Norberto Manero, also known as Kumander Bucay, led over 250 armed civilians in the 1970s to hunt Moro National Liberation Front rebels in Mindanao. He cultivated a feared image but could have been a good military commander. However, he had a close brush with death facing a firing squad for murder and other charges, until being spared through the help of a lawyer. Manero then joined the Lost Command paramilitary group that committed brutal acts across Mindanao and Samar island under the Marcos regime.
Norberto Manero, also known as Kumander Bucay, led over 250 armed civilians in the 1970s to hunt Moro National Liberation Front rebels in Mindanao. He cultivated a feared image but could have been a good military commander. However, he had a close brush with death facing a firing squad for murder and other charges, until being spared through the help of a lawyer. Manero then joined the Lost Command paramilitary group that committed brutal acts across Mindanao and Samar island under the Marcos regime.
Norberto Manero, also known as Kumander Bucay, led over 250 armed civilians in the 1970s to hunt Moro National Liberation Front rebels in Mindanao. He cultivated a feared image but could have been a good military commander. However, he had a close brush with death facing a firing squad for murder and other charges, until being spared through the help of a lawyer. Manero then joined the Lost Command paramilitary group that committed brutal acts across Mindanao and Samar island under the Marcos regime.
Norberto Manero, also known as Kumander Bucay, led over 250 armed civilians in the 1970s to hunt Moro National Liberation Front rebels in Mindanao. He cultivated a feared image but could have been a good military commander. However, he had a close brush with death facing a firing squad for murder and other charges, until being spared through the help of a lawyer. Manero then joined the Lost Command paramilitary group that committed brutal acts across Mindanao and Samar island under the Marcos regime.
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Kumander Bucay: Living the ghost of his past
By: Edwin Espejo
GENERAL SANTOS CITY Circa 1975. Norberto Manero was leading a force of more than 250 fully armed civilians trekking the mountains of Davao del Sur and the then undivided South Cotabato.
For five long months, they scoured the perilous jungles and crossed the treacherous rivers in search for Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) rebels who had opened up several war fronts as Mindanao came almost on the brink of civil war. Inside his backpack were reams of amnesty papers signed by no less Juan Ponce Enrile, then defense secretary under the martial law regime of President Ferdinand Marcos.
Manero, a.k.a. Kumander Bucay, was barely out of his 20s. By then, he was already cultivating an image that would become one of the most feared if not hated figures in the history of the Mindanao conflict.
From the accounts of his armed forays in the mountains of Mindanao hunting down the MNLF and NPA rebels, Manero could have become a good military commander had he joined the Armed Forces.
Norberto Manero was then emerging from the shadows of the late Feliciano Luces alyas Kumander Toothpick, the man who he said was the founder of the dreaded and infamous Ilaga group.
Yet, two years earlier, Manero literally faced the firing squad of the Marcos regime for multiple murder, massacre and arson.
He was being un-cuffed and was already facing a squad from the defunct Philippine Constabulary when a radio message from then Central Mindanao Command chief Maj. Gen. Fortunato Abat arrived, which spared him from execution. It was his closest brush with death.
For that, Manero would be forever grateful to the late lawyer Cornelio Falgui, former mayor of Kiamba town which is now part of Sarangani province.
It was Falgui who pulled some strings to let Manero off the hook. That harrowing experience would soon be transformed into storied brutality which culminated in the murder of Italian missionary Fr. Tulio Favali in Tulunan, North Cotabato a decade after.
To protect himself from the clutches of a Davao del Sur mayor who filed the murder charges against him, Manero joined the group of Lost Command chief Lt. Col. Laudemer Lademora and a certain Sgt. Valdez. Lademoras group sowed fear and terror throughout Mindanao and even as far as Samar. Manero said he was once sent to Samar to go after the NPA rebels.
When Manero was exonerated, the mayor of Magsaysay town who filed the murder and massacre raps against Kumander Bucay, sold all his properties and migrated to the US. So too was the officer of the would-be PC firing squad, Filipino Amoguis, who likewise settled in the US upon retiring as a general in the Philippine National Police.
Documentation for The Lost Command Feb. 26, 1982 The New York Times Around Davao, there is much talk of the ''lost command'' a mysterious paramilitary unit that has been accused of extreme brutality
March 15, 1982 Newsweek He presides over an outfit nicknamed the Lost Command: a clandestine army of275 to 400 irregulars whose ostensible mission is to search out and destroy the enemies of President Ferdinand Marcos on the Philippine island of Mindanao. The colonel is very good at the job. "I'm not a mad killer," he says mOver the past 31 years xxhas killed countless communist Huks, nonpartisan bandits and Muslim insurgents. Technically he is a coloneI in the Armed Forces of the Philippines.... His group earned its nickname after surviving a hopeless last stand against a band of Muslim rebels in 1973. Since then xxxhas filled out his ranks with deserters and other desperadoes willing to "go where others would not go and do what others would not do." ..Last September six men from the Lost Command got into a scrape and gunned down three policemen and a government militiaman in Luzon. Confronted with the facts, Lademora dispatched a hit team to track down the killers. Within 24 hours all six were dead.
