Ferdinand Marcos Jr. walked out of a Manila hospital on Thursday, blaming stress and age for the intestinal flare-up that ignited a firestorm of death rumors and sent Philippine markets wobbling.
Ferdinand Marcos Jr. is home, smiling and—by his own account—ready to rejoin the political fray after a sudden hospitalization for diverticulitis, an inflammation of small colon pouches that can cause sharp abdominal pain, fever and nausea.
The 68-year-old leader recorded a short video inside the presidential palace hours after discharge, wearing a crisp white barong and chuckling at speculation that he had died. “Don’t get too excited yet,” he told unnamed rivals. “The rumors of my death are highly exaggerated.”
What actually happened
Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro said Marcos felt “unwell” late Wednesday, underwent observation at a private Manila hospital and was cleared to leave early Thursday. He immediately held two closed-door meetings at Malacañang Palace, a signal to cabinet members and investors that no power vacuum is forming.
Doctors diagnosed diverticulitis, a condition common among older adults and people under chronic stress. Marcos attributed the flare-up to “age and the pressures of the presidency,” listing a cascade of crises on his plate: Chinese coast-guard confrontations in the South China Sea, recent earthquakes and super-typhoons, economic headwinds and a corruption scandal that has implicated senior legislators.
Why markets and Manila care
Philippine equities dipped on Thursday morning as unsubstantiated WhatsApp messages claimed Marcos had been rushed into intensive care. The peso slid 0.3 % against the dollar before the palace released the video, after which both stocks and the currency trimmed losses. Traders say the episode is a reminder of how heavily investors tie political stability to a single leader nearly halfway into his six-year term.
Historical lens: a family familiar with health drama
Marcos’s father, the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr., hid a serious kidney condition for years while ruling under martial law; his concealment fueled uncertainty that eventually hastened his 1986 ouster. The younger Marcos’s transparency this week—broadcasting a self-deprecating message within hours—appears designed to avoid a repeat of that costly opacity.
What happens next
- Marcos is expected to preside over a national security council meeting on Monday, where officials will finalize the Philippines’ reply to the latest Chinese water-cannon incident at Second Thomas Shoal.
- A previously scheduled state visit by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim next week remains on track, palace aides say.
- Doctors have placed Marcos on a temporary low-fiber diet and recommended reduced public appearances for seven days, but no constitutional hand-over is contemplated.
Bottom line
The president’s rapid discharge and on-camera defiance quelled the most dramatic rumors, yet the episode spotlights two realities: the Philippine body politic is jittery about succession, and the 68-year-old leader is confronting a workload that could strain anyone’s health. How Marcos manages both his diet and geopolitical stress will shape the second half of his presidency—and, by extension, Southeast Asia’s balance of power.
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