Malacañang should not take too much offense on the statement of Manny Pacquiao’s trainor, American national Freddie Roach who said over television that his ward The Pacman is essentially more popular than President Pnoy. That quote was invariably just both hype and existential.

Instead, the Palace can focus its attention upon the people on the ground. Take the Mindanao observer interviewed almost a fortnight ago over ABC News Australia. The observer’s comments are instructive. On the question about how he sizes up the renewed hostilities in Mindanao today, the observer’s curt reply was: “President Aquino cannot solve the conflict”.

Just like the past presidents of the Republic before him he is inadequate. He said, that Aquino’s own mother, the late Pres. Corazon Cojuangco Aquino, who was much, more more popular and powerful as Head of State – coming just after a Revolution that toppled an autocrat, thought that she could bind the nation together by holding out open arms to Nur Misuari and Jose Maria Sison, making friends with rebels left and right and forgetting about and neglecting the armed forces, the members of the entire gamut of the security apparatus, who were fighting for the country with blood, sweat and tears.

Her national security adviser was asked to draft written orders to slash and burn about seventy percent of the budget for all military and security, intelligence forces. The act of cutting the fund to our armed services was actually done, when it was finally legal for the late lady president to sign the draft orders.

Subsequently, the late Mrs. Aquino failed in the quest to consolidate her hold on the country. She could not unify the nation neither heal the wounds that kept opening up one after the other, making it ripe on the part of the uniformed services for armed adventurism to smolder.

Now listen to what follows in the observer’s statement:  The true power in Mindanao is wielded by the agglomeration of fiefdoms – economic, political and those who flaunt power through the barrel of the gun.

These are the power vortices, he said that prevent the resolution of the conflict because for as long as the turmoil exists, these power centers exercise control over the resources of the island. These are much, much more powerful than the elected head of state and of course, the government of this Republic.

This revelation is not new. Douglas McArthur’s father (Arthur), a brigadier general assigned to Mindanao in the early 20th century, may have realized the nascent rise of the phenomenon called guerilla warfare. The .45-caliber Colt pistol was invented to stop suicidal amucks dead on their tracks. But guerilla warfare morphed into the fourth generation warfare, terrorism, now a global problem.

Going back to Pres. Pnoy’s dilemma, the Philippine Chief Executive should perhaps be more serious and down-to-earth in his pursuit of peace.

On the other hand, his idealism and the brave advocacy of good governance, that is taking much of the government’s time, talent and resources is slowly evaporating in the midst of the corrosive effects of corruption surrounding his government.

Go to any national agency and you will not find a worker who will tell you that his bosses are spanking pure and clean. Every single one of them are out to make big bucks while in office and sometimes, their actions cannot be fully kept from public knowledge. So the smaller ones down the line will follow the same dynamics guiding his own superiors.

The franchise to illegally make money using one’s position in government ttrickles down to the grassroots. Try doing business in any municipality and you will see what I mean – you will have to go through the gauntlet of corrupt schemes and mechanics it is like passing through the eye of a needle.

If you are lucky enough to pass muster the various local government units, you will end up several tens of thousands or even many millions poorer. That is why foreigners literally abandoned the Philippines as their investment haven because of WHOLESALE corruption. Unbridled, unstoppable, coming from the top down to the bottom.

Have you been to the premier district in the country lately?  In Ermita, Manila? The police precinct just in front of the United States Embassy Chancery is manned by policemen wearing sando and beach sandals. Visit their precinct quarters and you will see fifty fighting cocks kept in a gallinera. And listen to their talk about the latest events that brought in dirty money. To think that, “What the Manila Police District does, the entire Philippine National Police follows.” It is such as shame.

Even in the country’s court of last resort, the Supreme Court, the cases are not argued in chambers but discussed in private places in five star hotels or wherever the talks could be kept the least harried and tense. If you try to follow up very keenly on a case with the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court, they will refer you to an official who is traditionally authorized to take the reasons for the court to favor your case. Guess who that official is?

