kin of one of the
detainees in Camp Capinpin shared with us this cute story.
A week after the world celebrated the birth of Jesus Christ
in a manger more than 2,000 years ago, the officers detained in Camp Capinpin
were overseeing the birth of man’s best friends. Eleven of them.
Tuesday night, Col. Ariel Querubin’s female bull mastiff,
Jenny, gave birth to 11 puppies.
This was the account of one of detainees’ relatives: "We are
all excited but Jenny had a hard time. Eleven puppies.
"The scene was so funny. Marine Lt. Belinda Ferrer (the only
female detainee in the whole AFP) and the Rangers were the ones assisting Sir
Ariel. They knew what to do. I didn’t know they were all trained midwives. The
rest of the Marines were cheering and counting."
Like a proud relative, the source also said of the baby
Mastiffs, "They are all beautiful! They come from a noble bloodline and born to
a nationalist environment."
It’s refreshing to hear stories that show the gentle side of
these battle-scarred officers. Charmaine Deogracias of NHK TV said, "This was
what they missed, being in delivery rooms when their wives gave birth while they
were out in the battlefield cradling their guns."
Prison life indeed has a way of bringing out gems in a person
otherwise submerged and untapped when one was busy surviving and getting ahead
in the rat race we call life.
Querubin, a Medal of Valor awardee, and 25 other Marines and
Rangers are detained in connection with the February 2006 alleged plan to
withdraw support from Gloria Arroyo in the wake of the Hello Garci exposé that
she used the military to cheat in the 2004 elections. The highest-ranking
officers among the detainees are Maj. Gen. Renato Miranda (who is detained
separately from the rest but also in Camp Capinpin) and Brig. Gen. Danilo Lim
(who is now detained at the PNP Custodial Detention Center with the Magdalo
officers because of the Nov. 20 Manila Pen incident). Capt. Dante Langkit of the
Army Special Forces is detained at the Intelligence Security Group compound at
Fort Bonifacio.
Jenny’s 11 puppies (all shiny brown) are the latest additions
to the animal population explosion in Camp Capinpin’s CMU. I was told that
Querubin’s female Labrador retriever, Julie, gave birth to 14 puppies last week
fathered by Maj. Leomar Jose Doctolero’s Ranger, a handsome black Lab.
The affable Lab seems to be the officers’ favorite pet.
Marine colonels Custodio Parcon, another Medal of Valor awardee, and Orlando de
Leon both have Labradors. So do Army Rangers Capt. Erick Sales, Capt. William
Upano, and Lt. Sandro Sereño.
Capt. James Sababan has a mini-pinscher. Lt. Col. Nestor
Flordeliza has a cute shitzu. Col. Parcon has another dog, a poodle.
But the most vain of all the canine population at the
detention center is Pudz, Lt. Ferrer’s poodle. Pudz, who is the son of Maj.
Doctolero’s Nova, is always well-groomed and smelling good.
Dogs are not the only denizens in the CMU’s animal world.
Cordillerans Captains Ruben Guinolbay and Joey Fontiveros have goats, ducks,
chickens, and turkeys.
The officers have also engaged in gardening. They grow their
own bananas, papayas and other vegetables. Not only that, some have even gone
into furniture-making.
The CMU now, green and alive with all the varied sounds of
life, is far cry from the harsh, desolate place that Gen. Lim and Maj. Jason
Aquino, the first inhabitants of the detention center, found almost two years
ago. The severe living conditions were meant to break the spirit of the
officers.
It is a credit to the officers’ resiliency and strength of
character that they have transformed what was meant to be a place of deprivation
into something that celebrates life and the triumph of human spirit against
formidable odds.
Last Dec. 30, the officers were informed unofficially that
they would be transferred to Fort Bonifacio; the Marines to the Brig and the
Rangers to the Army CMU. The transfer may have something to do with the court
martial hearings that are expected to be held several times a week starting next
week. Or it could have something to do with the unresolved restiveness among the
armed forces still related to the Nov. 29 incident.
Soldiers are used to being transported from one place to another. It’s the
least of the officers’ worries if the leadership feels insecure about their
detention in faraway Tanay. Their concern now is, would the military have enough
cages to transport Jenny and her 11 babies, Julie and her 14 kids, Podz and his
whole grooming paraphernalia, and the rest of their dogs, goats, chickens,
ducks, and turkeys?