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House resolution extending funds for victims of human rights abuse OK’d on final reading

By Charmaine A. Tadalan
THE HOUSE OF Representatives has approved on third and final reading a joint resolution extending until December 2019 reparation funds to victims of Ferdinand E. Marcos’s martial-law regime.
House Joint Resolution No. 26, authored by Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Isagani T. Zarate, proposes to authorize the Bureau of Treasury (BTr) and Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) to release funds to victims of human rights violation and to their families after it ended in May 2018.
Republic Act 10368, enacted in 2013, provides in part reparation and recognition of victims of human rights violations during the Marcos regime and mandates the Human Rights Victims Claims Board (HRVCB) to distribute for these purposes a total of P10 billion in two years. The board’s life was extended for another two years with Republic Act 10766.
According to Mr. Zarate, as of May 11, 2018, the board has approved 11,103 legitimate claimants among more than 75,000 applicants.
“As of June 28, 2018, the HRVCB account with the Land Bank of the Philippines reported a balance of P792.628 million,” Mr. Zarate said in his resolution. The remaining balance had been maintained until Aug. 11 and is expected to be reverted to the BTr.
The resolution also seeks to provide a more efficient distribution of funds to the victims, following the reported issuance of 451 “problematic” checks.
Mr. Zarate cited “291 checks which amounted to P239 million, representing unreleased checks, and 160 checks amounting to P110.9 million, representing checks issued to payees who are now deceased.”

Duterte: PHL better off with a dictator like Marcos because Robredo ‘cannot hack it’

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Thursday, Aug. 30, said it would be better for Filipinos to choose a dictator the likes of the late president Ferdinand E. Marcos, Sr. than letting Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo run the country because “she cannot hack it.”
“If I stop now my crusade against drugs and if there is no order in this place, the Philippines, and corruption will continue, patay yun (it won’t work). I said you’re better off choosing a dictator the likes of Marcos. That’s what I suggested,” Mr. Duterte said in his remarks at the 49th Charter Day celebration of Mandaue City at the Mandaue City Cultural and Sports Complex in Cebu on Thursday evening.
He added: “Puwede kayong magkaroon ng (You can follow the) constitutional succession, si (Ms.) Robredo, but she cannot hack it.”
Last Aug. 13, Mr. Duterte said that once he resigns as president, he prefers the “likes” of Senator Francis Joseph G. Escudero or former Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. as his successor over his constitutional successor Ms. Robredo.
Also during his speech, Mr. Duterte said he “stands by [his] words” that Ms. Robredo’s hometown, Naga City, is a “hotbed” of shabu.
“Ang (It’s her) brother-in-law niya ang nagdala ng (who brought) drugs sa (to) Bicol. Totoo yan. Siyempre (That’s true, of course. [They are just in] denial,” he added.
Last week, the city council of Naga has issued a resolution declaring “indignation” over Mr. Duterte’s statement. At the same time, the city council extended an invitation to Mr. Duterte to visit and “walk our safe, peaceful, and drug-free streets.” The city, an independent component city within Camarines Sur, is the hometown of Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo, who belongs to the opposition party. Her late husband, Jesse M. Robredo, was mayor of the city for six terms starting in 1988 and later appointed as Interior and Government secretary under the previous administration of Benigno S.C. Aquino III.
 

Solid waste plan of Quezon City, 15 towns in Luzon approved

THE NATIONAL Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC) approved the Solid Waste Management (SWM) Plan of Quezon City and 15 municipalities in Luzon during its en banc meeting on Aug. 28. The 15 towns are: Dilasag, Dipaculao, and San Luis in Aurora province; Mallig, Isabela; Bacnotan, La Union; General Nakar, Quezon; Mangaldan, Pangasinan; Angat and Guiguinto in Bulacan; Alfonso Lista and Lagawe in Ifugao; and Bongabon, General Natividad, Guimba, and Talugtog in Nueva Ecija. Environment Undersecretary for SWM and Local Government Unit (LGU) Concerns Benny D. Antiporda said the NSWMC, which is under the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, has made it easier and faster for LGUs to secure approval for their plans. Republic Act 9003, the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2000, requires all LGUs to come up with and implement an SWM. Mr. Antiporda reminded local leaders that, “Improper or non-implementation of an approved SWM plan could lead to its cancellation and filing of charges against concerned local officials.” He also encouraged all LGUs to develop a good system on recycling, composting and disposal of solid wastes.

