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Tag: Gloria Arroyo

Ano ang gagawin kay Gloria Arroyo?

The discussions in the previous post on this question of how the next president would handle Gloria Arroyo have been vibrant. However, I noticed that some quoted just a part of the answers which could be misleading.

For my column for Abante I got all the answers of the four presidential aspirants: Senators Manny Villar, Benigno Aquino III, Francis Escudero and Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro.

Although Che-Che Lazaro didn’t ask exactly the same questions to all the interviewees, more or less, you have an idea of their stand or lack of stand.

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Ang isang bagay na gusto ng marami nating kababayan marinig sa mga kandidato para pangulo ay kung ano ang kanilang gagawin kay Gloria Arroyo kung sila ang maupo sa Malacañang.

A semi-permanent state of emergency?

Malaya editorial:

Gloria Arroyo appears to have turned truly insane as she counts the days to her exit on June 30. Is the declared policy of prolonging the nationwide state of emergency in the wake of the devastation of typhoon “Ondoy” her perverse way of exacting retribution on the people for hating and distrusting her?

A deliberate policy of prolonging an emergency does not make sense. After the initial declaration, national and local government units have been freed to release their calamity and contingency funds. Relief and rehabilitation work can now be bidded out without going through stringent requirements for the duration of the emergency. Assessment of damage and drawing up of appropriate rehabilitation programs can be done within 60 days, the duration of an emergency unless otherwise extended.

But all of 365 days and counting to get these things done? Truly it is the hopelessly incompetent who cannot the job fast enough. We have been saying for a long time that Gloria, for all her self-proclaimed expertise as a manager, is at core an incompetent. Many were dazzled in her early years by the image she projected of being a modernizing politician cum technocrat. We were among the few who saw through her posturing early on. And proven right later on.

Bakit wala yatang pinapalabas na pera si Arroyo para sa mag nasalanta ng bagyong Ondoy?

Napansin nyo ba mula Sabado, nang nananalasa ang bagyong Ondoy hanggang ngayon, wala pang order si Gloria Arroyo na magpalabas ng pera mula sa contingency fund?

Tiningnan ko ang website ng Office of the Press Secretary kung saan lahat na press release ng Malacañang lumalabas, wala ni isang order magpalabas ng pera.

Dati kapag may bagyo, pasikat kaagad si Arroyo. Magu-order siyang magpalabas ng pera. Sa budget mayroong mga P1 bilyon na calamity fund at P1 bilyon din para sa contigency fund. Kaya total na mga P2 bilyon sa isang taon. Sa opisina yan ng Presidente at kailangan ang kayang approval sa pagpalabas nun.

Arroyo’s latest gimmick: packs her bags, turns Malacañang into refugee and relief center

Gloria Arroyo’s statement:

Arroyo
Arroyo
The recent calamity brought about by typhoon Ondoy was an extreme event not likely to happen again in our lifetimes. This of course is of little comfort to our countrymen who were ravaged by the storm, and who now need more than ever our time, our compassion, and our time, our compassion, and our material support as they try to rebuild their lives.

As my own small contribution to the common effort, I have ordered Malacanang Palace to be opened to the general public, effective immediately, as a center for relief and rescue operations, the receipt and distribution of charitable donations and the temporary relocation of families who were displaced or made homeless by the storm.

Relocated families will be sheltered in all available premises within the Palace grounds. Government employees will be asked to make room for our guests, and I myself will move across the river to temporary quarters at bahay pangarap in the PSG compound.

Arroyo tries another tack to stay longer

I’m glad that Comelec Chairman Jose Melo accepts the possibility that automated elections may not take place in many parts of the country on election day.

Last Wednesday, a week after the Supreme Court upheld Comelec’s claim that they are fully capable of a nationwide automated elections despite questions raised by the Concerned Citizens Movement on the legality their having skipped the required testing of the contracted system, Melo said, “Aside from preparations for poll automation, Comelec is also preparing for manual elections sa mga liblib na lugar (in remote areas), provinces with no electricity, and would have issues in electronic transmission. We are ready for manual polls in at least 30 percent or 50 percent of the country as a last contingency measure in case the contingency plans for automation are difficult to implement.”

I don’t know if Melo’s admission of lack of electricity in many areas of the country has something to do with the warning of Energy Secretary Angelo Reyes of a power shortage next year, during election period.

Hindi pinu-proteksyunan ng batas ang krimen

The Arroyos just before a lunch meeting with ZTE officials in Shenzhen on Nov. 2, 2006.
The Arroyos just before a lunch meeting with ZTE officials in Shenzhen on Nov. 2, 2006.

