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词条 Alex Boncayao Brigade
释义

  1. Background

  2. Activities

     Peace talks 

  3. In popular culture

  4. References

{{Infobox militant organization
| name = Alex Boncayao Brigade
| logo = Alex Boncayao Brigade Logo.jpg
| caption =
| native_name =
| native_name_lang =
| other_name = ABB
| country = Philippines
| leader = Filemon Lagman
Nilo dela Cruz
| foundation = 1984
| dates =
| dissolved = 2000
| split = New People's Army
| area = Luzon, Visayas
| ideology = Marxism–Leninism
| motives = Proletarian revolution
| position =
| crimes =
| attacks =
| status =
| size = 500[1]
| revenue =
| financing =
| flag =
| website =
}}

The Alex Boncayao Brigade, also known by the acronym ABB, was the urban assassination unit of the New People's Army, the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines. Organized in 1984, the unit broke away from the New People's Army as a consequence of a split in ideology during the 1990s.[2][3] In 1997, the Alex Boncayao Brigade allied itself with the Revolutionary Proletarian Army, the armed wing of the Revolutionary Workers' Party.[4][5]

Background

{{main|CPP-NPA-NDF rebellion}}

The Alex Boncayao Brigade was established in May 1984 and was named after a labor leader killed by Philippine government security forces the year before. The brigade became especially active after the departure of then-President Ferdinand Marcos as a consequence of the People Power Revolution, and during the term of President Corazon Aquino.

{{main|Second Great Rectification Movement}}

In 1993, Filemon Lagman and several cadre of the Manila-Rizal regional committee of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) broke away from the mainstream group, taking the Alex Boncayao Brigade with them. In 1994, Lagman was arrested in Quezon City, putting a damper on the brigade's activities. The ABB itself, headed by Nilo dela Cruz, would eventually split from Lagman in 1997 after an internal rift.[6] Lagman would later give up the armed struggle and become a labor union organizer. He was assassinated in 2000, allegedly by members of his former revolutionary group.

Nilo dela Cruz, using the alias "Sergio Romero", was arrested that same year in Bulacan after crashing his car while being pursued by government intelligence agents. It would later be revealed that Dela Cruz had allied the ABB with the Revolutionary Proletarian Army, forming the Revolutionary Proletarian Army - Alex Boncayao Brigade.[2] This was not the first time Dela Cruz had been arrested, or used an alias; in the 1970s he had been detained in the Youth Rehabilitation Center at Fort Bonifacio under the alias "Mario Saldaña". He had kept a low profile then and his true identity was never discovered.[7] In 2003 it was reported that Dela Cruz had "shifted from terrorist activities as leader of the ABB to organizing the labor forces of the Philippines into trade unions".[5]

Activities

The Alex Boncayao Brigade is credited with the assassinations of nearly 200 police officers from 1984 until 1993.[5] In 1984, the ABB claimed responsibility for the assassination of Police General Tomas Karingal, a former Chief of the Quezon City Police Department. In 1989, they claimed responsibility for the assassination of United States Army Colonel James N. Rowe, an adviser to the Philippine Army.[5] Consequently, the US government added the ABB to its Patriot Act Terrorist Exclusion List[8] in 2001.[1]

In 1996, the ABB also claimed responsibility for the assassination of Philippine Constabulary Lt. Col. Rolando Abadilla, a former chief of the Metrocom Intelligence and Security Group. As proof of the deed, they turned over the late Abadilla's wristwatch to a Catholic priest, Fr. Robert Reyes.[9][10]

In 2000 a rifle grenade attack was carried out against the Department of Energy in Manila and Shell Oil offices in the Visayas were strafed. The group claimed credit for the attacks to protest rising oil prices.[1]

Peace talks

In 2000, Nilo dela Cruz of the ABB and Arturo Tabara, leader of the Revolutionary Proletarian Army, announced their intention to engage in peace talks with the government of Joseph Estrada; this resulted in a truce with the Philippine Army in December 2000.[5][4] This in turn prompted a vehement condemnation from Filemon Lagman; in a press release he branded Tabara and Dela Cruz "scoundrels masquerading as revolutionaries".[11] The agreement signed is the model used for the 2019 peace talks between the government and local CPP–NPA–NDF wings.[12]