Nationwide round-up

DoT to launch global ad campaign with Boracay as ‘more environment-friendly’ destination

BW FILE PHOTO/LOUINE HOPE U. CONSERVA

THE DEPARTMENT of Tourism (DoT) is preparing to launch a new global advertising campaign, in time for the Oct. 26 reopening of Boracay Island, which will be showcased as a more “environment-friendly” destination.
“When you look at it overall, we really have to make sure that when we roll it out, when we relaunch Boracay, it would be a better destination, more environment-friendly, and it will be more secure and we have to make sure that, more important than anything else, we avoid the problems that led to its closure in the first place,” DoT Spokesperson and Undersecretary for Tourism Development Benito C. Bengzon Jr. said in a statement.
The worldwide advertising campaign will also be complemented by strengthened promotions for various Philippine destinations.
“The fact that we have kept ourselves afloat is a very strong reflection of how resilient the industry is, how quick we are to make adjustments with our marketing and promotions and I think, also a very strong communication of how prepared the other destinations are in welcoming the influx of tourists who otherwise would have gone to Boracay,” Mr. Bengzon said.
DoT recorded 3.706 million foreign arrivals in the first half of 2018, which Mr. Bengzon said is indicative that the industry in “well on track with its 7.4 million target” for the year.

Palace says Piñol still has Duterte’s trust

MALACAÑANG ON Thursday said Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol still has the trust and confidence of President Rodrigo R. Duterte despite a call by lawmakers for his resignation because of his proposal that rice smuggling in the southwestern part of Mindanao be “legalized.”
“Unless fired, yes!” Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. told reporters in a text message when asked if Mr. Piñol still enjoys the President’s trust and confidence amid the controversy.
In another statement, Mr. Roque said, “We understand Agriculture Secretary Piñol was misquoted on the issue of legalized smuggling of rice in Zamboanga.”
“The recommendation of the Department of Agriculture (DA) is to establish a rice trading post where government can collect customs duty on legally imported rice with import permit from the National Food Authority (NFA). We also understand that the amount of imports to be allowed will be enough to cover the needs of the ZamBaSulTa (Zamboanga-Basilan-Sulu-Tawi Tawi) area,” he added.
At the same time, Mr. Roque said the government expects “the rice situation normalizing because the main harvest is beginning to come in by next month.”
Meanwhile, Senator Cynthia A. Villar, Senate committee on agriculture and food chairperson, said in an interview with reporters, “It’s not my option to make him resign, it’s the wish of the President. Ako (Me) I’m just pointing out na (that) we’re not happy.” — Arjay L. Balinbin
>> See related story on http://www.bworldonline.com/p2b-revenue-seen-from-regulated-rice-trading-in-zambasulta/