These are challenges facing our beloved President. The question hangs above our heads, will the guy not really be up to it or can he still be able to hack it? We hope and pray for the latter.

5 comments :

  1. Mohamad even this government is so corrupt

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  2. Teodorico E. ZaragozaDecember 13, 2011 at 2:58 AM

    The Philippine in Crisis. This is the scenario that some of our political leaders, legal luminaries, and even known constitutionalists would like to paint only because our present government headed by the Executive branch is spearheading a no-non-sense campaign against Corruption.

    Crisis should be viewed from the eyes of the citizenry, from the uncorrupted eyes of the majority or the lot of the Filipino people.

    Let us define Corruption which has long put this country in crisis. Oxford defines it as a decay or rotting; a moral debasement; inducement to do wrong by unlawful or improper means.

    This is the crisis that has long plagued our country and it is sad to note that corruption in the Philippines is perpetuated by people in authority who can induce the commission of wrong by unlawful or improper means. These people are able to commit corruption because they are in high positions of authority, from the Executive, to the legislative, and up to the Judiciary, and in all levels of the government.

    The commission of wrong is induced and made possible because the wrongdoers are able to hide in the mantle of their high positions. Worst is that the highest court of the land, the Supreme Court, which is mandated to uphold justice and guard the rights of the people was used as an instrument of corruption.

    The supposedly honorable court allows itself to be used when magistrates are beholden to the appointing Executive of the land as in the present case wherein the majority of the justices were appointed by former president and now congresswoman Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

    To make the abuse of this appointing power so blatant is to appoint a chief justice within the period disallowed by law before election or after election, when a president is leaving office after her term..

    Curiously enough, the chief justice appointed has been long identified with the former president as her chief-of-staff even while she was still vice-president of the land.

    The former president, who was hounded by all forms of corruption from electoral sabotage to misuse of government funds of the DA, PCSO , and OWWA, clearly needed to appoint justices and a chief justice in the supreme court before she left office even if the appointment was against the law.

    This appointment practice is corruption in itself and infects even our highest court of the land when the justices are beholden to the appointing person and cover, protects, and even bend the law and jurisprudence of decided cases in favor of the person of the wrong doer.

    Some people would like to present that the efforts of the Executive to cleanse the judiciary up to the supreme court could result to a crisis.These people are deliberately misleading the citizenry by making it appear that the efforts of the government against corruption is an attack to the independence of the court. What will bring this country into real crisis and even real chaos is the failure of the government to stamp out corruption.

    The efforts of the government to stamp out corruption is to weed out the judiciary up to the supreme court of corrupt court officials, magistrates, and justices so that the independence of the court and its supreme respectability could be restored.

    The efforts of the government to end corruption at the top is not an attack to an institution, like the supreme court, but to the corrupt court officials administering the dispensation of justice.

    Once the supreme court is rid of these corrupt justices, only then will
    the institution will be able to secure back its name in the high pedestal of respect in our government. A high court with a sacred duty to dispense true and supreme justice for the Filipino people and not for a powerful few..

    IF NOT, WE WILL CONTINUE AS A COUNTRY IN CRISIS IF CORRUPTION IS NOT STAMPED OUT.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Teodorico E. ZaragozaDecember 16, 2011 at 3:30 PM

    RIGHTS & PRIVILEGES.

    Politics has so plagued this country that the true meaning of rights and privileges have been intertwined and confused with each other.

    Public officials, especially in high positions, have forgotten that prior to their election or appointment, they are citizens just like the rest who enjoy the basic rights guaranteed by law.

    Once elected to a public position as high as the Presidency, these basic rights transcends to a higher level we call privileges. The elected official because of the sensitivity of his/her position and the accompanying responsibility gets to enjoy the tight security from our armed forces; enjoy the privilege of living in a government palace which we call Malacanan; able to summon and mobilize other government agency officials tasked to provide services to the people; approve national budget; and approve or veto laws of major importance.

    These official privileges coming with the high position also comes with other privileges accorded to the very person of the high government position for his/her comfort during the term of the office.

