Fidel Ramos (left to the second row) along his wifeAmelita (right to the first row) with his parents
Ramos marriedAmelita Martinez on October 21, 1954, at the Central Church (now known asCentral United Methodist Church) inErmita, Manila.[9] They started as friends while they were classmates at the UP High School and neighbors atPadre Faura Street in Manila.[10] Together, they had five daughters: Angelita Ramos-Jones, Josephine Ramos-Samartino, Carolina Ramos-Sembrano,Cristina Ramos-Jalasco, and Gloria Ramos.[4][5] They also have five grandsons and three granddaughters.[11]
Ramos received several military awards including thePhilippine Legion of Honor (March 18, 1988, and July 19, 1991), the Distinguished Conduct Star (1991), the Distinguished Service Star (May 20, 1966, December 20, 1967, and August 3, 1981), Philippine Military Merit Medal (May 23, 1952), the U.S. Military Academy Distinguished Graduate Award andLegion of Merit (August 1, 1990), and the FrenchLegion of Honor.[5][12]
Ramos was a member of the Philippines' 20th Battalion Combat Team of thePhilippine Expeditionary Forces to Korea (PEFTOK) that fought in theKorean War. He was an Infantry Reconnaissance Platoon Leader.[5] Ramos was one of the heroes of theBattle of Hill Eerie,[13] where he led his platoon to sabotage the enemy in Hill Eerie.[14]
Ramos was also in theVietnam War as a non-combat civil military engineer and Chief of Staff of thePhilippine Civic Action Group (PHILCAG).[5] It was during this assignment where he forged his lifelong friendship with his junior officer Maj.Jose T. Almonte, who went on to become his National Security Advisor during his administration from 1992 to 1998.
Chief of Indonesian National Police Lieutenant General Awaloeddin Djamin received an honorary visit by Chief ofPhilippine Constabulary Maj. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos, AFP (left), December 1979
In January 1972, Ramos was appointed head of thePhilippine Constabulary, then a major service branch of the Armed Forces of the Philippines,[15] which functioned as the country's national police. He served at this post at the timeFerdinand Marcos imposedMartial Law[5] on September 21, 1972.
In 1975, all civic and municipal police forces in the country were integrated by decree, and it became known as theIntegrated National Police (INP), which was under the control and supervision of the Philippine Constabulary. As head of the PC, Ramos wasex officio the INP's first concurrent Director-General.
Martial Law was formally lifted nine years later on January 17, 1981, but Marcos retained absolute powers. Due to his accomplishments, Ramos was one of the candidates for the position of Chief of Staff of theArmed Forces of the Philippines in 1981, as replacement to the retiring GeneralRomeo Espino who was the nation's longest serving chief of staff. Ramos lost to GeneralFabian Ver a graduate of theUniversity of the Philippines, whom Marcos appointed to the top military post. Instead Ramos, a cousin of Marcos was named AFP Vice-Chief of staff in 1982, and promoted to the rank of lieutenant general, while remaining as PC-INP Chief.
On May 12, 1983, a new unit in the formerPhilippine Constabulary was organized to deal with so-called "terrorist-related" crimes, and named as the Philippine ConstabularySpecial Action Force[16] as a requirement of General Order 323 of Philippine Constabulary Headquarters. Fidel Ramos and Gen.Renato de Villa were the founders of the unit. De Villa tasked Rosendo Ferrer and Sonny Razon to organize a Special Action Force.[17] Subsequently, a training program called the SAF Ranger Course, was used to train the 1st generation of SAF troopers, which numbered 149.[18] Of that number, 26 were commissioned officers while the rest were enlisted personnel recruited from a wide range of PC units such as the defunct PC Brigade, the Long Range Patrol Battalion (LRP), the K-9 Support Company, PC Special Organized Group, the Light Reaction Unit (LRU) of PC METROCOM, the Constabulary Off-shore Action Command (COSAC), and other PC Units.[18] Later on, they changed the name of the course to the SAF Commando Course.[18]
On August 8, 1983, during a speech inCamp Crame to commemorate Philippine Constabulary Day, Marcos announced his removal of Defense MinisterJuan Ponce Enrile from the chain of command, and the creation of a new arrangement with himself as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces replacing AFP Chief of Staff Gen.Fabian Ver. Marcos also removed the operational control of the Integrated National Police from the Philippine Constabulary under Gen. Ramos and transferred it under the direct control of Gen. Ver; the Constabulary then had only administrative supervision over the INP.