3 more Dengvaxia-related cases filed

THREE NEW cases on deaths due allegedly to Dengvaxia vaccination were filed before the Department of Justice (DOJ) on Thursday.
Named as respondents are former Health secretary Janette L. Garin, several other government officials, Dengvaxia manufacturer Sanofi Pastuer, Inc., and distributor Zuellig Pharma Corp.
The charges are reckless imprudence resulting to homicide, violation of anti-torture act, and violation of consumer protection act for the deaths of Clarissa Alcantara, Erico Leabres, and Christine Mae de Guzman.
This brings the number of Dengvaxia-related charges to Dengvaxia 15.
Public Attorneys Office (PAO) Chief Persida V. Rueda-Acosta, speaking to reporters after the filing, said they found common patterns in the signs and symptoms among the three victims.
“Same pattern, common pattern. Bago mabakunahan (before vaccination), they appear to be healthy. No history of bleeding… hemorrhages. Pero nung mabakunahan (after vaccination), common signs and symptoms: headache, pamumutla (paleness), vomiting, stomach ache, diarrhea.”
Ms. Garin, sought for comment, said, “The new cases as well as the ones previously filed are all baseless and not supported by expert medical testimony. The PAO is giving false hopes to the poor parents who do not fully understand the medical basis of their complaint. They are being misled by PAO doctors who are not pathologists nor experts in vaccinology.”
“The actions of PAO should in fact be questioned before the Ombudsman for causing undue prejudice to the government’s health programs,” she added.
In a press conference, PAO Forensic Chief Erwin P. Erfe said there is a group of doctors and lawyers who are also planning to file a complaint against incumbent Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III seeking to revoke his medical license and bring the case before the International Criminal Court.
Mr. Erfe said the charges would be based on Mr. Duque’s alleged negligence over Dengvaxia vaccine recipients who have died.
In response, Mr. Duque told reporters that the complaints are “baseless.”
“I do not know what they’re talking about, I consider such actions as totally baseless, malicious… these are nuisance complaints meant to distract me from doing my varying important job of protecting the health of the Filipino people.” — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

No-parking policy to be strictly implemented along Mabuhay Lanes

THE METRO Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced on Thursday it will implement a stricter no-parking policy with a P500 fine along 17 Mabuhay Lanes beginning Friday morning.
Mabuhay Lanes are express routes connected to main thoroughfare EDSA and roads going to commercial districts and shopping hubs.
“We’re announcing and warning the public, all Mabuhay lanes, starting tomorrow, 6 a.m.,” MMDA General Manager Jose Arturo S. Garcia, Jr. said in a press briefing yesterday.
The parking ban will be in effect from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.
“Traffic enforcers are instructed to issue citation ticket to vehicle owners. For unattended vehicles, tickets will be attached to their windshields,” said Mr. Garcia, adding that this scheme is expected to reduce confrontation between drivers and MMDA personnel as well as avoid corruption and illegal towing activities.
The P500 fine consists of P200 for illegal parking, P150 for disregarding traffic signs, and P150 for obstruction.
Further, Mr. Garcia disclosed that the Metro Manila Council has agreed to increase the fine on illegal parking from P200 to P1,000 for attended vehicles, while unattended vehicles will be raised from P300 to P2,000.
These new rates will not be implemented yet as it is subject first to a meeting with the MMC Special Traffic Committee.
Mr. Garcia said the meeting is set for next week and the higher fees could take effect within September. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

CAAP-ARMM airport manager off-loaded over bomb joke

A PASSENGER on a flight from the Ninoy Aquino International Airport bound for Cotabato Airport was off-loaded after being reported of making a bomb joke. The Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), in a statement yesterday, identified the passenger as Saidona A. Singgon, who was taken into custody by “authorities for questioning.” He reportedly claimed that he is an employee of CAAP, which is under the Department of Transportation (DoTr). The statement said both “CAAP and DOTr deny any connection with the passenger.” Mr. Singgon is actually the CAAP-ARMM airport manager, based on the DoTr-ARMM Web site, as confirmed by a call to the office.

‘LGBT-friendly’ Iloilo City plans creation of support office

IRISH INOCETO IRISH INOCETO/ILOILO PRIDE TEAM FB PAGE

ILOILO Mayor Jose S. Espinosa III has formally declared the city as “LGBT-friendly” and is planning to establish an office that will develop programs and activities for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender sector. Mr. Espinosa said he is also looking into hiring an executive assistant for LGBT affairs. “Here in Iloilo, we don’t frown upon as to what these people choose. We want to give them self-respect,” he said. During the recently concluded 81st Iloilo City Charter Day, among the activities were the Miss LGBT Ambassadress of Iloilo City 2018 and sporting events. In June this year, the Iloilo City Council unanimously approved an anti-discrimination ordinance that penalizes those who discriminate based on sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, descent, ethnic origin, and religious beliefs. It also mandates the creation of the anti-discrimination mediation and conciliation board, with the mayor as chairperson, which will initiate the filing of cases against violators. The Iloilo Pride Team, a network of Ilonggo LGBTQIA (queer, intersex, asexual), is holding the 3rd Iloilo Pride March on Oct. 13. — Louine Hope U. Conserva

