World

US returns war trophy bells to Philippines

December 11, 2018
Philippine Air Force personnel unload the bells of Balangiga after their arrival at Villamor Air Base in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines, on Tuesday. — Reuters
Philippine Air Force personnel unload the bells of Balangiga after their arrival at Villamor Air Base in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines, on Tuesday. — Reuters

MANILA — Church bells seized from the Philippines by US troops as war trophies over a century ago were returned on Tuesday, in a bid to turn the page on a difficult chapter between the historical allies.

Giving back the three so-called Balangiga bells meets a decades-old demand from the former US colony at a time when the two nations’ ties have been rattled by President Rodrigo Duterte’s pivot to China.

“Returning these bells is the right thing to do,” US Ambassador Sung Kim said at a sober handover ceremony on a Manila airfield, where a cheer went up when the bells were pulled from wooden crates.

“It is my great honor to be here at the closing of a painful chapter in our history,” he told the crowd that included people who had lobbied for years to bring the bells home.

The bells will be sent back later this week to the church in the central town of Balangiga where they were looted by US soldiers avenging a surprise attack that killed 48 of their comrades on September 28, 1901.

In reprisal, the US commander Jacob Smith ordered the surrounding island of Samar be turned into a “howling wilderness”, resulting in the slaughter of thousands of Filipinos and Balangiga’s razing.

The return of the bronze bells has been divisive with some US veterans and lawmakers, who see them as a tribute to fallen American troops, while the Philippines hails them as a symbol of its struggle for independence.

Two of the bells had been on display in the US state of Wyoming and the other in South Korea until being restored and flown to a Manila air base on Tuesday aboard an American military cargo plane.

“It is time for healing. It is time for closure. It is a time to look ahead as two nations should with shared history and as allies,” Philippine secretary of defense Delfin Lorenzana said.

“After 117 years the sound of the bells will once again ring,” he added.

Manila’s push for the bells’ repatriation began in the 1990s and has had backing from Philippine presidents as well as from the Catholic Church and historians, but also supporters in the US.

Duterte, 73, bluntly called on Washington in a 2017 speech — where Kim was in the audience — “Give us back those Balangiga bells. They are not yours.”

Within months of winning the presidency in mid-2016 he signaled his intention to split with the Philippines’ former colonial master and end a standoff with Beijing over the disputed South China Sea.

The president did not attend Tuesday’s handover, but is due to speak at a ceremony Saturday in Balangiga when the bells — which weigh a combined 408 kilograms (900 pounds) — will be given back to the church.

Salvador Panelo, the president’s spokesman, claimed a lot of the credit for Duterte, pointing to his “strong political will”. However, experts said the process had been complicated.

“No single president can claim credit to it,” Francis Gealogo, history professor at the Ateneo de Manila University, told AFP. “The credit should be given to the Filipino people who campaigned vigorously and actively.”

A key factor was also major American veterans’ associations, including the largest group Veterans of Foreign Wars, dropping their opposition to the bells being given back. — AFP


December 11, 2018
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