Apolinario Mabini encouraged the
Malolos Republic to form a national Red Cross organization. On February 17, 1899, the Malolos Republic approved the Constitution of the National Association of the Red Cross. The government appointed
Hilaria del Rosario de Aguinaldo – the
consort of
President Emilio Aguinaldo – as the first head of the association. She cared for wounded soldiers and their families and established the
Hijas de la Revolución (Daughters of the Revolution) that later became
Asociación Filantrópica de los Damas de la Cruz Roja en Filipinas (Red Cross Association), considered a precursor of the present Philippine Red Cross, and for this she raised funds for medicines and other medical supplies. Filipino diplomat
Felipe Agoncillo met with
Gustave Moynier, an original member of the
International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (ICRC) president on August 29, 1900. He sought recognition of the Filipino Red Cross Society as well as the application of the
First Geneva Convention during the
Philippine–American War. On August 30, 1905, the
American Red Cross (ARC) formed a Philippine Branch with Filipino and American leaders at the
Ayuntamiento. After several years of continuous effort, the ANRC officially recognized it as a chapter on December 4, 1917. In 1934, President
Manuel L. Quezon established an independent Philippine Red Cross (PRC). However, because the Philippines was a
territory and later a
Commonwealth under United States sovereignty, it could not sign the Geneva Conventions and therefore it could not be recognized by the ICRC. In 1942, during the
Japanese occupation of the Philippines, the Japanese created a Philippine Red Cross that they controlled to care for internees. Once
Manila was liberated by combined American and Filipino forces in 1945, local Red Cross officials and the ANRC re-established an independent Red Cross. The Philippines gained independence from the United States on July 4, 1946. Dr. J. Horacio Yanzon was appointed the first Filipino Red Cross manager in December 1946, with thirty-six Red Cross chapters initially set up in the country. On February 14, 1947, President
Manuel A. Roxas signed the
Treaty of Geneva and the Prisoners of War Convention. On March 22, 1947, President Roxas signed Republic Act 95, the PRC charter. The ICRC approved the recognition of the PRC, and telegraphed First Lady
Aurora Aragon Quezon, the first PRC chairman, on March 29, 1947. The PRC had an inaugural ceremony on April 15, 1947. The PRC was admitted as a bona fide member of the
League of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies on September 17, 1947. Since 2004, the chairman of the PRC Board of Governors is
Senator Richard J. Gordon. Since 1965, actress
Rosa Rosal has sat on the Board of Governors. Rosal was awarded in 1999 the
Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service for her activities with the PRC.
The Philippine Red Cross Act of 2009 In 2009, Republic Act No. 10072 or the Philippine Red Cross Act of 2009, was signed into law by President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. The law is an affirmation of the country's "conformity with the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their additional protocols, and the Statutes of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement", as well as a confirmation of the PRC's stand as a "voluntary, independent and autonomous nongovernmental society auxiliary to the authorities of the Republic of the Philippines in the humanitarian field". Apart from the apparent change in the organization's name from "Philippine National Red Cross" to "Philippine Red Cross", included in the act's new provisions is the organizations' exemption from real property taxes, direct and indirect taxes, duties and fees that will emerge from its operations and its exclusive importations and purchases. == Equipment ==