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The system breeds corruption

April 13, 2010

Chaff from the Grain

The system breeds corruption

By HECTOR R.R. VILLANUEVA Former Press Secretary
April 12, 2010, 5:19pm

“Only he who keeps his eye fixed on the far horizon will find his right road.” — DAG HARRARSKjold (1961)

It will be tragic for the Philippines if the next president will be elected based on pay-per-view commissioned popularity surveys and media hype, and nothing else.

Recent examples in the last decade easily come to mind.

In 1998, President Joseph “Erap” Estrada came to power in a landslide victory only to be ousted from office after 2 ½ years by EDSA-DOS people power.

Then Vice President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo of the administration party also won by a landslide.

Both outstanding personalities from two opposite political parties enjoyed unprecedented popularity.

President Estrada was subsequently convicted of plunder, albeit pardoned, and served his prison term in stately exile in his country estate in Tanay, Rizal.

Meanwhile, Vice President Gloria Arroyo succeeded the deposed President, as mandated by the Constitution, in 2001.

Since then, owing to Erap-inspired destabilization protests, coup attempts, corruption, and the global economic crisis, the satisfaction and popularity ratings of President Gloria Arroyo have consistently been going south to below negative zero for reasons beyond comprehension, notwithstanding her impressive infrastructure accomplishments and skillful steering of the economy.

Across the sea, former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra won twice by landslide, only to be deposed by a military-led coup, and subsequently exiled abroad and ignominy.

Today, the “Red-shirt” followers of Thaksin are now the ones destabilizing and tearing apart Thailand.

First, presidential aspirants all pledge to effect dramatic changes in Philippine society once elected.

It is a political commitment and a solemn promise in which voters have heard many times before in earlier elections.

Truth to tell, it is the existing oligarchic political system that shapes, or reshapes, or steers Philippine society, and not political leaders while swallowing them into its black hole.

One in power with his relatives, classmates, cronies, and court jesters, the next President will find it more prudent and more convenient to temporize and work within the system, and gradually relegate Constitution and fundamental reforms to the backburner. Instead, he will address the more mundane and urgent retail issues, such as, power shortage, budget deficit, taxes, Cabinet appointments, legislative agenda, the speakership, and other down-to-earth issues.

Second, the tolerant oligarchy-dominated political framework not only allows corruption to incubate and spread but also tolerates anomalies, immoral and illegal activities from election frauds to election overspending, illegal posters, untruth in advertising, and worst of all, manipulated and fabricated popularity surveys and media hype which are a gross disservice to the nation and to the Filipino people.

When all is said and done, regardless of who will be the next President, especially if they will be elected by hype and not competence and merit, and no immediate Constitutional revision, corruption will continue with a new set of corruptors, expensive elections, excessive politics, “balimbingism,” and more scams because the system allows and abets them.

Since democracy has many faces, meanings, nuances, characteristics, and “nationality,” it has its basic strength and virtue pari-passu with its weaknesses, abuses, and negative aberrations.

You be the judge.

Posted by belisima at 3:25 pm | permalink | Add comment

GMA, Obama at US nuclear summit

GMA, Obama at US nuclear summit

By ELENA L. ABEN
April 13, 2010, 10:45am

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Leaders of more than 40 countries, including President Arroyo, will gather here from April 12 to 13 for the 2010 Nuclear Security Summit (NSS), which US President Barack Obama is hosting to seek international commitment to stop nuclear proliferation, secure “loose” nuclear materials in the world today and prevent nuclear smuggling and terrorism.

During the summit, President Arroyo is expected to define the Philippines’ position on nuclear terrorism, which the US President has identified as the most immediate and extreme threat to global security.

The Philippines is set to assume the presidency of the Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, which binds signatory countries not to spread or allow other countries to spread nuclear weapons, missile materials and nuclear weapons technology.

The holding of the NSS has placed the US capital in another major security alert since the inauguration of Obama, who has just signed a new nuclear arms reduction agreement with Russia.

Along with the security initiatives leading to the treaty with Russia, Obama is said to be looking at the Washington Summit as “another cornerstone of (his) nuclear security policy.”

According to the White House, the summit will “facilitate discussions on the nature of the threat and develop steps that can be taken together to secure vulnerable materials, combat nuclear smuggling and deter, detect, and disrupt attempts at nuclear terrorism.”

Obama will welcome the leaders at the Walter E. Washington Center here, while on the second day of the summit, the US President will chair the plenary discussions on the critical topic “ National Actions to Secure Nuclear Materials and Prevent Illicit Trafficking.”

The discussions will be followed by a working lunch among the world leaders, also at the convention center, during which Obama will again lead discussions on “ The Role of the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) in Nuclear Security.”

The US President will close the summit with a press conference.

Expectations are high here that the Summit will result in a communiqué that will reflect the pledges of the participating countries to efforts “to attain the highest levels of nuclear security, which is essential to international security, as well as the development and expansion of peaceful nuclear energy worldwide.”

Obama, who is pushing the anti-nuclear terrorism initiatives, has envisioned a four-year timeline within which all nuclear materials must be secured to prevent them from falling into terrorist hands, particularly the Al-Qaeda.

A treaty ally of the United States, the Philippines has been relentlessly pursuing counter-terrorism initiatives, particularly in Mindanao, where the Al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) is based. US Pacific Command Units have also been deployed for counter-terrorism action in the Philippines, particularly in the South.

The Philippine participation in the summit, however, is not expected to raise much interest in the country’s waning aspirations for civilian nuclear technology, seen by some legislators as a possible solution to the power supply instability in the country and future power problems.

The President Arroyo left Monday to pursue her five-day swing to United States and Spain with a directive to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) to ensure the safety of nearly 15,000 Filipinos in Thailand, particularly those living and working in Bangkok following the escalation of violence in the Thai capital.

Executive Secretary Leandro Mendoza said Mrs. Arroyo wanted to “keep the peace and make all situation very normal” while she was away for her five-day swing in the United States and Spain.

“We’re monitoring of what’s happening in Thailand and you know the concern is the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region,” he said in ambush interview after the President and her 25-man delegation flew to Washington via Philippines Airlines chartered flight at 8:30 a.m.

He said there is still no need to evacuate the 14,880 Filipinos in Thailand.

Posted by belisima at 3:20 pm | permalink | Add comment

     

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