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Guns,Money and Justice
Authors:Bronwyn Winter
Affiliation:1. Department of French Studies , School of Languages and Cultures, University of Sydney , NSW 2006, Australia E-mail: bronwyn.winter@sydney.edu.au bronwyn.winter@usyd.edu.au
Abstract:In late 2005, Suzette Nicolas, then known publicly only as ‘Nicole’, alleged that on 1 November of that year she had been gang-raped by US Marines in Olongapo City in the Subic Bay area on the island of Luzon, site of one of two former large US military bases in the Philippines. Thus began what was to become an internationally notorious rape case, involving the US and Philippine governments, the US military, the Philippine judiciary and a broad feminist-led activist coalition. The case, played out against the backdrop of the US state's Asian front in the ‘War on Terror’, has become inextricably linked with the ongoing Philippine campaign against the US–Philippines Visiting Forces Agreement. This article looks at the case, its background, its symbolism and the current political debate on the ongoing connections between militarism, globalization, US imperialism and violence against women in the Philippines.
Keywords:Philippines  Subic rape case  Visiting Forces Agreement  US ‘War on Terror’  feminist social activism
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