLL 24305.437155
SOS 662.425802
SRD 43.270992
STD 23990.719317
STN 24.804419
SVC 10.146912
SYP 128.116096
SZL 18.773561
THB 37.710252
TJS 10.750241
TMT 4.068388
TND 3.374966
TOP 2.790799
TRY 53.683879
TTD 7.877771
TWD 36.578986
TZS 3042.601568
UAH 51.937311
UGX 4290.429144
USD 1.159085
UYU 46.819612
UZS 13914.81526
VES 690.856847
VND 30514.07171
VUV 138.224161
WST 3.175562
XAF 655.106385
XAG 0.01639
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.132486
XCG 2.090068
XDR 0.815645
XOF 654.883233
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.586687
ZAR 18.740584
ZMK 10433.149863
ZMW 20.497385
ZWL 373.224897
  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    18.55

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    52.15

    -0.13%

  • RELX

    -0.7900

    32.01

    -2.47%

  • NGG

    -1.6000

    80.68

    -1.98%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.28

    -2.32%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    70.81

    -1.06%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    62.87

    0%

  • RIO

    -3.0700

    102.67

    -2.99%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    22.32

    -0.2%

  • JRI

    -0.1900

    12.62

    -1.51%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    177.89

    -0.46%

  • VOD

    -0.3600

    14.53

    -2.48%

  • BTI

    -1.8900

    59.49

    -3.18%

  • BP

    -1.0100

    40.14

    -2.52%

Filipino mother's search for missing son in the spotlight
Filipino mother's search for missing son in the spotlight / Photo: Ted ALJIBE - AFP

Filipino mother's search for missing son in the spotlight

For 17 years, Edita Burgos has looked inside body bags, visited military camps, led street protests, and filed court cases in a desperate search for her missing son Jonas.

Text size:

He was 37and a prominent activist for a left-wing farmers group when he was bundled by a group of unknown men into a vehicle at a Manila shopping mall in 2007.

He has not been seen since.

Human rights group Karapatan estimates hundreds of people have gone missing or died in extra-judicial killings since the government began fighting a communist insurgency in the late 1960s.

The military accused Jonas of being a high-ranking communist rebel leader, but have always denied involvement in his disappearance.

Edita, a mother of five, is the protagonist in a new documentary by her youngest son, JL Burgos, that examines Jonas's abduction and the family's soul-crushing search for him.

While Jonas's political views echoed those of the rebels, Edita doesn't know if her middleson was a communist.

She said it shouldn't matter anyway.

"Whatever he was, no one has the right to kill somebody, not even a rapist," Edita, 80, told AFP ahead of the screening of "Alipato at Muog" (Spark and Fortress) at the country's independent film festival Cinemalaya earlier this month.

"You have to take them to court, not make them vanish."

No one has ever been convicted over Jonas's abduction, despite the Court of Appeals, Supreme Court and the independent Commission on Human Rights finding that members of the military were involved.

An army major was arrested in 2013 and put on trial for the alleged arbitrary detention of Jonas, but he was acquitted in 2017 after a key witness failed to testify.

JL, 50, said he was "haunted" by his older brother's disappearance and suffered a "breakdown" as he worked on the documentary over eight months.

He hoped the film would prompt someone to come forward with information about Jonas's whereabouts -- even if it were just his remains.

"Logically, he should no longer be alive, but then we cannot prove that," said JL.

- Waiting for answers -

Edita, a widow of an outspoken critic of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr, has sought the help of presidents and military generals, and even the communist rebels' urban death squad, in her search for Jonas.

She's still waiting for answers.

Jonas, who briefly trained in his early teens to become a priest, had been helping people in poor rural villages in Bulacan province when he was abducted in Manila.

Edita has long blamed an army battalion operating in the province for her son's disappearance.

In the film, Edita is seen visiting the unit's headquarters in Bulacan where she is told that the number plate of a van earlier seized and impounded by soldiers had been stolen.

The same number plate was seen on the vehicle used in the abduction of Jonas.

Edita has accused Eduardo Ano, who was a military intelligence officer at the time, of being the "mastermind" of her son's disappearance.

Ano, who was later promoted to the head of the military and is now the national security adviser to President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, the son and namesake of the ex-dictator, has denied involvement.

The documentary was a "desperate attempt to revive an old case linking the military to the disappearance of Jonas Burgos," Jonathan Malaya, spokesman for the National Security Council, told AFP.

The criminal cases have all been "dismissed for lack of merit", while the allegations of Ano's alleged involvement "are a rehash of old accusations that have never been proven nor supported by facts or evidence", Malaya said.

Edita, meanwhile, lives with the pain of not knowing what happened to her son.

"You can't even pray and say 'May his soul rest in peace' because you do not know if he's still there."

- 'Culture of violence' -

Forced disappearances have continued under the administration of Marcos Jr, who took power in 2022, Karapatan secretary-general Cristina Palabay told AFP.

Thirteen activists have gone missing during Marcos Jr's term, taking the group's tally to 1,913 since the start of the communist insurgency during the elder Marcos's rule more than five decades ago.

That does not include the many victims of suspected extra-judicial killings in that time.

"(It's) a strategy to quell dissent," Palabay told AFP.

"You don't see a tombstone, and you do not have closure as a family. It has a longer-lasting impact that extends to the community. There's a strong message that 'If you do this, this will happen to you and your family'," she said.

Edita said Marcos Jr had a responsibility to find out what happened to her son and other victims of forced disappearances.

"He should really address human rights," Edita said, "because it was his father who set the tone that led us to a culture of violence among the uniformed ranks".

As the years go by with no news of her son, Edita said there was still hope in her heart that one day he would be found.

"For all we know they could just be hiding him," Edita said.

"Who knows, one of these days I will hear somebody knocking and asking, 'Mummy, what's for dinner?'"

(K.Müller--BBZ)