On February 22, 1986, Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile protested alleged fraud committed by Marcos in the1986 snap elections, withdrawing support and triggering the non-violentPeople Power Revolution. General Ramos later also defected and followed Enrile into Camp Crame, and the duo shifted their fealty toCorazón Aquino, the widow of Senator Benigno Aquino and Marcos' main election rival. On February 25, the "EDSA Revolution" reached its peak when Marcos, along with his family and some supporters, fled into exile in Hawaii with the assistance of theUnited States government, ending his20-year rule, leaving Corazon Aquino to accede as the country's first female President. Later in life, Ramos would say he considered his role in the revolution as his "atonement" for his role in the implementation of Martial Law.[19]
When belittled by the press regarding his combat record, Ramos responded with trademarksarcasm (July 31, 1987):
I fought thecommunists as part of thebattalion combat teams, I went up the ladder. Battalion staff officer.Company commander. Task Force commander.Special Forces group commander. Brigade commander. All in different periods in our country.Huk campaign.Korean War campaign. TheVietnam War, and I was the head of the advance party of the PHILCAG (Philippine Civil Action Group to Vietnam) that went to a tiny province at the Cambodian border – the so-called Alligator Jaw – War Zone Z where evenMax Soliven saidTheViet-Cong will eat us up. Of course, we were physically there as non-combat troops. But you try to be a non-combat troop in a combat area – that is the toughest kind of assignment.
Korea – as a Recon platoon leader. What is the job of a recon leader? To recon the front line – no man's land. And what did we do? I had toassault a fortified position of the Chinese communists and wiped them out. And what is this Special Forces group that we commanded in the Army – '62–'65? That was the only remaining combat unit in thePhilippine Army. The rest were training in a military division unit set-up. We were inLuzon. We were inSulu. And then, during the previous regime,Marawi incident. Who was sent there? Ramos. We defended the camp, being besieged by 400 rebels.
So next time, look at the man's record, don't just write and write. You said, no combat experience, no combat experience. Look around you who comes from the platoon, who rose to battalion staff, company commander, group commander, which is like a battalion,brigade commander, here and abroad. Abroad, I never had an abroad assignment that was not combat. NO SOFT JOBS FOR RAMOS. Thirty-seven years in the Armed Forces. REMEMBER THAT. You're only writing about the fringe, but do not allow yourself to destroy the armed forces by those guys. You write about the majority of the Armed Forces who are on the job.
That's why we're here enjoying our freedom, ladies and gentlemen. You are here. If the majority of the Armed Forces did not do their job, I doubt very much if you'd all be here.[excessive quote][20]
Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces and Secretary of National Defense
In December 1991, Ramos declared his candidacy for president. However, he lost the nomination of the then-dominant partyLaban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) to House SpeakerRamon Mitra Jr. Days later, he bolted from the LDP and founded his own party, thePartido Lakas Tao (People Power Party), invitingCebu GovernorEmilio Mario Osmeña to be his running mate. The party formed a coalition with the National Union of Christian Democrats (NUCD) of Senator & DFA SecretaryRaul Manglapus and the United Muslim Democrats of the Philippines (UMDP) of Ambassador Sanchez Ali, and turned into Lakas–NUCD Ramos and Osmeña, together with Congressman (later House Speaker)Jose de Venecia, campaigned for economic reforms and improved national security and unity.
