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Originally published Wednesday, February 23, 2011 at 5:27 PM

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Filipinos look back 25 years to 'people power' uprising

From the fist-pumping crowds to the anguished dictators, the pro-reform revolts reshaping Arab history resemble the 1986 Philippine uprising...

The Associated Press

MANILA, Philippines — From the fist-pumping crowds to the anguished dictators, the pro-reform revolts reshaping Arab history resemble the 1986 Philippine uprising that booted a strongman 25 years ago. But the similarity ends with the killing of protesters from Tunisia to Libya.

The four-day "people power" revolt a quarter century ago that Filipinos commemorate this week saw multitudes of civilians and rosary-clutching nuns and priests mounting a human barricade against tanks and troops to bring down dictator Ferdinand Marcos with little bloodshed as the world watched in awe.

Since then, democratic revolutions have ended autocracies and military rule in South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan and Indonesia in relatively peaceful feats that seemed unimaginable before 1986.

But the Philippines also became a showcase of post-dictatorship pitfalls that revolt leaders say could provide lessons to Arab nations, which will have to grapple with daunting uncertainties once the euphoria wears down.

Aside from democracy, little has changed in this Southeast Asian nation of 94 million.

It remains mired in corruption, appalling poverty, rural backwardness, chronic inequality, long-running Marxist and Muslim insurgencies and chaotic politics.

A restive military often tries to undermine civilian rule.

Imelda Marcos, the dictator's widow once reviled for the extravagance epitomized by her vast shoe collection and eye-popping diamonds, has made a political comeback after winning a seat in the House of Representatives last year.

Filipinos rallied in 1986 around pro-democracy icon Corazon Aquino, whose husband, an opposition leader, had been assassinated three years earlier by soldiers under Marcos.

The widow had agreed to challenge Marcos in a snap election in which she claimed victory despite widespread cheating and called for civil disobedience. Cardinal Jaime Sin, a hugely influential church leader in the predominantly Roman Catholic nation, helped summon the mammoth crowds against Marcos via appeals on church-run radio.

On Feb. 25, Marcos was sworn in for a new term, but hours later, after it had become clear that the United States, his Cold War ally, would not intervene to prop up his rule, he gave up.

U.S. military aircraft flew the dictator and his family to exile in Hawaii.

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Crowds swarmed into the Malacanang presidential palace and gawked at the opulence enjoyed by their former ruler.

Suddenly thrust into power, Aquino's initial years focused on rebuilding democratic institutions and crafting a new constitution.

However, congressional elections in 1987 brought back many of the landed political dynasties that have ruled provinces like fiefdoms through patronage.

Disgruntled troops launched seven failed coups that scared away investors.

With poverty remaining pervasive, many Filipinos continued to stream out in search of work abroad, draining the country of its best brains and hardest workers.

In the absence of radical changes, what effectively took place in 1986 was "a change of faces" in the same system, political analyst Clarita Carlos said.

"Across the board the same problems persisted — poverty, the sad state of education, political patronage," Carlos said.

"It's disheartening to think that our sacrifices then did not bear much fruit," said Vilma Masinda, one of many nuns who joined the anti-Marcos crowd in 1986. "Change is very slow but we have to be patient."

Corazon Aquino's death of cancer in 2009 sparked a mass outpouring of sympathy that turned into a groundswell of support for her son, Benigno, who hesitantly accepted an opposition draft and won last May's presidential election by a landslide on a promise to eradicate corruption and poverty.

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