HE
WOULD have been a still-young 61 last Monday, Nov. 27. But it’s been over two
years now, since Angelo “Sonny” Lopez Jr., aka Bogart to his very close
friends, wrote his final 30.
Still,
he’s missed, all too fondly. In remembrance, here’s the eulogy I delivered at the Pampanga Press Club
necrological rites for Sonny on 3 June 2015, Holy Mary Memorial Park Chapel B.
IN
ATTENDANCE here tonight is a small universe in grief, with our dearly departed
Sonny at its vortex. All of us inter-connected with the common bond of love, of
affection, we have for him, and he had for us.
Each
of us having taken a part, at some time or the other, in Sonny’s journey
through life. Allow me to share mine.
Sonny
was serving as city economist in the early ‘80s when he was introduced to me by
Ram Mercado, his journalism mentor and publisher of Pampanga Eagle where
Sonny was starting his writing career as a columnist. I was at that time
moonlighting as editor of Max Sangil’s Live News which shared the same
printer with the Eagle, the Bankers’ Press.
Weeks
after this first meeting, Ram scrounged a fact-finding mission for Sonny and me
to then strife-torn Zamboanga City, where upon knowing we were Kapampangans,
the widow of the martyred mayor Cesar Climaco told us to our faces that it was
our cabalen Col. Rolly de Guzman that killed her husband. Little did we know
then that this same Colonel De Guzman would himself figure in our own almost
extrajudicial extinction.
It
was in the immediate post-EDSA period that Sonny and I – along with the
departed Ody Fabian, Bert Basa and budding journalists Elmer Cato, Jay Sangil
and Arnel San Pedro whom we fondly called the “Kamias Trio” – lived unseparated
lives chasing after stories, primarily on the insurgency, that took us to
mountain lairs of the regular units and urban dens of partisans, even right to
the battlegrounds and encounters; and established the Shanghai Cartel,
so-called because we shared and wrote our stories at the city’s famous restaurant
and phoned these to our respective newspapers and wire agencies in Manila.
Abad Santos
In
1988, we helped Elmer put up the Angeles Sun which within its very first
month was taken to court for libel by Mayor Antonio Abad Santos, owing to the
column “Political estafa” by Sonny Lopez. The case though was dismissed right
at the fiscal’s office.
But
Abad Santos would not rest easy. On September 6, 1988, six bodyguards of the
mayor, brandishing M-16 assault rifles and machine pistols swooped down on
Radio dzYA, ordered the radio staff to leave, and posted themselves at
the studio, their guns pointed to the hosts of the Tagamasid program Sonny
Lopez and Bong Lacson, even as we continued on the air with the exposes of
corruption in the city government and the events at the station which caused a
mini-people power downstairs the dzYA building.
All
the while through our broadcast, Sonny had his right hand inside his shoulder
bag, clutching at the ready, his trusty and rusty .38 pistol with only three
bullets in its chamber.
Vigilantes
It
was the coverage of the insurgency in the region, notably the exploits of the
urban partisan unit of the NPA, the Mariano Garcia Brigade, that earned us the
ire of the military, and merited our inclusion in the order of battle of the
right-wing vigilante groups.
At
the tail-end of the so-called “festival of killings” in Angeles City in
May-June 1988 where over 40 were killed including policemen and
para-military forces on one side and a doctor, lawyer and leftist sympathizers
on the other, the order came for three newsmen to be added to list of
fatalities.
The
names were Sonny Lopez of Malaya and United Press International,
Elmer Cato of Manila Chronicle and Kyodo; and Bong Lacson of People’s
Tonight and the Associated Press.
It
was only through the intervention of a friend in the military who separately
hid us the day we were supposed to be killed, and a businessman patron who
pleaded our case with the head of the vigilante group that we were spared from
sure execution, with the most extreme prejudice.
A
week later, in a party at the home of the friend that hid us, Sonny, Elmer and
I were the only “civilian” guests, all the others were in the police and
military services as well as para-military groups. A businessman-looking
white-haired gentleman approached our table and introduced himself as Col.
Rolly de Guzman and in a soft but firm voice accused us of being propagandists,
if not actual members, of the CPP-NPA that warranted our inclusion in the
vigilantes’ death list.