He won the seven-way race on May 11, 1992, narrowly defeating popular Agrarian Reform SecretaryMiriam Defensor Santiago. His running mate, Governor Osmeña, lost to SenatorJoseph Estrada as vice president. Despite winning, he garnered only 23.58% of the vote, the lowest plurality in the country's history. The election results were marred by allegations of fraud as Santiago was leading the race for the first five days of counting but became second after a nationwide energy black-out, putting Ramos in first place. International media were already calling Santiago as the president-elect but withdrew their declarations because of the sudden change in positions in the vote tally. Santiago filed an electoral protest, but it was eventually junked by theSupreme Court. The quote, "Miriam won in the elections, but lost in the counting" became popular nationwide.[22]
De los Santos alleged that Libyan leaderMuammar al-Qaddafi had channeled $200,000 (5 million pesos) to Ramos' 1992 election campaign. Philippine election laws prohibit accepting contribution from foreigners.[23] Ramos dismissed the claim as "hearsay by itself, and is further based on a string of successive hearsay conversations" and challenged anyone who presumed the claim's veracity to produce evidence.[24]
At the time of his accession in 1992, he was the first and onlyProtestant to date to be elected President of the Philippines, which has a majority-Roman Catholic population, and the only Filipino officer in history to have held every rank in the Philippine military from Second Lieutenant to Commander-in-Chief.
The first three years of his administration were characterized by an economic boom, technological development, political stability, and efficient delivery of basic needs to the people. He advocated party platforms as an outline and agenda for governance. He was the firstChristian Democrat to be elected in the country, being the founder of Lakas-CMD (Christian-Muslim Democrats Party). He was one of the most influential leaders and the unofficial spokesman ofliberal democracy in Asia.[25]
Ramos' policies were organized around asocio-economic program dubbed "Philippines 2000",[26] which envisioned the Philippines achieving anewly industrialized country status by the year 2000 and beyond.
The five points of the program were:
Peace and Stability
Economic Growth and Sustainable Development
Energy and Power Generation
Environmental Protection
Streamlined Bureaucracy
Contrary to expectations as a former military general, Ramos made peace with the country's various armed rebel groups, kickstarting the process by creating a National Unification Commission (NUC) and appointingHaydee Yorac to be its chair.[27]
Although he battled Communist rebels as a young lieutenant in the 1950s, Ramos signed into law theRepublic Act No. 7636,[28] which repealed theAnti-Subversion Law.[29] With its repeal, membership in the once-outlawedCommunist Party of the Philippines became legal.[30] It was also during his presidency that the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL), which provided a mechanism to monitor human rights abuses in the course of operations was signed between the government and the CPP on 16 March 1998.[31]
During his administration, Ramos began implementing economic reforms intended to open up the once-closed national economy, encourage private enterprise, invite more foreign and domestic investment, and reduce corruption. Ramos ended the government's monopoly over the skies and opened aviation to new players.[32] Ramos was also known as the most-traveled Philippine President compared to his predecessors with numerous foreign trips abroad, generating aboutUS$20 billion worth of foreign investments to the Philippines. To ensure a positive financial outlook on the Philippines, Ramos led the4thAsia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Leaders' Summit in the Philippines in November 1996.
Under his administration, the Philippines enjoyed economic growth and stability. ThePhilippine Stock Exchange in the mid-1990s was one of the best in the world and his visions of 'Philippines 2000' that led the country into a newly industrialized country in the world and the "Tiger Cub Economy in Asia".[33]
At the start of Ramos' tenure, the Philippines was experiencing widespread blackouts due to huge demand for electricity, the antiquity of power plants, the abolishment of theDepartment of Energy, and the discontinuation of theBataan Nuclear Power Plant during the Corazon Aquino administration. During his State of the Nation address on July 27, 1992, he requested that theCongress enact a law that would create an Energy Department that would plan and manage the Philippines' energy demands. Congress not only created the department but gave him special emergency powers to resolve the power crisis. Using the powers given to him, Ramos issued licenses to independent power producers (IPP) to construct power plants within 24 months. Ramos issued supply contracts that guaranteed the government would buy whatever power the IPPs produced under the contract in U.S. dollars to entice investments in power plants. This became a problem during the1997 Asian financial crisis when the demand for electricity contracted and thePhilippine peso lost half of its value.