March 15, 1982 Newsweek The Lost Command, they point out, spends a good deal of its energy protecting large logging and plantation interests in areas where the poor are desperate for land. In towns through five eastern Mindanao provinces, gunmen identifying themselves with the Lost Command have been extorting from small traders and businessmen. Some of the charges are worse: that xx's men may have terror-bombed a church Easter service, and that they massacred men, women and children in one village while looking for communists on the island of Samar last fall. The accusations infuriate xx; he blames the bombing and the massacre on Muslim and communist insurgents and attributes the rest to communist propaganda or to "bad elements" ...
Ravaging Samar island during martial law years Historical data showed that continuous and rapid and systematic destruction of Samar island's rain forests occurred in the last four decades. The primary cause of this deforestation was commercial logging. During the whole decade of the seventies, when the whole country was under martial law, the entire forests of Samar island were licensed to commercial logging companies for exploitation. Timber Licensing Agreements or TLAs were the main instrument used to exploit the forests. In the "Politics of Plunder", author Marites Vitug says that "forest concessions used to be handed out by the different administrations at a frenzied rate. President Ferdinand Marcos, used the TLA to reward supporters, enrich friends and family and keep politicians under his patronage." Under Marcos, the number of timber licenses in the country leaped from 58 in 1969 to 230 in 1977, the highest recorded figure. Samar island was a "pie" President Marcos carved into logging concessions for his cronies and friends. The largest of these concessions (95,770 hectares) was granted to then Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile who owned the San Jose Timber. His license to cut timber extends up to the year 2007. Second largest concession was granted to Great Pacific Industries, Inc. owned by family of once Philippine Ambassador to Japan, the Yuchengco Family. Its license, however, was suspended in 1985 due to violations of its terms and conditions. Senator Enrile's logging operations in Samar was reportedly protected by the "Lost Command" headed by Renegade PC Col. Carlos Lademora, also known as Commander Brown. His group figured in the massacre of 45 men, women and children in Brgy. Sag-od, Las Navas town of Northern Samar in September 1981. They were "commissioned to enforce order in Sag-od where the operations of a logging company were reportedly being disrupted by the strong presence of the New People's Army. The timber firm's logging concession used to border Sag-od.." (Petilla, Phil. Daily Inquirer, Sept. 15, 1989). Replicating the pattern in the country, the number of timber licensees in Samar island leaped from one TLA in 1967 to 15 by 1978. The concessionaries who were not from Samar. Even the precious Mancono forests (Philippine ironwood) in Homonhon Island were not spared. The total logging concessions added up to 599,000 hectares, equivalent to 47% of the total land area of Samar. The total allowable cut per year was 373,277 hectares cubic meters (Cramer). But we all knew that the loggers cut more that they were allowed. In fact, in 1986, six of TLAs were suspended due to non-compliance with its terms and conditions. One concession, Western Palawan, was cancelled in 1989 due to its overcutting. (Bautista, The Logging Moratorium Policy in Nueva Ecija, Nueva Viscaya and Samar). Deforestation legally and steadily increased over the years and Samar and its people did benefit from the plunder of its forest resources.
Kumander Bucay: Living the ghost of his past By: Edwin Espejo
GENERAL SANTOS CITY Circa 1975. Norberto Manero was leading a force of more than 250 fully armed civilians trekking the mountains of Davao del Sur and the then undivided South Cotabato.
For five long months, they scoured the perilous jungles and crossed the treacherous rivers in search for Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) rebels who had opened up several war fronts as Mindanao came almost on the brink of civil war. Inside his backpack were reams of amnesty papers signed by no less Juan Ponce Enrile, then defense secretary under the martial law regime of President Ferdinand Marcos.
Manero, a.k.a. Kumander Bucay, was barely out of his 20s. By then, he was already cultivating an image that would become one of the most feared if not hated figures in the history of the Mindanao conflict.
From the accounts of his armed forays in the mountains of Mindanao hunting down the MNLF and NPA rebels, Manero could have become a good military commander had he joined the Armed Forces.
Norberto Manero was then emerging from the shadows of the late Feliciano Luces alyas Kumander Toothpick, the man who he said was the founder of the dreaded and infamous Ilaga group.
Yet, two years earlier, Manero literally faced the firing squad of the Marcos regime for multiple murder, massacre and arson.
He was being un-cuffed and was already facing a squad from the defunct Philippine Constabulary when a radio message from then Central Mindanao Command chief Maj. Gen. Fortunato Abat arrived, which spared him from execution. It was his closest brush with death.
For that, Manero would be forever grateful to the late lawyer Cornelio Falgui, former mayor of Kiamba town which is now part of Sarangani province.