We
had trouble looking for our balls that night. We went home assured though that
we’d been delisted and would live beyond the insurgency wars.
Politics
Sonny’s
joining politics did not diminish any his relationship with his media peers. On
the contrary, it further strengthened our bonds. As we went all out for him, to
the point of lambasting some other political pretenders. Here’s a take from a
column in the March 22-28, 1992 issue of The Voice, titled “First was
Sonny Lopez.”
WITH THE successful conversion of Clark Air Base from a military
installation into a special economic zone emerging as the most viable issue to
prop even the most asinine political platform, every Angeles City candidate now
claims he first thought of the economic alternatives to Clark long ahead of the
others.
That’s a lot of bull. None of the mayoralty bets in the city ever
thought of an American-less Clark, much less any alternative uses to the base
even as late as 1990.
The truth of the matter is that all of them... slavishly worked for a
continuing American presence at Clark. Some even resorted to sponsoring
pro-base rallies at the height of militancy among the anti-US forces in the
city.
If there is one single candidate who can rightfully lay claim to being
the first to not only think of but advocate alternative uses to Clark, this is
none other than sangguniang panlungsod-bound Angelo “Sonny” Lopez…
It is on record that one factor that greatly contributed to Sonny’s loss
in his Angeles City council bid in the local elections of 1988 was his advocacy
for alternatives to Clark.
Against tactical prudence and the heightened emotions of the time, Sonny
made the alternatives to Clark – the international airport, the business and
industrial zone, the agricultural productivity center – as the centrepiece of
his campaign, from leaflets to meetings, grand and small.
Even earlier than that, Sonny had already preached the gospel of Clark’s
economic productivity, even without the Americans.
“An artificial economy exists in Angeles,” Sonny often said then in
various fora, knowing whereof he spoke, being the former city economist….
Sonny
topped the council race, and in 1995, he sought the city mayorship but failed.
Publicly dismissed as a quixotic quest of reaching the unreachable star, I
found in Sonny’s run a test of character. Witness as I am to its unfolding.
Soon
as Sonny made public his aspiration for the city mayorship, immediately came
summons to separate meetings with two powerful personalities.
The
first in Apalit, with the celebrated Don of the time asking Sonny to be running
mate of his preferred candidate, the city’s crying doctor finishing his last
term at vice. With the air of a feudal lord about him, the Don promised to open
his enormous war chest for Sonny’s campaign.
With
a courteous “I am grateful for your offer” followed by a curt “I cannot
accept,” Sonny stood up from the table to leave, the Don flabbergasted, having
been used to politicos ever in supplication before him.
The
second was in Lubao, with our dear nanay ng laging saklolo – to use the
term of endearment of Manila Bulletin’s Jun Icban – pleading with Sonny to
reconsider and run for vice mayor instead, vowing family support through his
campaign, onto his victory, and beyond, re-election and ultimately, the
mayorship insinuated there.
Again,
Sonny was grateful but firm in his resolve not to back out of his mayoralty
dream.
I
cannot help but be reminded here of that truism: “Of all sad words of tongue or
pen, the saddest are these: ‘It might have been.’”
PGKM
Life’s
irony played, indeed preyed, on Sonny with his assumption of the post of
communications department manager of the Clark Development Corp.
On
one hand, it was the fulfilment of his long-time crusade of an American-less
Clark serving the Filipinos more.
On
the other, it estranged him from the very group he helped conceive in that
advocacy. A confession: the Pinoy Gumising Ka Movement started as an advocacy
of three – in order now: Pert Cruz, Sonny Lopez, and Bong Lacson.
The
adversarial stance of the PGKM vis-à-vis the CDC in policies, practices and
projects at the Freeport may have struck sensitivities in us, but it never even
dented our friendship. Having long compartmentalized the professional, even the
political, from the personal.
Hence,
even after a rather stinging banat on the CDC in Punto, there’s always a
genial Sonny I meet, absent any mention of the issue taken.
Not
in character, his peers at the CDC readily note, firmly fixed to Sonny’s brusko
persona.
All
in character, I would say. Fully knowing that behind that hulking presence that
earned him the monikers Conan and Bogart, Sonny had a pusong mamon. Bursting
with all that goodness, kindness, and compassion for his friends.
Thank you for this Tito Bong. May God be with you and your family always.
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