Kailan ba naman na ang pangungurakot sa kaban ng bayan ay “acts of the state” o gawain para sa bayan?

Tama ang punto ng Concerned Citizens Movement sa pag-kwestyun sa desisyon ng Ombudsman na hindi kasama si Gloria Arroyo sa kakasuhan sa ma-anomalya na $329 milyon na NBN-ZTE deal.

Ang pinuprotektahan ng Saligang Batas ay ang mga gawain ng isang pangulo para sa taumbayan. Hindi ang katiwalian na dapat nga ang pangulo mismo ang magsusulong ng pagparusa dahil yan ay obligasyon niya sa taumbayan.

Ombudsman clears Arroyo on NBN deal

Update: Concerned Citizens Movement to appeal Ombudsman’s ‘fatally flawed’ decision clearing GMA

The Concerned Citizens Movement, whose members stood as complainants in the only complaint that included Mrs. Gloria Miguel Arroyo as respondent for violations of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act in connection with the NBN-ZTE deal , will appeal the recent decision of the Ombudsman to charge only Chairman Abalos and Chairman Abalos with violations of the anti-graft and corrupt practices act before the Sandiganbayan, which they described as “fatally flawed”.

“This a decision that sanctions impunity. Why should only two co-conspirators be charged when the facts are very clear that the Spouses Miguel and Gloria Arroyo were co-conspirators to the criminal acts committed in the botched NBN-ZTE deal? In a conspiracy, the act of one is the act of all”, Roque who is both a complainant and counsel declared.

The CCM also challenged anew the correctness of the Ombudsman stance that the President is both immune from investigation and from suits. According to the group, the principle of presidential immunity has been revised since it was first applied in Philippine jurisprudence.

Roque explained: “Presidential immunity finds no demonstrable textual commitment in the letters of our Constitution. It was merely a result of jurisprudence intended to improve the administration of public administration. The assumption is that without the said immunity, the President may run out of time to govern since all her time will be devoted to defending herself in court. Since the concept was first applied in our jurisprudence as early as 1910 in the case of Forbes vs. Chuoco Tiaco, it has since been revised by the our own Philippine Supreme Court, citing the US case of Clinton v. Jones. Today, the prevailing view as held in the case of Estrada v. Desierto, is that immunity should only be for official acts: “It will be anomalous to hold that immunity is an inoculation from liability for unlawful acts and omissions. The rule is that unlawful acts of public officials are not acts of the state and the officer who acts illegally is not acting as such but stands on the same footing as any other trespasser. Indeed, a critical reading of current literature on executive immunity will reveal a judicial disinclination to expand the privilege especially when it impedes the search for truth and impairs the vindication of a right”(Estrada vs. Desierto, (353 SCRA 452).

Construing this decision of the Ombudsman with the decision of the Supreme Court in Neri vs. Blue Ribbon Committee which upheld Neri’s invocation of privilege in refusing to answer questions that would clearly show the President’s culpability, Roque said that this latest Ombudsman decision, if unchallenged, will result in presidential Impunity and a license for all Presidents to commit any and all criminal acts such as other acts of graft and corruption and even killings, torture and enforced disappearances.

Aside from Roque, other CCM members who stood as complainants are: Josefina Lichauco, Consuelo Paz, Renato Constantino jr., Guillermo Cunanan, Roel Garcia, Bebu Bulchand, Perla Bandiola, and Maria Flor Querubin.

CCM members were also joined in the said Petition by Former Vice-President Teofisto Guingona, and representatives from Bayan Muna, Gabriela, ACT, Kilusan Mayo Uno , Courage and Bayan.

Leila Salaverria
Inquirer

The Office of the Ombudsman has dropped graft charges against President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and her husband in connection with the scuttled $329-million NBN-ZTE deal, but recommended the prosecution of former election chief Benjamin Abalos and ex-Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Romulo Neri.

Pang-iinis ni Arroyo sa pamilyang Aquino

Bilib naman talaga ako sa kapal ng mukha at tapang ng apog nitong si Gloria Arroyo at ng kanyang mga alagad.

Sinabi na nga ng pamilyang Aquino na “No, thank you” doon sa kanilang plano na magpatayo ng monumento para kay dating Pangulong Cory Aquino sa Rizal Park, pinagpipilitan pa.

Sabi ni Gary Olivar, dating aktibista ng panahon ni Pangulong Marcos na ngayon ay isa sa tagapagsalita ni Arroyo: “The proposed Rizal Park monument to President Cory is a gift in her honor from the Filipino people and the Philippine government through their elected president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.”