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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 12:10 p.m., Monday, March 24, 2008

PHILIPPINES
Former Philippine President Aquino has cancer

Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Usually dressed in her trademark yellow in public, former Philippine President Corazon Aquino has remained active in social and political causes. Her daughter said today that she has colon cancer. Aquino, 75, was swept into power by the peaceful uprising that ousted late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, cementing her as an icon of democracy.

AP FILE PHOTO | August 2007

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MANILA, Philippines — Former Philippine President Corazon Aquino, who sparked a wave of pro-democracy movements around the world by leading a 1986 "people power" revolt, has colon cancer, her daughter said Monday.

Aquino, 75, was swept into power by the peaceful uprising that ousted late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, cementing her as an icon of democracy.

Usually dressed in her trademark yellow in public, she has remained active in social and political causes. Most recently, she has been attending rallies calling for the resignation of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

Kris Aquino, her voice breaking as she fought back tears, read a statement on live television that said her mother had gone in for tests after suffering from high blood pressure, difficulty breathing and fever during the Christmas and New Year holidays, then a loss of appetite and weight loss.

"The result showed our mother is suffering from cancer of the colon," she said.

She said her family knows that its affairs are "part of our country's history," but asked that her mother "be accorded her privacy."

"We ask you for your compassion and prayers for our mom's recovery," she said.

A former housewife and political neophyte, Aquino reluctantly took over as Marcos' main challenger after her husband, opposition leader Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr., was gunned down at Manila's airport upon returning from exile in 1983.

After a fierce campaign, voting was held Feb. 7, 1986, and journalists, foreign observers and church figures raised charges of massive fraud by Marcos.

The Commission on Elections ruled Marcos won by a slight majority; Aquino's camp figured she lost 25 percent of her votes through fraud.

The military brass mutinied, and hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, accusing Marcos of cheating, swept Aquino to power on Feb. 25 in a peaceful protest that became a harbinger of change in authoritarian regimes worldwide.

Marcos fled the country and died in Hawai'i in 1989. Aquino held office until 1992, surviving at least six coup attempts.

She oversaw the writing of a new constitution, but critics claimed that she fell short of the promise of social and economic reforms which many of her supporters hoped would follow the ouster of Marcos.

Aquino again became active in 2001, throwing her support behind Arroyo, who was swept to power in the country's second "people power" revolt, toppling Joseph Estrada.

However, Aquino later took on Arroyo, joining opposition figures in calling for her resignation over allegations of vote-rigging in the 2004 elections and, more recently, of corruption.