Jose Maria Sison | |
|---|---|
Sison in 2020 | |
| Founding Chairperson of theCommunist Party of the Philippines | |
| In office December 26, 1968 – 1977[1] | |
| Preceded by | Position established |
| Succeeded by | Rodolfo Salas |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Jose Maria Canlas Sison (1939-02-08)February 8, 1939 Cabugao,Ilocos Sur, Commonwealth of the Philippines |
| Died | December 16, 2022(2022-12-16) (aged 83) Utrecht, Netherlands |
| Political party | CPP (1968–2022) |
| Other political affiliations | NDF (1973–2022) PKP-1930 (1962–1968) |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 4 |
| Alma mater | University of the Philippines Diliman (BA) |
| Website | josemariasison |
| Military service | |
| Allegiance | |
| Battles/wars | New People's Army rebellion |
Jose Maria Canlas Sison (Tagalog:[hoˈsemɐˈɾijakɐnˈlasˈsisɔn]; February 8, 1939 – December 16, 2022), also known asJoma[pronunciation?], was a Filipino writer, poet, and activist who founded and led theCommunist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and added elements ofMaoism to its philosophy—which would be known asNational Democracy. His ideology was formed by applyingMarxism–Leninism-Maoism[2] to the history and circumstances of the Philippines.
Sison was born inIlocos Sur to a landowningpolitical family. He was educated inManila, studying atAteneo de Manila University,Colegio de San Juan de Letran, and theUniversity of the Philippines. He then became a professor of literature, political science, andRizal studies. During his youth, he learned aboutthe rebellion of the communistHukbalahap (Huk), which ended in 1954. Sison joined thePartido Komunista ng Pilipinas (PKP; "Philippine Communist Party") in 1962 and became a member of its executive committee in early 1963. In 1964 he co-founded theKabataang Makabayan ("Patriotic Youth"). However, Sison's faction had several disagreements with the PKP leading to theFirst Great Rectification Movement. After Sison's faction were expelled from the PKP, he founded and became the chairman of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) in 1968. Three months later, Sison andBernabe Buscayno, who led a faction of Huk holdouts, organized theNew People's Army (NPA) to stage aproletarian revolution. Sison was captured in 1977 and was imprisoned, mostly insolitary confinement, until thePeople Power Revolution of 1986. The new government under PresidentCorazon Aquino released him for the sake of "national reconciliation" and for his role in opposing themartial law regime of PresidentFerdinand Marcos. Nonetheless, he also criticized the Aquino administration. In 1988, while in the Netherlands as part of his international lecture tour, his passport was revoked and he was charged in the Philippines for violating theAnti-Subversion Act. From then on, he lived in the Netherlands but continued to advise the communist movement in the Philippines.
From August 2002, Sison had been classified as a "person supporting terrorism" by the United States. TheEuropean Court of First Instance ruled in September 2009 to delist him as a "person supporting terrorism" and reversed a decision by member governments to freeze his assets.[3][4] Sison was charged with several counts of murder in the Philippines and the Netherlands (later dropped). He died in exile in 2022.
The CPP, NPA, and theNational Democratic Front (NDF) are considered terrorist organizations by the Philippines'Anti-Terrorism Council.[5][6][7][8]
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Jose Maria Canlas Sison was born on February 8, 1939, inCabugao, Ilocos Sur to a prominent landowning family with ancestry from Spanish-Mexican-Malay mestizos and fromFujian, China, and with connections to other prominent clans such as the Crisólogos, Geraldinos, Vergaras, Azcuetas, Sollers, Serranos and Singsons.[9]
Sison's father, Salustiano Sison, was a "vocally strong support ofClaro Mayo Recto and had a mix of "strong feudalist orientation" and "anti-imperialist sentiment."[10] His mother, Florentina Canlas Sison, was part of a landed family inMexico, Pampanga. As a child, Sison's parent nicknamed him "Cheng."[11]
His great-grandfather, Don Leandro Serrano, was the biggest landlord in northern Luzon at the end of the 19th century. His grandfather, Don Gorgonio Soller Sison, was the lastgobernadorcillo of Cabugao under Spanish colonial rule,[12] the municipal president under the Philippine revolutionary government, and the first mayor under US colonial rule. His great-uncle, DonMarcelino Crisólogo was the first governor ofIlocos Sur. His uncle,Teófilo Sison was governor ofPangasinan and the first Defense Secretary in the Commonwealth government. He was convicted in 1946 of having collaborated with the Japanese occupation forces but was amnestied in 1947.[13]
During his childhood inIlocos, he learned about theHuk rebellion in Central Luzon from Ilocano farm workers and from his mother. In his early high school years in Manila, he talked to his barber aboutHukbalahap activities. Unlike his elder siblings, he attended a public school before enteringAteneo de Manila University and later studying atColegio de San Juan de Letran.
