Philippine National Police camp in Calamba, Laguna
Camp Vicente Lim is a facility of the Philippine National Police located in Barangay Mayapa in the city of Calamba, Laguna, which currently serves as the regional headquarters of the PNP in Calabarzon (Region IV-A).[1] It has played a significant part in the local history of the Calabarzon region, as well as the national history of the Philippines; it was part of the Calamba Airstrip during the Philippines' American Colonial era,[2] and was occupied by the Japanese during World War II although it is not recorded as having been used for military purposes during the war.[2] It later became a facility of the Philippines' integrated local police forces, hosting the Integrated National Police Training Command.[3] During Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos, Camp Vicente Lim was one of the four provincial camps to be designated a Regional Command for Detainees (RECAD). It was designated RECAD I and it housed thousands of political detainees from the Southern Tagalog and Bicol regions.[4]
Camp Vicente Lim is located along National Highway Mayapa Road.
Facilities within the camp
The Regional Headquarters also the main Headquarters of Bureau of Fire also inside the Camp Vicente Lim. The National Forensic Training Institute, Bureau of Jail Management Penology, Police National Training Institute also found inside Camp Vicente Lim. There is one multi-purpose gymnasium inside the camp.
Residential area
There is also a residential area known as Campo by the locals or sometimes "Barangay Camp Vicente Lim," although it technically remains part of Barangay Mayapa. This residential area is divided into six zones: Purok 1, Purok 2, Purok 3, Purok 4, Purok 5 and Purok 6. Some of the landmarks near Camp Vicente Lim are the Iglesia ni Cristo house of Worship, Imall grocery and Department store. The Campo, meanwhile has its own covered basketball court located at purok 4 and the Veterans Hall found in purok 1.
Educational facilities
There are primary and secondary school building inside the camp: Camp Vicente Lim Elementary School, also known as Post Elementary School; and Camp Vicente Lim National High School.
Transportation
The means of transportation - both inside the Camp premises and in the residential Campo - is by pedicab.
History
Calamba airstrip
It was also known as Calamba Airstrip or Calamba Airfield since 1922.
During the Marcos dictatorship, Camp Vicente Lim was designated as one of the four provincial camps to become a Regional Command for Detainees (RECAD). It was designated RECAD I and it housed thousands of detainees from the Southern Tagalog and Bicol regions.[4]
Activists Bal Pinguel,[7]Manuel Bautista,[8] Nick Perez,[9] and Armando L. Mendoza[10] were tortured and detained there until they famously escaped with nine others in 1980 - the first documented successful escape from a Marcos prison. However, many of them were later recaptured or killed.[7]
Some victims, like UPLB Student activist Bayani Lontok, were killed elsewhere and then buried in an unknown grave within the camp.[11]
Martial law detention centers administered under Camp Vicente Lim
There were numerous other detention centers under Camp Vicente Lim's ambit as RECAD I. This included:
The Army camp in Tigaon, Camarines Sur where UP Engineering student and activist Floro Balce succumbed to his wounds after having been shot elsewhere[12]
Reagan Barracks (now Camp Ibalon), the military headquarters in Legazpi City, where the student activist pseudonymed as "Gato del Bosque" was detained and tortured.[13][14]
the Philippine Constabulary Batangas Provincial Headquarters at Kumintang in Ilaya, Batangas City where UPLB Student Leader Jose Pacres was detained and tortured.[15]
^ abRocamora, Rick (2023). Dark Memories of Torture, Incarceration, Disappearance, and Death under Ferdinand E. Marcos Sr.'s Martial Law. Quezon City. ISBN979-8-218-96751-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)