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Category: Governance

It’s politics, not ethics

This is another view on the C-5 controvery:

by Rene B. Azurin
BusinessWorld

More credibility, probably, would attach to the Senate committee report on its so-called “investigations” into the C-5 road project controversy if senators — most politicos, actually — were not widely perceived as being distinctly unshy, brazen even, about using their considerable power to influence government decisions on public works and procurement. That said, I would certainly give great weight to the C-5 allegations being leveled at Senator Villar if I were satisfied that they were true. I am not.

On an issue precisely of ethics, objective observers must wonder how senators — like presidential candidate Aquino’s Liberal Party partymate Mr. Pangilinan — can first affix their signatures to one resolution clearing Mr. Villar and then about-face 180 degrees to affix their signatures to another one censuring him, just because “it’s the party stand.” Well, that, at least, is an explicit admission of how “honorable” senators define ethics.

Although Mr. Villar has actually already made a point-by-point rebuttal in the Senate itself of the charges of “ethical misconduct” against him and has clearly taken pains to make available to the public — through media — documents supporting his answers to each allegation, he is, alas, simply not media’s darling. Thus, media outfits whose bias for his rivals is obvious to observers constantly detail the allegations against him in their stories on the controversy and formulaically just include his denials but not his specific answers to the allegations. Such is life in these politico- and elite-dominated islands.

‘Ganito kami noon, ganito pa rin kami ngayon’

Malaya editorial

Our favorite “pa-pogi” guy in government, Arthur Yap of the Department of Agriculture, is at it again. In the face of soaring prices of sugar, he directed the National Food Authority to make available 150,000 kilos to poor families through NFA’s “Tindahan Natin” outlets in Metro Manila.

The volume of 150,000 kilos translates into 150 tons of sugar. At an estimated nationwide consumption of 6,000 tons a day, the volume the NFA has been directed to inject into a market represents 2.5 percent of consumption. The volume will last about half an hour assuming people buy sugar round the clock during a 24-hour day.

(And, yes, we know that in doing the pencil-pushing exercise above we might be accused of intentional misrepresentation. The 150,000-kilo infusion is limited to Metro Manila, hence, we should not have used the nationwide consumption figure as the denominator. But we deliberately did so to show the silliness of Yap’s announcement given the obvious gap in demand and supply situation.)

Tunay na kulay

Kahit na pangit ang nangyayari ngayon sa Senado, mabuti na rin dahil lumalabas ang tunay na kulay ng marami sa kanila.

Kung hindi sila nagbabangayan, di hindi sana natin nalaman ang mga behind the scenes na ginawa ni Sen. Manny Villar katulad ng pakiki-usap kay Senate President Juan Ponce-Enrile na parang ang dating daw ay nag-aalok ng tulong kapalit ang favorable na report tungkol sa C-5 road extension na proyekto.

Nalulungkot lang ako sa nangyari kay Sen. Aquilino Pimentel, Jr. na malaki rin naman ang kontribusyon sa ating demokrasya sa kanyang paglaban sa diktaturang Marcos.

Tensions run high in C-5 showdown

by JP Lopez
Malaya

Tension ran high yesterday as Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile reported out to the plenary Committee Report 780 censuring Sen. Manuel Villar Jr. for allegedly using his position to realign the C-5 road extension project that will benefit his and his family’s real estate firms.

Villar, who never showed up at any of the committee’s deliberations to answer the accusations against him, was a virtual no-show, arriving at the session hall only after the session was adjourned.

Senate minority leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr. tried to delay the sponsorship speech of Enrile by questioning the Senate procedure on treating committee reports and resolutions.

May tupak ba si GMA?

Talaga naman. Hindi ko alam kung sino ang mas matindi ang tama, si Gloria Arroyo o si Marlene Aguilar-Pollard.

Kasi, sabi ni Aguilar-Pollard nakilala raw niya si Mayor Andal Ampatuan sa isang gabing pamamalgi niya sa detention quarters ng National Bureau of Investigation at sinabi niya sa media na huwag daw husgahan ang suspek sa pagpatay ng hindi kukulang sa 57 na tao sa Maguindanao dahil “mabait” naman daw. Dios mio naman!

Ito namang si Arroyo, sa interview sa kanya ni Joe Taruc sa DZRH, sinabi niya na “swerte” raw ang susunod sa kanya dahil matatag daw ang ekonomiya na kanyang iiwanan. “Alam mo siguro, suwerte yung susunod na pangulo sa akin.Iyong susunod na administrasyon maipagpatuloy lang niya, uusbong ang ating bansa.”