Sison graduated from theUniversity of the Philippines in 1959 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in English literature with honors and then studiedIndonesian inIndonesia before returning to the Philippines and becoming a university professor of literature and eventually Rizal Studies andPolitical Science.[10] He joined the LavaitePartido Komunista ng Pilipinas in December 1962 and became a member of its executive committee in early 1963. He was the Vice Chairman of the Lapiang Manggagawa (which eventually became the Socialist Party) and the general secretary of the Movement for the Advancement of Nationalism. In 1964, he co-founded theKabataang Makabayan, or Patriotic Youth, with Nilo S. Tayag. This organization organized youth against theVietnam War,Ferdinand Marcos,imperialism,bureaucrat capitalism andfeudalism. The organization also spearheaded the study of Maoism as part of 'the struggle'.
On December 26, 1968, he formed and led the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), an organization founded onMarxism–Leninism-Maoism, stemming from his experience as a youth leader and labor andland reform activist. This was known as theFirst Great Rectification Movement where Sison and other radical youth criticized the existing party leadership for its errors and failures since 1942. The old Communist Party had been run under a series of Moscow-leaning general secretaries from the Lava family. The reestablished CPP set its general political line as a two-stage revolution comprising national-democratic as the first stage then proceeding to the socialist revolution. During this period, Sison went by thenom de guerre ofAmado Guerrero, meaning "beloved warrior", under which he published the book manifestoPhilippine Society and Revolution.[14][15]
After this, theold Communist Party sought to eliminate and marginalize Sison. However, the reorganized CPP had a larger base and renewed political line that attracted thousands to join its ranks.[16]On March 29, 1969, the CPP, along with an HMB (Huk) faction led byBernabe Buscayno, organized theNew People's Army (NPA), theguerrilla-military wing of the party, whose guerrilla fronts, numbering more than 110, are nationwide and cover substantial portions of 75 of the 81 Philippine provinces. The NPA seeks to wage a peasant-worker revolutionary war in the countryside against landlords and foreign companies by operating in rural communities and mountains as strategy for protection.[17][18]
Sison was arrested on November 8, 1977,[19] inLa Union during the Marcos presidency and imprisoned for almost nine years, most of which were spent in solitary confinement.[20] Sison wrote prolifically while incarcerated, including hisBasic Principles of Marxism-Leninism: A Primer, which his wife Julie de Lima smuggled out of prison in 1982.[21]
Sison was released from military detention on March 5, 1986, after the overthrow of Marcos. He was released by the new administration of PresidentCorazon Aquino for the sake of "national reconciliation" and for his role in opposing Marcos. The release of Sison was vehemently protested by themilitary. His experience in prison is described inPrison & Beyond, a book of poetry released in 1986 which won theSoutheast Asia WRITE award for the Philippines.
Sison returned to teach at the University of the Philippines soon after. He then went on a global lecture tour, starting in September 1986. It is reported that upon his release, Sison and his followers actively sought to discredit the Aquino government in the European media by speaking out on Aquino'shuman rights violations, including theMendiola massacre, in which members of the military were accused of firing on unarmed peasants inManila, killing 17 people.[22] Also in 1986, Sison embarked on a world tour. In October 1986, he accepted the Southeast Asia Writers Award for a book of his poems from the Crown Prince of Thailand inBangkok.
