PILAR, Bataan—President Benigno Aquino III assured Filipino war
veterans of subsidized health services and vowed to continue the
modernization of the Armed Forces in Monday’s Araw ng Kagitingan (Day of
Valor) rites that paid tribute to Filipino and American soldiers who
fought the Japanese 70 years ago.
Mr. Aquino, who addressed the elderly soldiers and their relatives
gathered at the Dambana ng Kagitingan entirely in Filipino, got
thunderous applause when he announced that from March 31, 599 hospitals
had been accredited by Veterans Memorial Medical Center (VMMC) as
regional and provincial extensions, making it easy for the veterans to
access medical benefits.
“The state honors our veterans and I believe we should repay their sacrifices by caring for them,” he said.
Colonel Roberto Gacayan, 85, a war veteran from La Union province,
urged Mr. Aquino and legislators not to ignore the plight of the war
veterans.
“It seems that the government has been slowly forgetting what we did
during the war. We hope that our benefits will be increased … We will
not live long and we hope that in the remaining years of our lives, we
get to feel our true worth,” Gacayan, who heads the Confederation of
World War II Veterans’ Sons and Daughters Inc., said.
“If it had not been for our sacrifices, the youth will not experience the freedom they are enjoying today,” he said.
Veterans’ welfare
According to Mr. Aquino, VMMC has been subsidizing services for
cataract surgery, coronary angiogram procedure and cardiac bypass
operations.
The President again drew applause when he cited the direct remittance
servicing system of the Philippine Veterans Affairs Office (PVAO),
which is done through the banks or automated teller machines. This has
enabled war veterans to receive their pensions faster and in correct
amounts, he said.
The veterans’ list has also been purged, enabling government to
generate savings that are used to support more pensioners, he said.
Ernesto Carolina, the PVAO administrator, said the House committee on
veterans affairs had approved an increase in the old-age pension from
P5,000 to P10,000, with an increase of P1,000 a year for the next five
years.
A bill is also pending in Congress seeking to increase the burial assistance from P10,000 to P20,000.
Carolina said the PVAO had paid P4 billion to eligible pensioners,
with the funds coming from the savings made from the purging of illegal
claimants.
He said the hospitalization benefits in PVAO-accredited hospitals had
been doubled to P800 for a maximum of 45 days. The PVAO also pays for
the premium of veterans’ membership in the Philippine Health Insurance
Corp.
Pensions for old age, disability and death are paid to nearly 250,000 veterans, their spouses and descendants, he said.
Leslie Bassett, deputy chief of mission of the United States Embassy,
said that in the past two years, more than 18,000 Filipino veterans had
received a total of over $220 million from the US government’s Filipino
Veterans Equity Compensation Program.
Modern military
The President told the war veterans that his administration was working to fully upgrade the capacity of the AFP.
“What we want is that should the situation turn into a conflict, we are able to give a fight,” he said in Filipino.
He then enumerated the latest purchases for the AFP: a Hamilton class
cutter, renamed as BRP Gregorio del Pilar, and four combat utility
helicopters.
At least 138 projects under the defense acquisition system are scheduled for completion within five years, he said.
Good governance
Mr. Aquino said these are being done because of the good governance
of his administration, adding that “integrity and honor result in
programs that benefit our people.”
“I know that the morale of government troops is high not only because
of housing or combat allowance but also because they know that we have
removed the culture of corruption in the [AFP] leadership,” he said.
Mr. Aquino began his speech with lengthy quotes from Commonwealth
President Manuel Quezon and General Douglas MacArthur, the American
general and commander of US forces in the Philippines and Southeast
Asia.
“I am greatly concerned as well regarding all the soldiers I have
called to the colors and who are now manning the firing line. I want to
decide in my own mind whether there is justification in allowing all
these men to be killed, when for the final outcome of the war the
shedding of their blood may be wholly unnecessary,” he said, quoting
Quezon.
“It is no joke being responsible for the lives of thousands, millions
of your countrymen.
President Quezon might have asked himself: What is
at stake? Is the sacrifice worth it?” Mr. Aquino said.
He said he did not want the loss of lives. “This is the root of our determination to strengthen our armed forces,” he said.
“All that we have been doing now to lay the groundwork for reforms,
improve the economy and lift our brethren from poverty, come from a
single thought: We owe it to those who sacrificed before us to make sure
that it is worth it, very, very worth it to live free in the
Philippines,” he said.
The occasion, he added, should also be a time to celebrate the
strength of character of Filipinos “to fight the enemy with bravery,
honor and love for country as the sharpest weapon of all.”
Mr. Aquino also praised the Philippines’ strong alliance with the
United States, and confirmed the futility of violence and necessity of
working with neighboring nations.
Bataan Day in the US
In her speech, Bassett said some 7,000 people in the United States,
including war veterans and students in New Mexico, had joined a
reenactment of the Death March yesterday to pass what she called “the
torch of memory.”
“Some carried heavy packs to make the journey harder but not as hard as the cruel Calvary our heroes endured,” she said.
“Bataan commemoration takes place today across the United States …
and in the many homes where veterans and their memories still dwell. On
the high seas, the sailors of the USS Bataan will pause to commemorate
this day, including Master Chief Noel Vergara, whose grandfather, Romeo
Miranda, was a hero of Bataan,” she said.
Bassett stressed the importance of preserving freedom that Filipino and American soldiers had fought hard to win.
“Filipino and American soldiers relied on one another to survive the
Death March and what came after. Today their children and grandchildren …
proudly continue that tradition of friendship and mutual support,” she
said.
“Today we live in an era of technological marvel. But you cannot
download freedom from the Internet or buy liberty off the shelf. The
heroes of Bataan remind us not to take what we have for granted but to
cherish our freedom,” she said.
Japanese Ambassador to the Philippines Toshinao Urabe, who also spoke
in Filipino, extended his country’s sincerest apology and deep sense of
remorse for the Japanese atrocities during World War II.
He said the Japanese of today are “a far cry” from the Japanese during the war.
Urabe said the United States, the Philippines and Japan had forged
stronger ties and were now allies and friends. He stressed the
importance of unity among the three countries.
“Sa pagkakaisa, tayo ay lalakas; sa pagkakawatak-watak, tayo ay
babagsak (In unity, we will be strong; in conflict, we will fall),” he
said.
Aside from war veterans and their families, former President Fidel
Ramos, top military and police officials, Cabinet members, local
officials and diplomats attended the Araw ng Kagitingan ceremonies at
Mount Samat Shrine.
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Greg Refraccion, Tonette Orejas | Inquirer Northern Luzon | April 10, 2012 | Article Link