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Philippine History |
| About the Philippines |
The Philippines' aboriginal inhabitants arrived
from the Asian mainland around 25,000 B.C.
They were followed by waves of Indonesian and
Malayan settlers from 3000 B.C. onward. By the
14th century A.D., extensive trade was being
conducted with India, Indonesia, China, and
Japan.
Ferdinand Magellan, the Portuguese navigator in
the service of Spain, explored the Philippines in
1521. Twenty-one years later, a Spanish
exploration party named the group of islands in
honor of Prince Philip, who was later to become
Philip II of Spain. Spain retained possession of
the islands for the next 350 years.
The Philippines were ceded to the U.S. in 1899
by the Treaty of Paris after the Spanish-
American War. Meanwhile, the Filipinos, led by
Emilio Aguinaldo, had declared their
independence. They initiated guerrilla warfare
against U.S. troops that persisted until
Aguinaldo's capture in 1901. By 1902, peace was
established except among the Islamic Moros on
the southern island of Mindanao.
The first U.S. civilian governor-general was
William Howard Taft (1901–1904). The Jones
Law (1916) established a Philippine legislature
composed of an elective Senate and House of
Representatives. The Tydings-McDuffie Act
(1934) provided for a transitional period until
1946, at which time the Philippines would
become completely independent. Under a
constitution approved by the people of the
Philippines in 1935, the Commonwealth of the
Philippines came into being with Manuel Quezon
y Molina as president.
On Dec. 8, 1941, the islands were invaded by
Japanese troops. Following the fall of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur's forces at Bataan and
Corregidor, Quezon instituted a government-in-
exile that he headed until his death in 1944. He
was succeeded by Vice President Sergio Osmeña.
U.S. forces under MacArthur reinvaded the
Philippines in Oct. 1944 and, after the liberation
of Manila in Feb. 1945, Osmeña reestablished
the government.
The Philippines achieved full independence on
July 4, 1946. Manuel A. Roxas y Acuña was
elected its first president, succeeded by Elpidio
Quirino (1948–1953), Ramón Magsaysay (1953–
1957), Carlos P. García (1957–1961), Diosdado
Macapagal (1961–1965), and Ferdinand E.
Marcos (1965–1986).
Under Marcos, civil unrest broke out in
opposition to the leader's despotic rule. Martial
law was declared on Sept. 21, 1972, and Marcos
proclaimed a new constitution that ensconced
himself as president. Martial law was officially
lifted on Jan. 17, 1981, but Marcos and his wife,
Imelda, retained broad powers.
In an attempt to resecure American support,
Marcos set presidential elections for Feb. 7,
1986. With the support of the Catholic Church,
Corazon Aquino declared her candidacy. Marcos
was declared the official winner, but independent
observers reported widespread election fraud
and vote rigging. Anti-Marcos protests exploded
in Manila, Defense Minister Juan Enrile and Lt.
Gen. Fidel Ramos defected to the opposition,
and Marcos lost virtually all support; he was
forced to flee into exile and entered the U.S. on
Feb. 25, 1986.
The Aquino government survived coup attempts
by Marcos supporters and other right-wing
elements, including one in November by Enrile.
Legislative elections on May 11, 1987, gave pro-
Aquino candidates a large majority. Negotiations
on renewal of leases for U.S. military bases
threatened to sour relations between the two
countries. Volcanic eruptions from Mount
Pinatubo, however, severely damaged Clark Air
Base, and in July 1991, the U.S. decided to
abandon it.
In elections in May 1992, Gen. Fidel Ramos, who
had the support of the outgoing Aquino, won the
presidency in a seven-way race. In Sept. 1992,
the U.S. Navy turned over the Subic Bay naval
base to the Philippines, ending its long-standing
U.S. military presence.
Meanwhile, the separatist Moro National
Liberation Front was fighting a protracted war
for an Islamic homeland on Mindanao, the
southernmost of the two main islands. The
Philippine army also battled another rebel group,
the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. In Aug. 2001,
both rebel groups signed unity agreements with
the Philippine government. Frequent and violent
clashes with these and other terrorist groups
have continued, however. Abu Sayyaf, a small
group of guerrillas that has been fighting since
the 1970s for an independent Islamic state and
reportedly has links to Osama bin Laden, gained
international notoriety throughout 2000 and
2001 with its spree of kidnappings and murders.
Two leaders of Abu Sayyaf were killed in late
2006 and early 2007, dealing a serious blow to
the group. The Philippine military has also
battled the New People's Army, a group of
Communist guerrillas that have targeted
Philippine security forces since 1969.
International officials reported in June 2003 that
Jemaah Islamiyah, an affiliate of al-Qaeda, was
training recruits in Mindanao, in the southern
Philippines. About 120,000 people have died in
the conflicts with rebel groups, and more than 3
million have been displaced.
In May 1998, 61-year-old former action-film star
Joseph Estrada was elected president of the
Philippines. Within two years, however, the
Philippine Senate began proceedings to impeach
Estrada on corruption charges. Massive street
demonstrations and the loss of political support
eventually forced Estrada from office. Vice
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, daughter of
former president Diosdado Macapagal, became
president in Jan. 2001. In May 2004 presidential
elections, President Arroyo narrowly defeated
film star Fernando Poe.
Arroyo faced a political crisis in the summer of
2005, after admitting to calling an election
official during 2004's presidential race. A taped
phone conversation between Arroyo and the
official seemed to suggest that she had tried to
use her power to influence the outcome. She
survived an impeachment motion in July.
A mudslide in Feb. 2006 leveled the town of
Guinsaugon and killed about 1,800 of its 1,857
residents.
Arroyo declared a state of emergency in
February, saying the government had foiled an
attempted coup by the military. She also banned
rallies commemorating the 20th anniversary of
the ouster of Ferdinand Marcos. Some observers
dismissed the report of the coup attempt as
political maneuvering to gain support and
weaken the opposition. On June 24, President
Arroyo met with Pope Benedict XVI at the
Vatican, where she announced that the
Philippines was abolishing the death penalty.
About 460 people were killed in November in
landslides in Albay Province that were caused by
a typhoon.
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| About the Philippines |
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