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Satur Ocampo

Satur Ocampo
Bayanmuna.png
Member of the Philippine House of Representatives for Bayan Muna
In office
June 30, 2001 – June 30, 2010
Personal details
Born Saturnino Cunanan Ocampo
(1939-04-07) April 7, 1939 (age 78)
Santa Rita, Pampanga, Commonwealth of the Philippines
Nationality Filipino
Political party Bayan Muna
National Democratic Front (Philippines)
Makabayan Coalition
Other political
affiliations
Bagong Alyansang Makabayan
Nacionalista Party (2010)
Spouse(s) Carolina Malay
Profession Writer, journalist

Satur Ocampo (born April 7, 1939) is a Filipino politician, activist, journalist, and writer.

As party president and first nominee, he led the party-list group Bayan Muna in three successful elections in 2001, 2004 and 2007. He was a member of the House of Representatives, and Deputy Minority Leader in the 14th Congress of the Philippines. He has done work in human rights and other areas.

After his three terms as congressman, he ran for senator in the May 2010 elections; then-Representative Liza Maza of the women's partylist group GABRIELA and Ocampo were fielded by the Makabayan coalition and were included as guest senatorial candidates of the Nacionalista Party, a mainstream Philippine political party whose presidential standard bearer, Senator Manny Villar, they supported.

After the elections, on Aug. 21, 2010, Ocampo started a weekly opinion column in the Philippine Star titled "At Ground Level".

Ocampo was a business editor of the pre-martial law Manila Times and was the founder of the Business and Economic Reporters Association of the Philippines. He is a lifetime member of the National Press Club.

President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law on September 21, 1972 and Ocampo, among others, went underground. In 1973, Ocampo co-founded the National Democratic Front (Philippines), seeking to unite various anti-dictatorship forces.

In 1976, he was arrested and incarcerated as a political prisoner. For the next nine years he was severely tortured in various prison camps. At one point, he shared a cell with detained Philippine Collegian editor-in-chief Abraham Sarmiento, Jr. Though tried by a military court for rebellion, he was never found guilty. In 1985, while on pass to vote at the National Press Club annual elections, he escaped from the soldiers guarding him and rejoined the underground revolutionary movement.


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