In popular culture

A film entitled Alex Boncayao Brigade: The Liquidation Arm of the NPA starring Ronnie Ricketts was released in 1988.[13]

References

1. ^{{cite web | publisher =United States Department of State | title =Background Information on Other Terrorist Groups | url=https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/20120.pdf | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
2. ^{{cite book | last =Leifer | first =Michael | title =Dictionary of the Modern Politics of Southeast Asia | publisher =Routledge | year =2013 | pages =51 | url =https://books.google.com.ph/books?id=7UCl7VE4VMIC&pg=PA51&dq=Alex+boncayao+brigade&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjG5oegoaDXAhULfrwKHS3qDukQ6AEIJDAA#v=onepage&q=Alex%20boncayao%20brigade&f=false | isbn =1135129452 }}
3. ^{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com.ph/books?id=7UCl7VE4VMIC&pg=PA51&dq=Alex+boncayao+brigade&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjG5oegoaDXAhULfrwKHS3qDukQ6AEIJDAA#v=onepage&q=Alex%20boncayao%20brigade&f=false|title=Dictionary of the Modern Politics of Southeast Asia|last=Leifer|first=Michael|date=2013-05-13|publisher=Routledge|isbn=9781135129453|language=en}}
4. ^{{cite web | author =Peace Talk Philippines | title =Background of the GPH and RPMP/RPA/ABB Peace Process | url=https://peacetalkphilippines.wordpress.com/peace-tables/rpmprpa-abb/ | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
5. ^{{cite web | title =Alex Boncayao Brigade (ABB) | publisher=Thomson Gale | url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/politics/legal-and-political-magazines/alex-boncayao-brigade-abb | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
6. ^{{cite web | last =Santuario III | first =Edmundo | title =A 'Dirty War' And The Death Of Popoy Lagman | url=http://www.bulatlat.com/archive1/002popoy.htm | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
7. ^{{cite news | last =Hilario | first =Ernesto M. | title =The NPA, a tunnel, and a prison escape plot | publisher = Rappler | date = 28 March 2014 | url =https://www.rappler.com/nation/53893-npa-tunnel-prison-escape | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
8. ^{{cite web | publisher =United States Department of State | title =Terrorist Exclusion List | url=https://www.state.gov/j/ct/rls/other/des/123086.htm | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
9. ^{{cite news | last =Aning | first =Jerome | title =Aquino pardons 8 inmates but not ‘Abadilla 5’ | publisher =Philippine Daily Inquirer | date = 29 December 2012 | url =http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/331535/aquino-pardons-8-inmates-but-not-abadilla-5 | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
10. ^{{cite web | last =Reyes | first =Robert | title =PHILIPPINES: Christmas with a Dead Man's Watch | publisher = Asian Human Rights Watch | url=http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-PAP-005-2008 | date=6 May 2008 | accessdate = 3 November 2017}}
11. ^{{cite web | last =Lagman | first =Popoy | title =Tabara and Dela Cruz: Scoundrels Masquerading as Revolutionaries | url=http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/54a/202.html | date = 27 December 1999 | accessdate = 4 November 2017}}
12. ^{{cite news|title=Agreement with RPM-P/RPA-ABB-TPG model for localized peace talks|url=http://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1065745 |accessdate=30 March 2019|publisher=Philippine News Agency|date=27 March 2019}}
13. ^{{cite web | publisher = IMDB | title =Alex Boncayao Brigade: The Liquidation Arm of the NPA | url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0384800/ | accessdate = 4 November 2017}}
{{Communism in the Philippines}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Alex Boncayao Brigade}}

11 : Military wings of political parties|Military units and formations established in 1984|Far-left politics|Guerrilla organizations|Maoist organizations|Military history of the Philippines|Rebel groups in the Philippines|Communism in the Philippines|Defunct communist militant groups|Organizations designated as terrorist by the United States|Left-wing militant groups in the Philippines

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