HomeAsiaJuan Ponce Enrile, architect of Philippine martial law, dies at 101

Juan Ponce Enrile, architect of Philippine martial law, dies at 101


MANILA – Juan Ponce Enrile, the architect of the Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos Senior’s two-decade martial law, died on Thursday (November 13), closing the chapter on the Southeast Asian nation’s most turbulent political history in recent years. He was 101.

His daughter, Katrina Ponce Enrile, announced his death via the social media platform X and said her father had passed peacefully at their home.

“It is with profound love and gratitude that my father, Juan Ponce Enrile, peacefully returned to his Creator on November 13, 2025, at 4:21 p.m., surrounded by our family in the comfort of our home,” she said.

“It was his heartfelt wish to take his final rest at home, with his family by his side. We were blessed to honor that wish and to be with him in those sacred final moments,” she said.

The Enrile family, one of the most powerful political clans in the country, wanted to grieve privately. She did not give a cause of death, although one senator, Jinggoy Estrada, on Tuesday said the elder Enrile was rushed to hospital earlier this week.

He served as Chief Presidential Legal Counsel in the current administration until the time of his death.

Enrile was the last among the central players who played a pivotal role in the country’s Marcos Sr’s dictatorship. In 1986, he and then police constabulary chief, Fidel Ramos, broke away from Marcos Sr’s government, which had bankrupted state coffers and stifled opposition.

Thousands were killed or went missing during the brutal regime, and the Marcos family is accused of plundering state coffers of some US$10 billion.

Their rebellion was backed by the influential Catholic church, which marshalled millions of faithful along a major thoroughfare to protect Enrile and Ramos. That resulted in a “people power” revolution that eventually forced the Marcos family into exile in Hawaii in 1986.

He died there three years later, although his wife, Imelda and children were subsequently allowed to fly home.

The Marcos family has since rebuilt their political fortunes, and the alleged stolen wealth was never recovered in full. In 2022, his son and namesake, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, won as president. Several Marcos family members are either in the Senate or in the House of Representatives.

Often described as politically cunning, Enrile, a four-time elected senator, was the architect of the older Marcos’ martial law, which rights groups said was designed to prolong the dictator’s stay in power. In declaring martial law, Marcos said there was a need to stifle criminality, citing the ambush that Enrile survived.

“I honestly did not know why Marcos suddenly decided to cite my ambush in justifying the declaration of Martial Law,” Enrile wrote in his memoir, which he argued also brought “sweeping and dramatic changes” by restoring law and order to a “great extent.”

A group of activists jailed during martial law, however, said no tears should be shed for Enrile, whom they labeled as a “chief architect and enabler” of the dictatorship.

“For thousands of victims of the Marcos dictatorship, Enrile will forever be remembered neither as a patriot nor a statesman, but as one of the chief architects and defenders of tyranny, repression, and corruption in the country,” the Samahan ng mga Ex-Detainee Laban sa Detensyon at Aresto (or SELDA), an organization of former political prisoners, said in a statement.

Enrile “justified the dictatorship through deception, including the staged ambush on his convoy, which was later exposed as a fabrication to rationalize the imposition of Marcos’ one-man rule.”

“Enrile utilized to the hilt the military and police’s role as instruments of state terror. Under his command, these entities arrested, tortured, and caused the enforced disappearance of thousands of activists, students, journalists, and ordinary citizens,” it said.

“Enrile’s hands are stained with the blood and suffering of countless victims of martial law,” SELDA said, adding that Enrile in later years chose to distort and defend the Marcos family by “whitewashing their plunder and tyranny.”

His breakaway from Marcos was meant to “save his own skin” as the dictatorship crumbled, and not borne out of principle, it argued.

He later reconciled with the Marcos family and at the time of his death, Enrile was Marcos Jr’s legal adviser, “a chilling symbol of how impunity persists and history repeats itself under the current regime,” SELDA said.

“His long life was one spent in the service of power, not of justice,” the group stressed, adding that his death “should not close the book on the crimes of martial law or on the corruption that he and his ilk have perpetuated.”

“Instead, it should strengthen the people’s resolve to continue the fight for truth, justice and freedom,” the group said.

Jason Gutierrez was head of Philippine news at BenarNews, an online news service affiliated with Radio Free Asia (RFA), a Washington-based news organization that covered many under-reported countries in the region. A veteran foreign correspondent, he has also worked with The New York Times and Agence France-Presse (AFP).

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