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Category: Military

Media concerns in Nov. 29 incident

There are good pictures of the Nov. 29 incident in this site. Please click here.

(This is the statement I read at the hearing of the Senate Committees on Justice and Human Rights and Public Order and Illegal Drugs on the warrantless arrest of members of media after the Manila Peninsula standoff.)

In the November 29 incident at the Manila Peninsula, I see two media -related concerns: The first pertains to the duty of a journalist to inform the public of the unfolding crisis as truthfully as he or she can. The second pertains to the constitutional right of a person—journalist or not—to liberty and due process.

When I decided to stay at the Manila Peninsula despite the evacuation order from authorities (Malaya was never officially informed about the warning from the PNP, but learned about it from TV news), it was in performance of my duty as a journalist, which is to inform the public as truthfully as I can of the unfolding events that I considered—and still consider—of national interest.

Toadies crawling out of the woodwork

Malaya editorial:

A Marine colonel who headed the military component of the PNP-AFP contingent which assaulted the Manila Peninsula has started looking for “padrinos” at the Commission on Appointments to help swing his nomination to brigadier general.

His confirmation originally was seen as a cinch. There were some derogatory marks on his service record and he was also perceived as a “bata-bata” of AFP chief Gen. Hermogenes Esperon. Points against him, but not fatal to his career.

Post-Manila Pen, Col. Jonathan Martir is the proverbial camel seeking to pass through the needle’s eye. The opposition is determined to block his confirmation. He is likely to stay a colonel until the AFP rule on attrition catches up with him.

Esperon would be honored to be extended

by Victor Reyes

Armed Forces chief Gen. Hermogenes Esperon Jr. said he does not see it in the horizon but he would be honored if President Arroyo would extend his tour of duty as head of the 120,000-strong military beyond Feb. 9, 2008 when he reaches the mandatory retirement age of 56.

Esperon, the only one still active of so-called Hello Garci generals who supposedly helped rig the 2004 presidential elections in Mindanao to ensure President Arroyo’s victory, said the AFP chief’s tour of duty can be extended for a maximum of three years under the Constitution but the retirement age remains at 56.

Media arrests preview of ‘more dangerous times ahead’

Cabinet secretaries snub Senate’s media arrest hearing

Click here for Inquirer’s account: Media asserts rights, role in democracy

From ABS-CBN Online:

Journalists present at a Senate hearing on Thursday expressed fears because of the police’s arrest of media people who decided to stay inside a luxury hotel in Makati City last month while a group of rebel soldiers led by Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV and Army Brig. Gen. Danilo Lim were calling on the public to withdraw support to President Arroyo.

In her opening statement during the hearing, Malaya newspaper columnist Ellen Tordesillas, said scenes of movies about The Holocaust came into her mind while she and other journalists were being lined up and brought into a waiting police bus after the six-hour standoff.

Makati court junks rebellion case vs civilians

by Ashzel Hachero and Victor Reyes

A Makati court yesterday dismissed for lack of probable
cause the rebellion charge filed by the justice department against former Vice President Teofisto Guingona and 17 others in connection with the standoff at the Peninsula Hotel in Makati City late last month.

Judge Elmo Alameda also ordered the release of 14 individuals from detention at the PNP Custodial Center in Camp Crame.

Trillanes: “Tuloy ang laban!”

trillanes-gma7.JPGThis is to clarify recent news reports and headlines pertaining to my PDAF Allocation and yesterday’s court apology.

It had been my campaign promise to waive my PDAF allocation and I remain committed to that. However, I was informed by my Senate staff that since I am entering in the middle of the Fiscal year of 2007, half of the P200M PDAF allocation per senator is already part of the budget and, therefore, cannot be waived anymore. Otherwise, if the said amount would not be programmed, it would be like giving GMA a P100M blank check. Hence, I decided to have my PDAF funds programmed to various public hospitals all over the country as well as for the construction of school buildings. This is not a crime!

However, what had been conveniently excluded in the reports is my letter to the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile dated 28 Nov 2007, where I requested that my PDAF allocation for infrastructure projects be removed from next year’s budget which is exactly my campaign commitment.

Lim reiterates Oakwood agreement

Update: Agreement not binding: Esperon

That’s the big difference between an honorable officer and a dishonorable one. Click here for full story in Inquirer.

In his 30 minute testimony at the hearing this morning, Brig. Gen. Lim reiterated that the agreement forged between representatives of the government and the Magdalo officers was binding because it was approved by Gloria Arroyo.

The agreement was soldiers would surrender but only five of the core leaders would be charged in a military and for the rest to return to barracks. The five are Ltsg Antonio Trillanes IV, Ltsg James Layug, Capt. Gerardo Gambala, Capt. Milo Maestrocampo and Capt. Gary Alejano.

There were also reforms in the military that the rebel junior officers wanted to be investigated. Those were never done.

Pimentel to keep media out of courtoom till case promulgation

Journalists will be banned from covering the trial of Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV and 25 other Magdalo soldiers on mutiny charges inside the sala of Makati Judge Oscar Pimentel until the case has been promulgated.

Capt. Carlo Ferrer, public information officer of the Armed Forces’ National Capital Command, relayed Pimentel’s directive to journalists gathered at the corridor of the 14th floor of the Makati courthouse to cover the resumption of the trial this morning. He said the case may be promulgated before the end of December.

Ferrer, who has allowed journalists to move a few meters closer to Pimentel’s sala, would not say how many soldiers have been fielded to secure today’s proceedings. Two armored personnel carriers have been stationed at the Makati City Hall premises.

Lim testimony resumes today; security tight

The trial of the 26 Magdalo soldiers led by Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV for their participation in the so-called Oakwood mutiny in 2003 resumes in about an hour.

Brig. Gen. Danilo Lim, whose testimony last Nov. 29 was abruptly cut short when the accused walked out of Makati Judge Oscar Pimentel’s courtroom and proceeded to the Manila Peninsula Hotel to call for the withdrawal of support for the Arroyo administration, will be back at the witness stand.

The government is not taking any chances, fielding more than a thousand soldiers from the Army and Air Force in addition to police personnel to make sure there will be no Manila Peninsula standoff redux. Soldiers are posted as far as Buendia Avenue and Paseo de Roxas, a good distance from the courthouse on J. P. Rizal Road.