In 1989, Sison was cited in journalistGregg Jones' bookRed Revolution as having coordinated thePlaza Miranda bombing in August 1971 based on interviews with members of the CPP and the NPA.[23]
Since 1987, Sison had based himself in the Netherlands for his European lecture tour. While in the Netherlands in September 1988, he was informed that his passport had been revoked and that charges had been filed against him under the Anti-Subversion Law of the Philippines. The charges were ultimately dropped, including those that were subsequently filed by Philippine authorities. He applied for political asylum in the Netherlands in 1988 after his Philippine passport was cancelled by the Philippine government. His application was ultimately denied, however Dutch and European law protected him from deportation to the Philippines.[24][25][26] Since 1992, he had lived in the Netherlands as a recognized political refugee.
The CPP has stated for over 20 years that Sison was no longer involved in operational decisions and has served from Europe in an advisory role as chief political consultant of the National Democratic Front in peace negotiations with the Manila government.
The International Crime Investigation Team of the Dutch National Criminal Investigation Department arrested Jose Maria Sison inUtrecht on August 28, 2007. Sison was arrested for his alleged involvement from the Netherlands in three assassinations that took place in the Philippines: the murder ofRomulo Kintanar in 2003, and the murders of Arturo Tabara and Stephen Ong in 2006. On the day of his arrest, Sison's apartment and the apartments of his co-workers were searched by the Dutch National Criminal Investigation Department.[27]
Some 100 left-wing activists held a demonstration for the release of Sison, marching towards the Dutch embassy inManila on August 30, 2007. The demonstration was swiftly ended by police.[28][29]
There were no plans to hold the trial in the Philippines since there was noextradition request and the crimes Sison was accused of were committed in theNetherlands. Dutch lawyer Victor Koppe said that Sison would enter aplea of not guilty during his indictment. He could have received the maximum penalty oflife imprisonment.
On September 1, 2007,National Democratic Front peace panel chairLuis Jalandoni confirmed that the Dutch government was "maltreating" Sison because the court detained him insolitary confinement for several weeks without access to media, newspapers, television, radio or visitors; it also denied him the right to bring prescription medicines to his cell. The place where Sison was held was the same one used by the late formerYugoslav presidentSlobodan Milosevic who was held for war crimes and corruption. Meanwhile, protests were held inIndonesia, Hong Kong, Australia, the United States, and Canada. TheCommunist Party of the Philippines (CPP) feared that Sison may be "extra-judicially" transferred to the United States. CPP spokesmanGregorio Rosal said that the U.S. may detain and subject Sison to extraordinary rendition inGuantanamo Bay or some secret facility. U.S. ambassador Kristie Ann Kenney formally announced that the U.S. will extend support to the Dutch government to prosecute Sison.[30]
In New York City, formerUnited States Attorney General and left-wing human rights lawyerRamsey Clark called for Sison's release and pledged assistance by joining the latter's legal defense team headed by Belgian lawyerJan Fermon. Clark doubted Dutch authorities' validity and competency, since the murder charges originated in thePhilippines and had already been dismissed by the country's Supreme Court.[31]
Committee DEFEND, an International group stated that the Dutch governmenttortured Sison at theNational Penitentiary in Scheveningen. His wife, Julie De Lima, failed to see him in order to provide him with medicine and warm clothes on August 30, 2007.[32] Meanwhile, Sison's counsel, Romeo Capulong, questioned the Dutch government'sjurisdiction over the issue, alleging that theSupreme Court of the Philippines already dismissed the subject cases on July 2.[33]
On September 7, 2007, the Dutch court heard defense arguments for Sison, and stated that it would issue theresolution next week on whether to extend thedetention. Supporters outsideThe HagueDistrict Court chanted slogans while the wife, Julie De Lima stated that they complained to the International Committee of theRed Cross. Luis Jalandoni, chairman of theNational Democratic Front, accused the government of Prime MinisterJan Peter Balkenende of being "a workhorse" for Philippines PresidentGloria Macapagal Arroyo and for the U.S. government.[34]
TheNational Lawyers Guild (NLG), a progressivebar association in New York then headed by Marjorie Cohn, denounced the arrest of Sison, saying "it exposes the hand of the Arroyo administration in yet another assault on the rights of the people to dissent and organize".[35] Sison will remain in jail until Thursday, but was provided TV, radio and medication.[36]
On September 12, 2007, lawyers Edre Olalia and Rachel Pastores stated that Sison's lawyers will appeal the reported Dutch court's newly promulgatedruling extending Sison'sdetention for 90 days.[37] The Dutch court did not extend the detention for 90 days but released him on September 13, 2007, after being held in solitary confinement for 17 days.
