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		U.S. returns bells looted after 
		Philippine wartime massacre 
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		 [December 11, 2018] 
		MANILA (Reuters) - Church bells 
		taken as war trophies by U.S. forces more than a century ago arrived in 
		the Philippines on Tuesday, ending Manila's decades-long quest for the 
		return of some of the most famous symbols of resistance to U.S. 
		colonialism. 
 The "Bells of Balangiga" landed in a military cargo plane at a Manila 
		air base ahead of their return on Saturday to a church in Samar, the 
		central island where U.S. troops in 1901 massacred hundreds, perhaps 
		thousands, of Filipinos to avenge an ambush that killed 48 of their 
		comrades.
 
 "I'm a little bit excited and a little bit emotional. At last we have 
		seen the bells," Father Lentoy Tybaco, the parish priest of Balangiga, 
		told domestic television as the bells were lifted from boxes and 
		displayed on a runway.
 
 Two of the bells had been on display at an air force base in Wyoming, 
		the other at a U.S. army museum in South Korea.
 
		
		 
		
 Their return follows years of lobbying by former presidents, priests and 
		historians, and challenges from Wyoming veterans and lawmakers opposed 
		to dismantling a war memorial, resulting in legislation that barred 
		their removal.
 
 The battles in Balangiga that took place toward the end of the 1899-1902 
		Philippine-American War marked one of the darkest chapters of U.S. 
		colonialism.
 
 Historians say the bells were rung to signal the start of the surprise 
		attack on American forces, who retaliated with a massacre in which women 
		and children were killed.
 
 Last year U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis promised Philippine 
		President Rodrigo Duterte that he would push hard for their return, 
		which Duterte had demanded during his annual state of the nation 
		address.
 
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			Philippine Air Force personnel unload the bells of Balangiga after 
			their arrival at Villamor Air Base in Pasay, Metro Manila, 
			Philippines December 11, 2018. REUTERS/Erik De Castro 
            
 
            The move could help to appease Duterte, who has made a point of 
			lashing out regularly at Washington, despite a tight 
			U.S.-Philippines defense alliance.
 He has condemned what he sees as the United States' history of 
			hypocrisy, arrogance and political interference.
 
 Dueterte has yet to visit the United States as president, calling it 
			"lousy", although his foreign minister last month hinted the bells' 
			return might prompt a change of heart.
 
 Giving the bells back was "overwhelmingly viewed as the right thing 
			to do", said Sung Kim, the U.S. ambassador to the Philippines.
 
 "Our militaries have fought together, bled together, at times died 
			together," he wrote in the Philippine Star newspaper. "As your ally 
			and friend, we will forever honor and respect this shared history."
 
 (Reporting by Martin Petty; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 
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