Paalam, Cerge

Mrs. Remonde:Cerge going through crisis in credibility

Nasa taxi ako kahapon ilang minuto pasado ng 12 ng hapon nang lumabas ang balita na lumisan na si Press Secretary Cerge Remonde ng 11:51 ng umaga sa Makati Medical Center.

Sabi ng taxidriver, “Kung sino-sino ang kinukuha, bakit hindi pa tumbukin ang talagang yun dapat kunin.”
Nakuha ko ang ibig sabihin ng driver. Nang sabihin ng radio reporter na kaya pinuntahan ng kanyang driver si Remonde (at doon na natagpuan sa bathroom na walang malay) dahil may naka-schedule na press conference sa Malacañang, sabi ng driver, “Ayaw na siguro ng Panginoon na magsinungaling pa siya.”

Mahirap talaga magtrabaho para kay Gloria Arroyo. Kahit mabait ka na tao, kahit wala kang ginagawa na masama para sa sarili mo, mahirap ka hahanga-an ng taumbayan.

Draft Senate report seeks Villar censure

(We still have to see the report but it looks like the senators concluded the issue was ethics, not graft.)

Click here for the report: http://www.senate.gov.ph/lisdata/1341811858!.pdf

Manny Villar
Manny Villar
“It’s nothing but a piece of paper, ” Cayetano

By Christine Avendaño
Philippine Daily Inquirer

A draft report by the Senate committee of the whole is seeking the censure of Sen. Manuel Villar Jr. after finding him to have engaged in improper and unethical conduct in connection with the C-5 road extension project.

The report, which an official of a political party furnished the Philippine Daily Inquirer, said Villar’s involvement in the C-5 project in Parañaque and Las Piñas cities “made the Filipino suffer the total amount of P6.22 billion.”

The committee demanded the money’s return.

The money came from the realigned P4.28 billion for the extension project, the P1.8 billion spent for the original project but which was wasted due to the realignment, and the P141.1 million in overpriced right-of-way payments for Villar’s real estate companies.

Justice

by Conrado de Quiros
Philippine Daily Inquirer

It’s not just that justice delayed is justice denied. It’s also that justice selectively served is justice screwed.

At that, I don’t even know that justice, selective or not, is being served on Panfilo Lacson for the murders of Bubby Dacer and his driver, Emmanuel Corbito. Of course there’s direct evidence against him in the form of ex-Senior Supt. Cezar Mancao saying he heard him order Michael Ray Aquino to dispose of Dacer. But all that stands on the head of the pin that is Mancao’s credibility. Did Mancao truly suffer remorse during his exile in the US and felt compelled to tell what he knew a decade later, or is he just down on his luck from the same exile in the US and ready to swear that Lacson had Jose Rizal shot?

That is not something we can know under the present regime. I have no problem with Lacson being prosecuted grandly for the murders of Dacer and Corbito, and if found guilty punished grandly as well. But I have every problem with him being tried under this government. Or, since that is really a circuitous way of putting it, by this government. Whatever Lola wants, Lola gets. The justice department today has the distinction of being the one office writ large in Orwellian script, fomenting the opposite of what it says.

Let Trillanes fulfill his mandate

Senate Majority Floorleader Miguel Zubiri should not worry about the Philippines setting a precedent in allowing a detained senator to fulfill his duties to the people.

The Philippines has already set a precedent for having a president who has never been elected to that position by the people.

Zubiri, defending his sitting on a Senate resolution allowing detained Senator Antonio Trillanes IV to participate in the sessions and other legislative functions through remote or electronic Zubiri asked, “Is there a parliament anywhere around the world that allows legally detained members to participate in their sessions?”

Huwag maniguro kay Arroyo

Kamakailan, kausap ko si Albay Gov. Joey Salceda, ang economic adviser ni Arroyo, at inamin niyang talagang hindi nakuha ni Arroyo ang tiwala at pagmamahal ng taumbayan.

Paano ba naman nila itatanggi yan. Sa Disyembre 2009 na survey ng Social Weather Station, minus 38 ang satisfaction rating ni Arroyo. Sobra 60 porsiyento ang ayaw sa kanya at 23 na porsiyento lang ang kuntento sa kanya. Siya ang pinakaii-nisan na presidente sa Pilipinas mula ng mabalik ang demokrasya sa Pilipinas noong 1986.

Sabi ni Salceda ngayon daw nakita nila na “Good economic performance cannot compensate lack of mandate”. (Hindi talaga mapagtakpan ng magandang ekonomiya ang kawalang mandato o kung hindi ka binoto ng taumbayan.)