Ramos personally pushed for the speedy approval of some of the most expensive power deals, and justified signing more contracts despite warnings from within the government and theWorld Bank that an impending oversupply of electricity could push up prices, a situation that persists in the Philippines up to the present. Individuals linked to Ramos lobbied for the approval of some of the contracts forindependent power producers (IPPs), which came with numerous other deals, including lucrative legal, technical, and financial consultancies that were given to individuals and companies close to him. Among the deals tied to IPP projects were insurance contracts in which companies made millions of dollars in commissions alone. All the IPP contracts came with attractive incentives and guarantees. Every contract was designed to give IPP creditors some degree of comfort in financing ventures that would usually involve huge capital and risks. Most IPPs were funded by foreign loans secured with a form of government guarantee or performance undertaking, which meant that the Philippine government would pay for the loans if the IPPs defaulted. The Ramos government continued signing IPP contracts even after the end of 1993 when the power crisis was considered solved. The World Bank came up with a report in 1994 warning that power rates would rise if the government continued to enter into more IPP contracts that would mean excess power. The World Bank questioned the ambitious projections of the government on economic growth and power demand from 1994 to 1998. It also warned that the power generated by private utilities' IPPs could duplicate those of theNational Power Corporation and create an overcapacity. The World Bank said that the factors created considerable uncertainty in power demand, like substantial overcapacity, particularly under take-or-pay conditions and would require considerable tariff increases that would be unpopular with the public.[34]
While campaigning for the presidency, Ramos declared his support for reinstating the death penalty. Capital punishment was abolished for all crimes in 1987, making the Philippines the first Asian country to do so. In 1996, Ramos signed a bill that returned capital punishment with theelectric chair (method used from 1923 to 1976, making Philippines the only country to do so outside U.S.)"until thegas chamber could be installed".[35] However, no one was electrocuted or gassed, because the previously used chair was destroyed earlier in a fire and the Philippines adopted the method oflethal injection. After his presidency, some people were put to death by this means, until the death penalty was abolished again in 2006.
In early 1995, the Philippines discovered a primitivePRC military structure on Mischief Reef in theSpratly Islands, 130 nautical miles (240 km; 150 mi) off the coast ofPalawan. The Philippine government issued a formal protest over the PRC's occupation of the reef and thePhilippine Navy arrested sixty-two Chinese fishermen at Half Moon Shoal, eighty kilometers from Palawan. A week later, following confirmation from surveillance pictures that the structures were of military design, President Fidel Ramos had the military forces in the region strengthened. He ordered thePhilippine Air Force to dispatch fiveF-5 fighters backed by four jet trainers and two helicopters, while the navy sent two additional ships. The People's Republic of China had claimed that the structures were shelters for fishermen but these small incidents could have triggered a war in theSouth China Sea.
A perceived weakness[according to whom?] of his administration was the situation in handling migrant workers' protection, a very major issue in the Philippines, as there are millions of Filipinos abroad throughout the world serving as workers in foreign countries, and their remittances to relatives at home are very important to the Filipino economy. On the eve of his 67th birthday on March 17, 1995, Ramos was on a foreign trip whenFlor Contemplación was hanged in Singapore. His last-minute effort to negotiate with Singapore PresidentOng Teng Cheong and Prime MinisterGoh Chok Tong failed and Ramos' return was marred with protests after his arrival inManila. The protests also caused the resignation of Foreign Affairs SecretaryRoberto Romulo and Labor SecretaryNieves Confesor from the cabinet. He immediately recalled Philippine ambassador to Singapore Alicia Ramos and suspended diplomatic relations with Singapore and created a special commission to look into the case, which was in part an effort to try to rescue his sagging popularity.[citation needed] The commission was led by retiredSupreme Court JusticeEmilio Gancayco.
As recommended by the Gancayco Commission, Ramos facilitated the enactment of Republic Act No. 8042, better known as the "Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act of 1995", which was signed into law on June 7, 1995.[36] Learning from the lessons of the Contemplación case, Ramos immediately ordered Philippines Ambassador to theUAERoy Señeres to facilitate negotiations after learning of the death penalty verdict ofSarah Balabagan in September 1995. Balabagan's sentence was reduced and she was released in August 1996. After tensions cooled off, Ramos restored diplomatic relations with Singapore after meeting Goh Chok Tong on the sidelines during the 50th anniversary of the United Nations in New York City.
