Media Events in the Philippines
THE PHILIPPINE CENTENNIAL (1998)
he biggest media event in the Philippines for 1998
is the celebration of the first 100 years since the
declaration of the First Philippine Republic by Gen.
Emilio Aguinaldo during solemn rites in Biak-na-Bato,
Bulakan.
To commemorate this historical milestone in the life
of the nation, President Ramos created in 1996 the
National Centennial Commission and appointed as its
Chairman former Vice-President Salvador H. Laurel to
oversee preparations for the centennial. Towards the
end of 1997, the Philippine Congress upgraded the
status of the commission and appropriated additional
funds for its operations and activities.
THE FIRST PHILIPPINE REPUBLIC
Following is a backgrounder on the establishment of
the country's first Republican Government, excerpted
from/based on the article "The Biak-na-Bato Constitution:
Upholding the People's Will" by Nidia A. Liu, printed
in Kalayaan, a publication of the National
Centennial Commission:
Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, supreme leader of the Philippine
Revolution against Spain, constituted 52 revolutionary
leaders into an Assembly of Representatives that met
November 1 to 2, 1997 in Biak-na-Bato, Bulacan. The
delegates signed the "Constitucion Provisional de la
Republica de Filipinas," which was patterned almost
word-for-word from the Cuban Constitution of Jimaguayu.
The Biak-na-Bato Constitution declared the objective of
the Revolution as "the separation of the Philippines from
the Spanish monarchy and its formation into an independent
state with its own government called the Philippine
Republic." This was the first constitutional republican
government established in the Philippines.
The Biak-na-Bato Constitution created a Supreme Council
composed of the following officers: President - Emilio Aguinaldo,
Vice-President - Mariano Trias, Secretary of War - Emiliano
Riego de Dios, Secretary of Foreign Relations - Antonio
Montenegro, Secretary of Interior - Isabelo Artacho, and
Secretary of the Treasury - Baldomero Aguinaldo.
Among the salient provisions of the Constitution were:
- The President was invested with the power
"to approve and promulgate the acts" of the Supreme
Council.
- The effectivity of the Constitution was limited
to two years, after which the Assembly was to
reconvene to draft a new Constitution and elect a
new "Council of Government and Representatives of the
people."
- Four articles guaranteeing freedom of speech,
religion, and association, the excercise of one's
occupation, the right against loss of property,
and the right against imprisonment except on a valid
order of a competent court.
Sources: National Centennial Commission,
Philippine Information Agency
Posted: 21 May 1998
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