American years at Fort McKinley (called today Fort Bonifacio) firing a 37-mm antitank gun in training During the
American colonial period, the US government acquired a property south of the
Pasig River for military purposes. This area with a Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) dated 1902, was turned into a camp known as
Fort William McKinley after the 25th US president,
William McKinley. After the
Philippines gained its political independence from the United States on July 4, 1946, the US bestowed upon the newly independent country of the Philippines all rights of possession, jurisdiction, supervision, and control over the Philippine territory except the use of their military bases. On May 14, 1949, Fort McKinley was turned over to the
Philippine government by virtue of US Embassy Note No. 0570.
Post-independence years Under the
Armed Forces of the Philippines leadership of Gen. Alfonso Arellano, Fort McKinley was made the permanent headquarters of the
Philippine Army in 1957 and was subsequently renamed
Fort Bonifacio, after the Father of the Philippine Revolution against Spain,
Andrés Bonifacio, whose father, Santiago Bonifacio, was a native of Taguig. The
Manila American Cemetery Park is in Bonifacio Global City, a holy and relaxing place that memorializes the Allied War Dead in the liberation of Asia against Imperial Japan. When
Ferdinand Marcos placed the Philippines under
martial law in 1972, Fort Bonifacio became the host of three detention centers full of political prisoners - the Ipil Reception Center (sometimes called the Ipil Detention Center), a higher security facility called the Youth Rehabilitation Center (YRC), and the Maximum Security Unit where Senators
Jose W. Diokno and
Benigno Aquino Jr. were detained. Ipil was the largest prison facility for political prisoners during martial law. Among the prisoners held there were some of the country's leading academics, creative writers, journalists, and historians including
Butch Dalisay,
Ricky Lee,
Bienvenido Lumbera, Jo Ann Maglipon,
Ninotchka Rosca,
Zeus Salazar, and
William Henry Scott. After Fort Bonifacio was privatized, the area in which Ipil was located became the area near
S&R and Home Depot, near 32nd Street and 8th Avenue in Bonifacio Global City, while the YRC became a government facility just outside of the business district. On March 19, 1992, President
Corazon C. Aquino signed the Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992 (Republic Act No. 7227) into law, creating the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA), tasked with converting Military Bases into "integrated developments, dynamic business centers and vibrant communities."
Privatization and early development On June 7, 1994, President
Fidel V. Ramos approved the privatization of the former military base for . The following year,
Metro Pacific (MPC) won a bid of $1.6 billion to undertake the conversion of 535 acres of undeveloped land into the country's newest commercial, business, and residential complex. MPC crushed the attempts of four other groups, which was $438 million higher than
Ayala Land's bid of $1.2 billion. On February 3, 1995, the BCDA and a consortium led by Metro Pacific Corporation formed a
joint venture called the Fort Bonifacio Development Corporation (FBDC) for the purpose of developing of former Fort Bonifacio land. The private group bought a 55% stake in the FBDC for , while BCDA held on to the remaining 45% stake. The FBDC's landmark project was conceived as Bonifacio Global City, a real estate development area meant to accommodate 250,000 residents and 500,000 daytime workers and visitors. In 1999, the government proposed the Government Center for Investments Complex, which is part of the development of the BGC and would have a cluster of four state-of-the-art medium-rise buildings that would become a one-stop shop for businesses and investors, and the BCDA signed an agreement with Mansour Establishment for Commerce and Development Projects, CAMS Asia Inc., and Bonifacio Business Center Inc. This plan would have housed the eight key government agencies but was not realized. The project was hampered by the
1997 Asian financial crisis, but moved forward when Ayala Land and Evergreen Holdings, Inc. of the Campos Group purchased Metro Pacific's controlling stake in FBDC on April 24, 2003. Bonifacio Global City is part of Taguig's
barangay Fort Bonifacio. Prior to the creation of such barangay in 2008, it was part of barangay
Ususan.
Territorial dispute On December 9, 1937, the Deed of Absolute Sale executed by the owner, Don Anacleto Madrigal Acopiado in favor of the American Government covering the area of , portion of Bicutan, Taguig, annotated at the back of TCT No. 408. During the American Commonwealth, it was converted to a Military base, named Fort McKinley. It was during the presidency of President
Ferdinand Marcos' administration when Fort McKinley was renamed Fort Bonifacio and transferred to Makati. Taguig got the jurisdiction over Fort Bonifacio after winning the case against Makati in filed in the
Pasig Regional Trial Court in 1993. Makati appealed the ruling, but the Pasig RTC in 2011 still sided with Taguig, saying that Fort Bonifacio including the EMBO Barangays are all part of Taguig. Makati then asked the
Court of Appeals to review the case. The Court of Appeals overturned the Pasig Regional Trial Court's decision and reverted jurisdiction of the BGC in favor of Makati. Taguig has filed a Motion of Reconsideration at the Court of Appeals seeking to revert the decision. The newest Court of Appeals Resolution was promulgated on October 3, 2017. In an 18-page resolution promulgated on March 8 penned by Associate Justice Edwin Sorongon and was concurred by Justices Ramon Cruz and Renato Francisco, the CA's Special Former Sixth Division granted Taguig's motion to dismiss citing Makati's violation of the forum shopping rule (or pursuing simultaneous remedies in two different courts) and accordingly dismissed the latter's appeal of the earlier decision of the Pasig Regional Trial Court (RTC) which originally ruled in favor of Taguig. The CA took notice of the Supreme Court's decision on June 15, 2016, which found Makati guilty of "willful and deliberate forum shopping". "However, the Supreme Court has not spoken. Ineluctably, we must adhere. The issue of whether Makati committed willful and deliberate forum shopping in these cases has been finally laid to rest no less than by the Supreme Court," the CA said in a ruling. With this development, the rightful owner of the former military reservation is Taguig. In a decision dated December 1, 2021 and handed down on April 7, 2022, by
Associate Justice Ricardo Rosario, the
Supreme Court of the Philippines declared permanent the 1994 injunction issued by the
Pasig City Regional Trial Court which disallowed the Makati City government "from exercising jurisdiction over, making improvements on, or otherwise treating as part of its territory Parcels 3 and 4, Psu 2031, comprising Fort Bonifacio, including the so-called
Inner Fort Barangays Pembo, Comembo, Cembo, South Cembo, West Rembo, East Rembo and Pitogo." It was later affirmed in April 2023, when the Supreme Court junked the motion for reconsideration that was filed by Makati to finally side with Taguig. ==Description==