The1997 Asian financial crisis, which started in Thailand, was a major blow to the end of the Ramos administration, with him stepping down with a negative GDP growth. The economy was hit by currency devaluation with thePhilippine Peso dropped to ₱45.42/$1 in January 1998 from ₱26.40/$1 in July 1997.[37] The same was true for theThai baht,Malaysian ringgit, andIndonesian rupiah. Growth fell to about −0.6% in 1998 from 5.2% in 1997, but recovered to 3.4% by 1999. It also resulted in the shutdown of some businesses, a decline in importation, a rising unemployment rate, and an unstable financial sector.
Supposedly, one of his notable contributions to the Philippines was the revival of nationalistic spirit by embarking on a massive promotion campaign for the centennial of Philippine Independence celebrated on June 12, 1998. However, charges of alleged massive corruption or misuse of funds blemished the resulting programs and various projects, one of which was the Centennial Expo and Amphitheater at the formerClark Air Base inAngeles City, supposedly Ramos's pet project. The commemorative projects, particularly those undertaken at Clark, were hounded by illegal electioneering and corruption controversies even years after the Centennial celebrations. Clark Air Base at that point was already completely free of American interference and therefore conceived as a suitable venue forIndependence Day. In 1992, all American military bases were transferred to Philippine control after the Senate rejected the military bases agreement with the United States.
Later on it was revealed through a special report by thePhilippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) that the projects relating to the Expo site not only revealed the extravagance and inefficiency of the administration, but also served as a convenient vehicle to affect election fund-raising for the LAKAS political party of Ramos, which came at the expense of tax-payers and was in direct violation of theElection Code. TheCentennial Expo Pilipino project, intended to be the centerpiece for celebrating the 100th anniversary of the country's independence from Spain, also earned extensive criticism for being an expensivewhite elephant project that disadvantaged the government at the cost of₱9 billion or 1.7 percent of the country's 1998 national budget.[38] Six ranking Ramos cabinet members and officials, headed bySalvador Laurel (former vice-president), chairman of the Centennial Commission, were cleared by theOmbudsman and theSandiganbayan. Ramos appeared before a Congressional Committee in October 1998 to help exonerate said officials of any wrongdoing.
During his final years in office, Ramos tried to amend the country's1987 constitution through a process popularly known to many Filipinos ascharter change orcha-cha. Widespread protests led by Corazon Aquino and theRoman Catholic Church stopped him from pushing through with the plan. Political analysts were divided as to whether Ramos really wanted to use charter change to extend his presidency or only to imbalance his opponents as the next presidential election neared. He also intended to extend the term limits of the presidency to remain in power but his political rivalMiriam Defensor Santiago went to the Supreme Court and negated extending the term limit of the president, which preserved democracy at the time.[39]
Ramos was Chairman Emeritus of his party now namedLakas–CMD. The CMD or Christian–Muslim Democrats in the party's name adopted in 2003 which led by then-President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
At the height of theelection-rigging scandal in July 2005, Ramos publicly convinced PresidentGloria Macapagal Arroyo not to resign from office.[41] Ramos, who was also hounded by charges of electoral fraud during the 1992 elections which were never proven in the Supreme Court, repeatedly stated that the scandal is nowhere as grave as that of People Power Revolutions of 1986 and 2001, citing factors such as the stagnant Philippine economy in the final years of the Marcos regime as well as the allegedly massive corruption of the Estrada administration. According to Arroyo, he also showed full support to her during the failed coups in the latter part of her presidency.[42]
Ramos, then-Philippine Special Envoy to China, briefs PresidentRodrigo Duterte and the cabinet.
Ramos also unveiled his proposals for constitutional change of the country. Citing the need to be more economically competitive in the midst ofglobalization and the need to improve governance for all Filipinos, Ramos suggested that government should start the process of Charter Change with a set deadline in 2007 (by which time the new charter and new government would take effect). Ramos supported the transformation of the country's political system from the Philippine presidential-bicameral-system into a unicameral parliament in transition to a federal form.
Ramos represented the Philippines in theASEAN Eminent Persons Group, tasked to draft the Charter of theAssociation of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN). He was also a member of numerous international groups and fora, and was the chairman of the board of directors of theBoao Forum for Asia (also one of the co-founders of BFA) and co-chairman of the Global Meeting of theEmerging Markets Forum (EMF). Ramos was heavily recommended for the position of the United Nations envoy toMyanmar (formerly known as Burma) in June 2006.
