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Fort Magsaysay

Coordinates: 15°26′02″N 121°05′14″E / 15.43389°N 121.08722°E / 15.43389; 121.08722
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(Redirected from Fort Magsaysay Airfield)
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Fort Magsaysay Military Reservation (FMMR)
Nueva Ecija, Philippines
Fort Ramon Magsaysay entrance gate
Fort Ramon Magsaysay is located in Nueva Ecija
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Fort Ramon Magsaysay is located in Luzon
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Fort Ramon Magsaysay is located in Philippines
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Fort Ramon Magsaysay
Coordinates15°26′17″N 121°05′28″E / 15.438°N 121.091°E / 15.438; 121.091
TypeMilitary Base
Site information
Controlled byPhilippine Army
United States Army (under jurisdiction of Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement)
Site history
BuiltDecember 19, 1955
In use1955-present  Philippines
MaterialsConcrete, Steel
Garrison information
Garrison
Fort Magsaysay Airfield
Summary
Airport typeMilitary
OperatorPhilippine Army
LocationFort Ramon Magsaysay, Nueva Ecija, Philippines
Elevation AMSL75.85 m / 248.85 ft
Coordinates15°26′02″N 121°05′14″E / 15.43389°N 121.08722°E / 15.43389; 121.08722
Map
RPLV is located in Nueva Ecija
RPLV
RPLV
RPLV is located in Luzon
RPLV
RPLV
RPLV is located in Philippines
RPLV
RPLV
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
23L/05R 1,600 5,249 Asphalt
Source:[1]
Philippine Marines armed with 5.56 mm M16A1 rifles set up an assault line, while participating in Tactical Recovery of Aircraft and Personnel (TRAP) training at Fort Magsaysay, Nueva Ecija during Exercise BALIKATAN 2004.

Fort Ramon Magsaysay, also known as Fort Magsaysay Military Reservation (FMMR) and Fort Mag, is the largest military reservation in the Philippines, and is a key training area of the Philippine Armed Forces. Fort Magsaysay straddles the provinces of Nueva Ecija and Aurora, encompassing Palayan City, Sta. Rosa, Gen. Tinio, Laur, and Dingalan.

History

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Creation

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On December 10, 1955, President Ramon Magsaysay enacted the 73,000 hectares (180,000 acres) base centered in Palayan City.[2] The reservation covers the municipalities of Papaya (now General Tinio), Santa Rosa and Laur, all of the province of Nueva Ecija and portion of Aurora province. The reservation is used for military training and live-fire exercises.

In its infancy, Fort Magsaysay hosted the Army Training Command (ATC) which provided basic training for enlisted personnel and officers and advanced training in some specialties such as infantry and artillery.[3]

As one of the main training grounds of the Philippine Army, Fort Magsaysay hosted the Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) a couple of times in its history. Currently, TRADOC is located in Camp O'Donnell, but majority of the field exercises are conducted in Fort Magsaysay.

Martial law

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During Martial Law, Senators Jose W. Diokno, the father of human rights and Ninoy Aquino, the father of the future 15th Pres. Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino were incarcerated in Fort Magsaysay for exactly thirty days after President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law on September 21, 1972.[4][5] It is now called the Aquino-Diokno Memorial and is home to the AFP Center for Human Rights.

Recent history

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In 1991, Mt. Pinatubo's eruption led to the Philippine government to relocate some of the residents of the volcano and Fort Magsaysay was one of the relocation sites. Almost two decades later, the Philippine Army remains in conflict with tenant farmers, as the latter have been ordered evicted from the military reservation.[6]

Fort Magsaysay's vast tracts of land has time and again attracted a number of claimants, without escaping controversy.[2][7][8] In some occasions, illegal loggers have found their way into the reservation.[9][10]

On September 21, 2012, President Benigno S. Aquino III led the observance of the 40th anniversary by opening the Aquino-Diokno Memorial, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Center for Human Rights Dialogue inside Fort Magsaysay and the museum-replica of the 1973 detention facility of Ninoy (Codenamed: Alpha) and Diokno (Codenamed: Delta).[1][2]

At present, Fort Magsaysay, along with the Crow Valley Range Complex in Tarlac, provides the Armed Forces of the Philippines and allied nations ample training grounds in modern jungle warfare in large unit formation. The RP-US 2009 Balikatan exercises commenced at Fort Magsaysay.[11] The fort is one of the five bases where US troops and supplies could be stationed under a security deal with the Philippine and US governments.[12]

Fort Magsaysay currently hosts the Mega Drug Abuse Treatment and Rehabilitation Center which was donated by Chinese businessman Huang Rulun after the election of President Rodrigo Duterte in 2016. Portable modular buildings were used, with the DND allocating the land within Fort Magsaysay for the project. The rehab center which is designed to house 10,000 patients has received much criticism from the opposition and various sectors of society. As of 2017 it only received 311 patients.[13] The Department of Health in July 2020 used the Mega Rehab Center as a quarantine facilities for the COVID-19 pandemic.[14]

