This still left Enrile and Ramos' forces trapped in the camps, however, and the two sought assistance from Roman Catholic Cardinal Jaime Sin.
[12][13] Cardinal Sin called on private citizens, already planning protests connected to cheating during the elections, to help protect Enrile and Ramos' forces by forming a human barricade on the stretch of EDSA between the two camps.
[12][13] The following years remained hostile for the Philippines, a series of bloody coup attempts led by then-Col. Gregorio Honasan of the Reform the Armed Forces Movement, involved thousands of renegade troops, including elite units from the army and marines, in a coordinated series of attacks on Malacanang and several major military camps in Manila and surrounding provinces, including Sangley and Villamor Air Base, using the T-28 aircraft for aerial assaults.
[14] In 1990, RAM cut its ties with the SFP (Soldiers of the Filipino People), and changed its name to Rebolusyonaryong Alyansang Makabansa (Revolutionary Nationalist Alliance).
[15] After the term of Corazon Aquino ended, peace talks with the administration of President Fidel V. Ramos led to the release of Proclamation No.
[16][17] In 2021, Antipolo Regional Trial Court Branch 97 convicted three members of the Reform the Armed Forces Movement[18] for the murder of labor leader Rolando Olalia and union worker Leonor Alay-ay.
[19] Former RAM officers Fernando Casanova, Dennis Jabatan, and Desiderio Perez[20] were convicted on two counts of murder and sentenced to up to 40 years imprisonment, without eligibility for parole.