Ramos was also a firm backer of the proposed PhilippineReproductive Health bill. During a meet-up with fellow RH bill supporters in May 2011, he urged PresidentBenigno Aquino III to certify the RH bill as urgent, saying it is the "right thing" to do.[43] During his administration, theDepartment of Health underJuan Flavier launched an intense drive to promotefamily planning.Asiaweek reported in August 1994 that under Ramos, "family planning funding has quintupled." They also noted that President Ramos "has gone the farthest of any administration in opposing the Church's positions on contraception and abortion."[44] As of 2024, Ramos was listed by the Forum for Family Planning and Development as one of its Eminent Persons.[45][46][47]
Ramos was a member of theGlobal Leadership Foundation, an organization which works to support democratic leadership, prevent and resolve conflict through mediation and promote good governance in the form of democratic institutions, open markets, human rights and the rule of law. It does so by making available, discreetly and in confidence, the experience of former leaders to today's national leaders. It is a not-for-profit organization composed of former heads of government, senior governmental and international organization officials who work closely with Heads of Government on governance-related issues of concern to them.
After his presidency, Ramos founded the Ramos Foundation for Peace and Development (RPDEV) with offices located in theUrban Bank Building (now ExportBank Plaza) inMakati. The foundation is a non-partisan, nonprofit, non-stock organization dedicated to promoting peace and development in the Philippines and the larger Asia-Pacific region. RPDEV supports Philippine national interests and people empowerment.Operating as a network of individuals and institutions inside and outside the country, it is meant to serve as a catalyst for constructive change, a medium for fostering unity, stability, and progress, and a force for mutual understanding.[48]
Ramos (center) as Special Envoy to China meets with PresidentRodrigo Duterte (right) on September 14, 2016.
President-electRodrigo Duterte revealed in June 2016 that Ramos was the one who pushed him to run for office so that "Mindanao will finally have a Filipino president."[citation needed]
On July 23, 2016, Ramos was appointed by President Duterte as the Philippine Envoy toChina to strengthen bilateral ties again after a much-heated diplomatic war over theSouth China Sea.[49][50] On 8 August 2016, the Philippines him to Hong Kong to mitigate tensions.[51]: 129 Ramos met withFu Ying (chair of China'sForeign Affairs Committee for the National People's Congress) and Wu Shicun (president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies).[51]: 129 Ramos conveyed the Philippines' willingness to engage in formal discussions with China.[51]: 129 The three issued a statement in their personal capacities emphasizing cooperation and dialogue between the two countries.[51]: 129
On November 1, 2016, Ramos sent his resignation after President Duterte returned from his state visit to China "because the officials have taken over." Duterte accepted his resignation from the post on the same day.[52] He was replaced by veteran journalistJose Santiago "Chito" Sta. Romana.[53]
After stepping down, while he continued to show support to President Rodrigo Duterte, he had been vocal in raising concerns and criticisms to his administration. In February 2017, Ramos raised his concern aboutimpunity andunilateralism amidst thedrug war.[54] In May 2017, Ramos criticized government officials who went with Duterte toRussia, claiming they turned the President's official visit into a "junket", which the Palace later denied.[55] In September 2017, Ramos said the Philippines continued to "lose badly" under the Duterte administration.[56] Despite his criticisms, Duterte still saw him as his "number one supporter" and at the same time his "number one critic", and even called him his "everything."[57][58][59]
On March 18, 2022, on Ramos' 94th birthday, the Fidel V. Ramos Presidential Library was launched online.[48] It became the first and, so far, the only online presidential library in the Philippines.[64] It was later revealed that Ramos was already ill at this time and was unable to take on visitors.[65]
Ramos did not make his endorsement public during the2022 elections, but he pledged support for thepresidential bid ofLeni Robredo, whom he had also successfully endorsed for vice president in2016.[66] This was despite the fact that his partyLakas–CMD had earlier adopted her rivalBongbong Marcos, who was the running mate of Lakas chairpersonSara Duterte, as its presidential candidate.[67]