In 2020, Fort Magsaysay received a budget of P273 million from the DND-DPWH Convergence Program on Strengthening and Expanding Military Readiness for National Security and Development otherwise known as Tatag ng Imprastraktura para sa Kapayapaan at Seguridad (TIKAS) (Stable Infrastructure for Peace and Security) program. This entails constructions, renovation, and refurbishment of facilities in military camps around the country. The project includes construction of a new headquarters for the 7th Infantry Division, a 7.3 km road, barracks and transient facilities for the Light Reaction Regiment and Special Forces units, as well as hangar facilities for the Army Aviation Battalion.[15]

Description

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Fort Magsaysay can be reached through the Bangad-Fort Magsaysay Road or through the Sta. Rosa-Fort Magsaysay Road.

The original 73,000-hectare military reservation has been reduced to 35,000 hectares after seven presidential proclamations. Despite this reduction, the sprawling base reaches all the way to the Pacific Ocean, over the Sierra Madre Mountains, with 12 kilometers of coastline.[16]

Fort Magsaysay is also the only Philippine Army base that boast its own runway, apron, aircraft maintenance, and air control facilities. The Philippine Army operates Cessna CE172 Skyhawk and CE421 from Fort Magsaysay.

Fort Magsaysay also has its own Rest & Recreation facility called Pahingahan Complex. ("Pahingahan" is the Filipino word for "a place of rest.") The R&R facility is located on the shores of a man-made lake in the base. Soldiers and tourists can also enjoy kayaking and hiking in the nearby trails. Fort Magsaysay is located in Northwest Luzon central of Manila. Its abundance of tropical fruits, vegetation and crops of rice facilitates military personnel among those are chickens used for cockfighting events and food delivery. The choice of transportation are mainly jeepneys, tricycle, motor vehicles and carabao. It is a gateway for rest and lively entertainment.

Modernization

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The Department of National Defense's plans to expand and modernize the Philippine Army, Fort Magsaysay has been designated as the AFP's National Training Center (NTC). The NTC's mission is to upgrade and train at battalion level. In a period of 6 years, more than 72 Army Battalions and 12 Marine Battalions have gone through the NTC's program at Fort Magsaysay.[17]

The fort acquired a fleet of trucks and ambulances worth P98.3 million on May 23, 2016.[12]

Facilities

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  • Fort Magsaysay Airfield (ICAO: RPLV)
  • Fort Magsaysay Army Station Hospital (FMASH)
  • 650 m firing range
  • 500 m firing range
  • 150 m firing range
  • 100 m firing range
  • 1.6 km runway & apron
  • Officer's Club
  • Batis
  • Church
  • Headquarters
  • Stockade
  • Army Store[18]
  • R&R Facilities (Pahingahan Complex)
  • Aquino Diokno Shrine
  • Golf Course
  • Pahingahan Dam
  • Gym
  • AFP Transient Facilities[19]
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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Airport information for RPLV[usurped] from DAFIF (effective October 2006)
  2. ^ a b G.R. No. L-27594
  3. ^ Philippine Army General Structure
  4. ^ Ninoy's Letter to his daughter Ballsy
  5. ^ Ninoy's letter to Soc Rodrigo
  6. ^ Groups bewail eviction of 34 families from military reservation
  7. ^ Fort Magsaysay in Romblon?
  8. ^ CA Junks claim over Fort Magsaysay
  9. ^ Top brass aware of NE logging
  10. ^ G.R. No. L-24971 June 20, 1975
  11. ^ Annual Balikatan 2009 exercise at Fort Magsaysay begins
  12. ^ a b Domingo, Ferdie (May 23, 2016). "Fort acquires new equipment". Manila Standard. The Standard. Retrieved May 28, 2016.
  13. ^ Billones, Trishia (1 November 2017). "Mega drug rehab center in N. Ecija a 'mistake': DDB chief". ABS-CBN news. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  14. ^ "Nueva Ecija drug rehab center turned into 500-room quarantine facility". GMA News Online. GMA News & Public Affairs. 18 July 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  15. ^ "Villar launched construction of new facility inside Fort Magsaysay | Department of Public Works and Highways". www.dpwh.gov.ph. DPWH. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  16. ^ Multi-Purpose Complex planned by the Army, Philippine Daily Inquirer, June 10, 2000
  17. ^ "Philippine Army".
  18. ^ PA Photo Release No 01-068 Archived 2010-05-21 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ AFP Transient Facilities and Location Archived 2010-05-23 at the Wayback Machine
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