It was Falgui who pulled some strings to let Manero off the hook. That harrowing experience would soon be transformed into storied brutality which culminated in the murder of Italian missionary Fr. Tulio Favali in Tulunan, North Cotabato a decade after.
To protect himself from the clutches of a Davao del Sur mayor who filed the murder charges against him, Manero joined the group of Lost Command chief Lt. Col. Laudemer Lademora and a certain Sgt. Valdez. Lademoras group sowed fear and terror throughout Mindanao and even as far as Samar. Manero said he was once sent to Samar to go after the NPA rebels.
When Manero was exonerated, the mayor of Magsaysay town who filed the murder and massacre raps against Kumander Bucay, sold all his properties and migrated to the US. So too was the officer of the would-be PC firing squad, Filipino Amoguis, who likewise settled in the US upon retiring as a general in the Philippine National Police.
Documentation for The Lost Command Feb. 26, 1982 The New York Times Around Davao, there is much talk of the ''lost command'' a mysterious paramilitary unit that has been accused of extreme brutality
March 15, 1982 Newsweek He presides over an outfit nicknamed the Lost Command: a clandestine army of275 to 400 irregulars whose ostensible mission is to search out and destroy the enemies of President Ferdinand Marcos on the Philippine island of Mindanao. The colonel is very good at the job. "I'm not a mad killer," he says mOver the past 31 years xxhas killed countless communist Huks, nonpartisan bandits and Muslim insurgents. Technically he is a coloneI in the Armed Forces of the Philippines.... His group earned its nickname after surviving a hopeless last stand against a band of Muslim rebels in 1973. Since then xxxhas filled out his ranks with deserters and other desperadoes willing to "go where others would not go and do what others would not do." ..Last September six men from the Lost Command got into a scrape and gunned down three policemen and a government militiaman in Luzon. Confronted with the facts, Lademora dispatched a hit team to track down the killers. Within 24 hours all six were dead.
March 15, 1982 Newsweek The Lost Command, they point out, spends a good deal of its energy protecting large logging and plantation interests in areas where the poor are desperate for land. In towns through five eastern Mindanao provinces, gunmen identifying themselves with the Lost Command have been extorting from small traders and businessmen. Some of the charges are worse: that xx's men may have terror-bombed a church Easter service, and that they massacred men, women and children in one village while looking for communists on the island of Samar last fall. The accusations infuriate xx; he blames the bombing and the massacre on Muslim and communist insurgents and attributes the rest to communist propaganda or to "bad elements" ...
Ravaging Samar island during martial law years Historical data showed that continuous and rapid and systematic destruction of Samar island's rain forests occurred in the last four decades. The primary cause of this deforestation was commercial logging. During the whole decade of the seventies, when the whole country was under martial law, the entire forests of Samar island were licensed to commercial logging companies for exploitation. Timber Licensing Agreements or TLAs were the main instrument used to exploit the forests. In the "Politics of Plunder", author Marites Vitug says that "forest concessions used to be handed out by the different administrations at a frenzied rate. President Ferdinand Marcos, used the TLA to reward supporters, enrich friends and family and keep politicians under his patronage." Under Marcos, the number of timber licenses in the country leaped from 58 in 1969 to 230 in 1977, the highest recorded figure. Samar island was a "pie" President Marcos carved into logging concessions for his cronies and friends. The largest of these concessions (95,770 hectares) was granted to then Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile who owned the San Jose Timber. His license to cut timber extends up to the year 2007. Second largest concession was granted to Great Pacific Industries, Inc. owned by family of once Philippine Ambassador to Japan, the Yuchengco Family. Its license, however, was suspended in 1985 due to violations of its terms and conditions. Senator Enrile's logging operations in Samar was reportedly protected by the "Lost Command" headed by Renegade PC Col. Carlos Lademora, also known as Commander Brown. His group figured in the massacre of 45 men, women and children in Brgy. Sag-od, Las Navas town of Northern Samar in September 1981. They were "commissioned to enforce order in Sag-od where the operations of a logging company were reportedly being disrupted by the strong presence of the New People's Army. The timber firm's logging concession used to border Sag-od.." (Petilla, Phil. Daily Inquirer, Sept. 15, 1989). Replicating the pattern in the country, the number of timber licensees in Samar island leaped from one TLA in 1967 to 15 by 1978. The concessionaries who were not from Samar. Even the precious Mancono forests (Philippine ironwood) in Homonhon Island were not spared. The total logging concessions added up to 599,000 hectares, equivalent to 47% of the total land area of Samar. The total allowable cut per year was 373,277 hectares cubic meters (Cramer). But we all knew that the loggers cut more that they were allowed. In fact, in 1986, six of TLAs were suspended due to non-compliance with its terms and conditions. One concession, Western Palawan, was cancelled in 1989 due to its overcutting. (Bautista, The Logging Moratorium Policy in Nueva Ecija, Nueva Viscaya and Samar). Deforestation legally and steadily increased over the years and Samar and its people did benefit from the plunder of its forest resources.