Marcos shoes damaged

Posted: September 24, 2012

MANILA, Philippines - Termites, storms, and neglect have damaged part of former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos' legendary collection of shoes and other possessions left behind after she and her dictator husband were driven into U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt.

Hundreds of pieces of late strongman Ferdinand Marcos' clothing, including the formal native see-through barong shirts he wore during his two-decade rule, have also begun to gather mold and fray after being stored for years without protection at the presidential palace and later at Manila's National Museum, officials told the Associated Press on Sunday.

The Marcoses fled the Philippines at the climax of an army-backed "people power" revolt, which became a harbinger of change in authoritarian regimes worldwide. Ferdinand Marcos died in exile in Hawaii in 1989 and his widow and children returned home years later.

They left staggering amounts of personal belongings, clothes, and art objects at the palace, including at least 1,220 pairs of Imelda Marcos' shoes.

More than 150 cartons of clothes, dress accessories, and shoes of the Marcoses were transferred to the National Museum for safekeeping two years ago after termites, humidity, and mold threatened the apparel at the riverside palace. They deteriorated further after the fragile boxes were abandoned in a padlocked hall at the museum that had no facilities to protect such relics and was inundated by tropical rains last month due to a gushing leak in the ceiling, museum officials said.

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