PresidentBongbong Marcos declared a nine-day period of "national mourning day" from July 31 to August 9, 2022, where all national flags were "flown athalf-mast from sunrise to sunset" as a sign of mourning.[70] Due prevailing policies about COVID-19 Omicron-related deaths in the country (during the Omicron time in the first 18-month period), Ramos' remains werecremated, which made him the second Philippine president to have been cremated before an initial burial after former PresidentBenigno Aquino III in June 2021. His wake was held from August 4 to 8 at The Chapels at Heritage Park inTaguig.[71] On August 9, he was accorded astate funeral, which was the first for a former Philippine president since Diosdado Macapagal.[72] His remains were inurned at theLibingan ng mga Bayani between former presidentsElpidio Quirino andFerdinand Marcos Sr.[11][73][74]
The FVR Legacy Initiative is a digital platform that honors the life and leadership of President Fidel V. Ramos, the 12th President of the Philippines. It offers a rich archive of materials that span his early years, military service, presidency, and post-presidential contributions to peace and development. It is a commemorative and educational project dedicated to preserving and promoting the leadership principles, governance philosophy, and historical contributions of former Philippine President Fidel V. Ramos. It serves as a multi-platform archive and advocacy network that highlights Ramos’ role in shaping democratic governance, national development, and regional diplomacy during and beyond his presidency (1992–1998).[84]
On March 18, 2024, theUP National College of Public Administration and Governance (UP NCPAG), in collaboration with the Management Association of the Philippines (MAP) and the FVR Legacy Initiative, launched the Fidel V. Ramos LEAD4R Fellowship Program. This executive education initiative is designed to honor the legacy of former President Fidel V. Ramos by promoting progressive governance and leadership principles.[85]
The program is tailored for current and future leaders across government, civil society, and the private sector. Its core mission is to foster values such as collaboration, integrity, accountability, and inclusivity in pursuit of public sector reform and sustainable development. TheUniversity of the Philippines emphasized that the fellowship seeks to instill the enduring leadership model of President Ramos, who championed democratic values alongside economic growth. His administration is remembered for linking economic progress with democratic reform, both nationally and globally. Structured as a 10-month non-degree program, the fellowship is equivalent to six academic units at the master's level. It offers participants exposure to innovative governance practices from both local and international contexts.[86]
^Seagrave, Sterling (1988).The Marcos dynasty (1st ed.). New York: Harper & Row. p. 263.ISBN978-0-06-015815-6.Ramos was the son of Narciso Ramos, Ferdinand's uncle, who had been executive officer of the Maharlika and later foreign minister at the time of the deal with Lyndon Johnson.
^"Fidel V. Ramos".Department of National Defense. Archived fromthe original on December 8, 2015. RetrievedMarch 3, 2016.
^Ramirez, Joanne Rae (November 1, 2019)."Here comes the bride". The Philippine Star. RetrievedAugust 4, 2022.
^Pʻyŏnchʻan Wiwŏnhoe, Chŏnsa (December 20, 1977). "The Philippine Force". In Yu Man Kap; Park Chan Sul; Kim Chong Ku (eds.).The History of the United Nations Forces in the Korean War. Vol. VI. Seoul, Korea: Ministry of National Defense (Republic of Korea). pp. 319–320.
^Yabes, Criselda (1991). Ruben Alabastro; Eric Gamalinda (eds.).The Boys From The Barracks: The Philippine Military After EDSA (first ed.). Pasig, Metro Manila, Philippines: Anvil Publishing Inc. p. 62.ISBN971-27-0127-1.
More electricity rate hikes to come: Sale of energy assets to have long-term shocking effects on the people – Bayan Muna. (August 21, 2007). Bayan Muna.
Chŏnsa Pʻyŏnchʻan Wiwŏnhoe,The history of the United Nations forces in the Korean War, Volume I-VI, (Seoul, Ministry of National Defense, Republic of Korea, 1972–77)
Ramos Presidential Center, Makati City
Senate, Republic of the Philippines.COMMITTEE REPORT NO. 30. Eleventh Congress. Retrieved August 24, 2008, from the Senator Aquilino "Nene" Pimentel official website:[1]