Dutch publicprosecutor's office's Wim de Bruin stated that Sison was released from jail at 10:45 a.m. on September 13, 2007. The court ruled that there was insufficientevidence to detain him on murder charges, specifically, if Sison "had a Concious [sic] and close cooperation with those in the Philippines who carried out the deed".[38][39]
On September 27, 2007, Sison appeared beforeThe HagueCourt of Appealpanel of 3 judges on thepublic prosecutor's appeal against thedistrict court's September 13judgment of release.
On September 28, 2007, the Dutch Ambassador to thePhilippines, Robert Brinks, announced that 3 Dutch judicial officials and Dutch prosecution lawyer Wim De Bruin will visit the Philippines "later this year" to review the evidence against Jose Maria Sison.[40] The next day,Leung Kwok Hung, a Hong Kong politician and member of theApril Fifth Action vowed to support Sison. Leung was in Europe at theInter-Parliamentary Union assembly inGeneva, Switzerland. He sits in the Hong Kong legislature as a member of the Finance and House Committees, and of the Legislative Panels on Constitutional Affairs, Housing, Manpower, Transport, and Welfare Services.[41]
On October 3, 2007, the Dutch court dismissed the prosecution's appeal against the release Sison, confirming his freedom while the Dutch police continue to investigate: "the prosecution file lacks enough concrete clues that Sison can be directly linked to the assassinations which is needed to prosecute him as a perpetrator". However, the decision does not bar prosecution for murder.[42] But the Dutch Public Prosecutor's Office (per spokesman Wim de Bruin) stated that it did not drop the charges against Sison yet, who remains a suspect. De Bruin said: "No, you have to separate the criminal investigation by the police from the investigation by the examining judge in The Hague. So the judge decided to finish the investigation but the police investigation will be continued and that means that Mr. Sison is still a suspect."[43]
The Dutch court, the Dutch court on May 20, 2008, heard Sison's appeal against the Dutch Public Prosecutors Office's request to extend its investigation until December, since the investigators arrived in the Philippines in February and interviewed witnesses. At the trial, however, the new evidence showed that there were indeed attempts to kill him, in 1999 and 2000, while Kintanar's wife, Joy, directly accused Edwin Garcia in the murder of her husband.[44] The Dutch court scheduled the promulgation on the verdict on June 10, 2008.[45]
The Dutch District Court of The Hague on June 5, 2008, decided in camera "that the Public Prosecution Service may continue the prosecution of Jose Maria Sison for involvement in, among other matters, a number of murders committed in the Philippines in 2003 and 2004; that while the prosecution's case file still held insufficient evidence, the investigation was ongoing and should be given time to unfold".[46] In February 2010, the Dutch Public Prosecution Service finally terminated its investigation of Sison and dropped the criminal charges against him.
Sison met his wife, Julie de Lima, when both were students atUP Diliman. Attending the same study groups, they grew closer and married first in a civil wedding in September 1959 and then in aCatholic church wedding in January 1960. The couple had four children.[47]
His wife belonged to the prominent De Lima family ofIriga City,Camarines Sur and is the aunt ofLeila de Lima, who served as Chair of theCommission on Human Rights during the presidency ofGloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Secretary of the PhilippineDepartment of Justice under the administration of PresidentBenigno S. Aquino III.,[48] and Senator during the administration of PresidentRodrigo Duterte.
He was the chairperson of theInternational League of Peoples' Struggle,[49] and the Chief Political Consultant of theNational Democratic Front of the Philippines.
