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Balangiga bells' journey back to the Philippines

December 14, 2018 | 1:06pm
Location: PHILIPPINES
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Balangiga bells' journey back to the Philippines
December 14, 2018

So will he or will he not? Malacañang gives mixed signals on whether President Duterte will attend the ceremonial turnover of the Balangiga Bells, which were transported all the way from Wyoming and Okinawa before it arrived in Manila earlier this week.

Presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo says Duterte will not attend the Mass at the turnover ceremony. "He has heard all the masses in the world. But he wil be there," Panelo says.

This was after the Palace announced days ago that Duterte would skip the ceremony without giving specific reasons.

The president, over the past couple of years, has been expressive of his unfriendly views toward the United States.

December 13, 2018

President Rodrigo Duterte changes his mind and will now be attending the turn-over ceremonies of the Balangiga bells to local officials in Samar on Saturday, December 15.

The announcement is made hours after the Palace reiterated Wednesday that the president will be skipping the event due to "pressing matters of governance."

December 12, 2018

The Diocese of Borongan and the parishioners of St. Lawrence the Martyr Parish of Balangiga, Eastern Samar launch a website for the historic bells.

On it, they express their gratitude to "individuals and groups who have worked, lobbied and prayed for the eventual return of the Balangiga Bells."

"Please be assured that we will return the bells to their original religious purpose—and care and cherish them as a precious legacy of the profound faith, heroism and courage of our forebears," the text on the website reads.

December 12, 2018

The Balangiga bells are displayed for public viewing on Wednesday and Thursday (December 12 and 13) from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. at the Philippine Air Force Aerospace Museum at the Villamor Airbase in Pasay City.

Visitors are advised to observe the dress code and other rules:

  • No sandos
  • No slippers
  • No flash photography
  • No video recording
  • No food and drinks
  • No touching of displays

The bells will be turned over to the parish in Balangiga, Eastern Samar.

December 11, 2018

The Balangiga Bells are home after a long journey from the United States and Japan. They are currently being offloaded from a US Air Force aircraft at the Villamor Air Base.

December 10, 2018

Malacañang says President Rodrigo Duterte will skip the turnover ceremony of the Balangiga bells.

Duterte was supposed to lead the handover tomorrow, December 11, at the Villamor Air Base in Pasay City.

The bells are currently at the US military base in Okinawa, Japan and are being prepared for its repatriation to the Philippines.

The church bells were taken by American soldiers from Balangiga in Eastern Samar in 1901.

November 15, 2018

Today the US government formally begins the repatriation of the Balangiga bells to the Philippines.

"After 117 years, the bells of Balangiga will be coming home. This morning the Government of the United States announced it would be returning the historic bells to the Philippines," the Department of Foreign Affairs says.

Presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo says Malacañang welcomes the United States' return of the Balangiga bells to the Philippines but adds that it will withhold any further comment on the matter "until the last bell has been properly delivered to the country."

"In the words of the president himself: 'It ain't here until it's here,'" he says as quoted by the state-run news agency PTV.

Philippine Ambassador to the United States Jose Manuel Romualdez said he would meet with US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis on November 15 (Manila time) and would release an official statement after a military ceremony for the repatriation of the Balangiga bells.

The three bells were taken by American soldiers as war booty more than a century ago. 

President Rodrigo Duterte has demanded the return of the bells to the Philippine soil in multiple speeches.

Ties of the Philippines with its longtime ally, the US, has soured after criticisms on human rights violations in Duterte's war on drugs.

Duterte had similarly raised rights violations committed by the United States, particularly the killing of Moros at Bud Dajo in 1906.

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