    Most important of these privileges inherent to the high position is the respect and admiration the citizenry gives to the elected official.

    However, once the public official involves himself/herself into electoral sabotage, votes manipulation, and downright stealing of the peoples'
    right to suffrage; misuse of public funds; amassing of unexplainable
    wealth; and abuse of authority and public position; twarthing and bending the law for personal gains and purpose; the said public official has impliedly abandoned these privileges and must be treated just like
    the other citizen who must squarely face the law and answer for his/her
    accountability.

    No government official has the moral right to invoke the continuing enjoyment of a high position privileges after the betrayal of public trust. He or she must face the penalties of the law just like any ordinary citizen. Privileges and to a great extent, even rights, are deemed abandoned by a high government official once indicted for a crime against the people. A high public position of honor and privileges is easily lost once the Trust is lost. This is the unique characteristic of
    a high public position.

    As such, a public official that is facing indictment charges for his/her crimes against the people can no longer invoke the same privileges he/she once enjoyed. The privileges in Malacanan cannot be invoked by a former president once he/she is in detention as he/she had already abandoned the privileges when he/she decided to betray the Public Trust.

    A crime committed by a public official is graver in terms of depth as compared to a crime by an ordinary citizen because the public official is held in a high position of respect and esteem and more is expected from from the person in the position in terms of wisdom and righteousness.

    This is also true even with appointed public officials.

    Thus they should squarely face their accountability without any privilege and should face the appropriate penalty in detention with the same discomfort like the rest of violators of our laws who are now in detention.

    If we will accord the former president and now congresswoman Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and former commissioner Benjamin Abalos Christmas furloughs, then nothing should stop us from granting the same privilege to the Ampatuans and the rest of the inmates in the BJMP.

    A public official, regardless of position, becomes an ORDINARY CITIZEN once he/she violates the rights and betray the public trust.

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  4. Teodorico E. ZaragozaDecember 16, 2011 at 4:05 PM

    BLACKMAIL

    The Motion to Inhibit thrown by former COMELEC Commisioner Benjamin Abalos and his lawyers against RTC Judge Jesus Mupas is a downright Blackmail. Worst, it is plainly incredulous and beyond belief that the fighting Judge Mupas will send an emissary to Abalos to propose the fixing of his (Abalos) pending electoral sabotage case for a fee of Php150,000,000.00.

    The Filipino people are not naive, they know the capability of the accused and his allies in the string of controversies he was involved such as the cheating in the 2004 election dubiously installing GMA as president and the fabricated charges against her opponent Fernando Poe, Jr. in order to disqualify him as a presidential candidate; the 2007 electoral manipulation that resulted in the senatorial proclamation and eventually the resignation of former Senator Miguel Zubiri; and the brokering of the ZTE-NBN government broadband project, so detestable that the nation went to the streets in protest.

    Their capability for involvement with the above scandals and mess shows only their capability to hatch and fabricate false charges being
    thrown against the honorable RTC Judge Jesus Mupas now presiding
    over the electoral sabotage cases of GMA and former Commissioner Abalos.

    The good Judge only knows well that he is handling and presiding a case of national importance which could go down in Philippine history as the first Suffrage case that convicted.and sentenced a former president and a comelec commissioner for life.

    Using the very words of the former comelec commissioner:

    VERY SHOCKING! UNBELIEVABLE!

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  5. IMPEACHMENT. The lawyers of the Defense Team of Chief Justice Renato Corona should be asked if they or anyone of them has pending cases with the Supreme Court.

    If they have pending cases in the Supreme Court, these should be disclosed to the Impeachment Court and the general public as the Impeachment proceedings is principally being undertaken for the citizenry who are the basic and primary party being represented by the prosecution panel.

    If the members of the defense panel have pending legal cases in the supreme court and the same are not publicly disclosed, then their participation is tainted with a strong conflict of interest. They are not sincerely in the defense of chief justice corana but they are simply involved for the enhancement of their individual legal practice and for the favorable decision of their cases now pending in the supreme court.

    .

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