In 2017, PresidentRodrigo Duterte, claimed that Sison had colon cancer.[50] Sison, while admitting he has been hospitalized at the Utrecht University Medical Center in March of that in year connection to hisrheumatoid arthritis andSweet syndrome symptoms, said that he has no serious illness including cancer.[51] In early 2022, reports emerged that Sison had died;[52] Sison himself refuted his supposed death.[53] Later that year, on December 16, the Communist Party of the Philippines, alongside its news organAng Bayan, announced the death of Sison after having been confined in a hospital inUtrecht,Netherlands, for two weeks. NDFP executive Luis Jalandoni disclosed that Sison died due to heart failure, after almost three weeks of hospital treatment, although he did not provide more details about Sison's death.[54][55][56][57]
Former SenatorJovito Salonga accused Sison of orchestrating the1971 Plaza Miranda bombing during theLiberal Party convention to force Marcos to suspend thewrit of habeas corpus and sign Proclamation No. 1081, initiating the advent of Martial Law in the Philippines.[58] This accusation comes from former CPP members such as Victor Corpuz and others.[59] The Philippine National Police (PNP) filed a criminal case against Sison for the Plaza Miranda bombing, but the charges were dismissed for lack of evidence, with the dismissal order citing the complainant's filing criminal charges based on speculation.[60]
On July 4, 2008,Manila's RTC Executive Judge Reynaldo Ros assumedjurisdiction over the 1,551-page cases of multiple murder lawsuits against Sison,Bayan Muna RepresentativeSatur Ocampo, andNational Democratic Front member Luis Jalandoni after the Supreme Court's Third Division ordered a change of venue from theHilongos, Leyte RTC Branch 18 for safety reasons.[61][62] During the time when these alleged killings supposedly took place, Sison and Ocampo had long been under maximum detention of the Marcos regime. Sison, Ocampo, and other political detainees were only freed in 1986 after the first EDSA uprising of the same year.
The European Union's second highest court ruled to delist Sison and the Stichting Al-Aqsa group from the EU terror list since the 27-nation bloc failed to respect their rights when blacklisted. The Luxembourg-based Court of Justice further reversed a decision by member governments to freeze the assets of Sison and the Netherlands-based Al-Aqsa Foundation, since the EU governments failed to inform them why the assets were frozen. Dekker said that EU lawyers in Brussels can lodge any appeal.[3][4] The EU was also ordered to shoulder all the litigation expenses during the five-year appeal of Sison against the Dutch government and the EU.[63] The final judgment of the European Court of Justice to remove Sison from the EU terrorist blacklist on September 30, 2009, became final and binding on December 10, 2009, inasmuch as the EU did not make an appeal. The court's decisions and other documents pertaining to cases involving Sison in the Philippines are compiled under the section of Legal Cases in www.josemariasison.org and can be further verified in the archives of the pertinent courts.
Two biographies have been written about him: one by the German writer Dr. Rainer Werning:The Philippine Revolution: From the Leader's View Point (1989), and one by the Filipina activistNinotchka Rosca,At Home in the World (2004). Two biographical films about Sison were produced:The Guerrilla Is a Poet (2013), directed by sisters Sari andKiri Dalena, andTibak (2016), written and directed by journalist Arlyn dela Cruz.
Since his death, national democratic organizations in Manila launched the Jose Maria Sison School, involving hundreds of youth, union members and activists in a re-examination of the Joma's teachings. Leftists from Berkeley to Rome followed suit.[64]
Many activists and scholars have continued Sison's legacy in different ways. On February 15, 2025, key leaders of the national democratic movement launched The Jose Maria Sison Legacy Foundation (TJMSLF) in Utrecht, The Netherlands to preserve the legacy of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) founder.[65]
Maybelle Guerrero has called for revolutionaries to review Sison's work and to take up his unfinished tasks, such as his repeated call to revive the armed city partisan teams to address human rights violators in the urban areas.[66]
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)It is also misleading for the applicant to claim that he has been recognised as a refugee by the Raad van State and the Rechtbank. In fact, the applicant has never been granted refugee status or a residence permit in the Netherlands, as was confirmed by the Rechtbank.