Bridge in insurgent stronghold

THE P210-million Lasicam Bridge was inaugurated on Aug. 28, coinciding with the launch of the Caraga Peace and Development Zones that include the provinces of Surigao del Norte and Surigao del Sur. The bridge passes through the barangays of Lahi, Sico-Sico, and Camam-onan in Gigaquit town, a known stronghold of local insurgents. Presidential Peace Adviser Jesus G. Dureza, who led the event, said the infrastructure is part of government’s emphasis on working on peace and development simultaneously. “You cannot sustain peace if you do not improve the lives of people. Conversely, you cannot also sustain development without peace. Dapat iyan (It should be) hand-in-hand,” he said. Speaking on behalf of the Mamanwa Tribe in the area, Datu Emilliano Jede said without the bridge, they had to walk a whole day to reach the town proper.

Zamboanga City backs establishment of Tawi-Tawi rice trading center

THE ZAMBOANGA City government has expressed support for the proposal of Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol to establish a rice trading center in the island province of Tawi-Tawi to regulate the entry of what would have been smuggled rice. Mayor Ma. Isabelle Climaco-Salazar, in a statement, said the city will benefit from this in terms of stabilizing rice supply. “We will abide by our agricultural and economic leaders and managers to craft what is best in order to have enough supplies of rice in the region especially in our city,” she said. Ms. Climaco added that this plan will not affect local rice producers, who produce a minimal share out of total demand. “It will not affect the interest of the local farmer, they are only producing 13% yield for the city,” the mayor said. —Albert F. Arcilla

Nation at a Glance — (08/31/18)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

Shackling ourselves to China

BACK in June 2014, China’s State Council published the “Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System.” The idea was to create a ratings system determining the political reliability of individual Chinese citizens.
The dystopian aspect is obvious: “people with low ratings will have slower internet speeds; restricted access to restaurants, nightclubs or golf courses; and the removal of the right to travel freely abroad.” Furthermore, “scores will influence a person’s rental applications, their ability to get insurance or a loan and even social-security benefits. Citizens with low scores will not be hired by certain employers and will be forbidden from obtaining some jobs, including in the civil service, journalism and legal fields, where of course you must be deemed trustworthy.” (“Big data meets Big Brother as China moves to rate its citizens,” October 2017, Wired)
Perhaps one reason why (according to the Bureau of Immigration) there are reportedly three million Chinese nationals who entered our country since 2016. In the first half of 2018, almost 800,000 Chinese entered our borders. Many have taken property leases within the Metro’s business areas and supplied loans to the public and private sector.
However, consider as well that we have reportedly (as of 2014) 1 million illegal aliens, with (as reported by immigroup.com this year) around 100,000 Chinese nationals who illegally entered our territory.
Finally, consider that it only took 129,435 Japanese troops to invade the Philippines back in 1941.
The legitimate question, of course, is why pick on China? The answer in a few words: Kalayaan and Bajo De Masinloc.
Under the present Trump administration, the United States Department of Defense (albeit working obviously for US interests rather than for the Philippines) has taken a keen interest in the Pacific trade routes. It recently sent a report to the US Congress. The following part is pertinent:
“China continues to exercise low-intensity coercion to advance its claims in the East and South China Seas. During periods of tension, official statements and state media seek to portray China as reactive. China uses an opportunistically timed progression of incremental but intensifying steps to attempt to increase effective control over disputed areas and avoid escalation to military conflict. China also uses economic incentives and punitive trade policies to deter opposition to China’s actions in the region. In 2017, China extended economic cooperation to the Philippines in exchange for taking steps to shelve territorial and maritime disputes. Conversely, a Chinese survey ship lingered around Benham Rise in the spring after the Philippines refused several requests from China to survey the area. Later in the spring, CCG boats reportedly fired warning shots over Philippine fishing boats near Union Bank. In August 2017, China used PLAN, CCG, and PAFMM ships to patrol around Thitu Island and planted a flag on Sandy Cay, a sandbar within 12 nm of Subi Reef and Thitu Island, possibly in response to Manila’s reported plans to upgrade its runway on Thitu Island.”
Economically, many here have also been seduced by China’s One Belt One Road (OBOR) project. The problem is, not many actually know what it is. Like the 9 Dash Line, the Chinese have been deliberately vague about it.
But as the Washington Post’s Adam Taylor reports (“Why countries might want out of China’s Belt and Road,” August 2018), the OBOR is “not a single thing, but rather a catch-all term for investments in more than 60 countries around the world.” “In practice, it usually involves getting foreign countries to take out large loans from China to build vast infrastructure projects, which are then typically built by Chinese companies.”
The catch is that all of it “is quite obviously in China’s interests.” It also “sometimes made no economic sense.” Malaysia’s and Sri Lanka’s experiences are good case studies.
Correlate that with the Pentagon’s above-cited report of China’s strategy to “develop strong economic ties with other countries, shape their interests to align with China’s, and deter confrontation or criticism of China’s approach to sensitive issues.”
So it is unfortunate that we expended so much hatred, at least rhetoric wise, towards our long time ally (albeit one-time colonizer) the US. At least with the latter, we share the same system of government, values (particularly human rights, democracy, and the rule of law), and history.
To paraphrase Franklin Roosevelt, the US may be a bastard but at least we know this bastard. But China?
To be independent is not to toady to another country (whether that be the US, China, or whoever) but rather to conduct ourselves such that we advance our interests, values, and beliefs.
The irony is, with evidence of impending social, political, and economic upheaval in China, further rendered vulnerable by Trump’s “trade war,” we may have sacrificed our constitutionally mandated “independent foreign policy” to favor a country that may not be very helpful to the Philippines at all.
 
Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.
jemygatdula@yahoo.com
www.jemygatdulablogspot.com
facebook.com/jemy.gatdula

Twitter @jemygatdula

‘Moving on’

FERDINAND “Bongbong” Marcos, Jr., then an outgoing senator, ran for the vice-presidency in 2016.
He has refused to concede defeat to Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” Robredo and is contesting her victory before the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET).
Well-known are his far from secret ambitions for the presidency of the Republic, to which his winning the vice-presidency was the intended prelude. But President Rodrigo Duterte only recently made his assuming that post even in the immediate future possible when he said he would resign only if Marcos, Jr. succeeds him.
He has declared that he’s ready for the presidency in the wake of the Duterte endorsement. And Mr. Duterte’s Aug. 25 appointment of regime partisan Teresita de Castro as Chief Justice makes Marcos, Jr.’s winning his protest before the Supreme Court sitting as the PET more than possible within her short term of 41 days. (It starts Aug. 28 and ends with her retirement on Oct. 8 this year.)
These have naturally aroused fears among those who survived his father Ferdinand, Sr.’s dictatorship (1972-1986) that partly thanks to Mr. Duterte, Marcos, Jr., who has justified and defended his father’s regime rather than acknowledge its crimes and apologize for them, could be president of this country.
Meanwhile, Ferdinand, Jr.’s sister, Ilocos Norte Governor Maria Imelda Josefa “Imee” Romualdez Marcos, could quite possibly run for the Senate next year. Her involvement in the conspiracy to oust former House of Representatives Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and to replace him with former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and her joining and taking center stage in the organization and consolidation of Sara Duterte’s “Hugpong ng Pagbabago” political party, have not helped dispel those fears, but on the contrary have further fanned them.
The Marcos sibling’s mother, one of the wealthiest women in the world, Imelda Romualdez Marcos the imeldific, was a two-term congresswoman who can still aspire for another elective or appointive post even at the age of 89. And above it all is the family’s alliance with the Duterte despotism, which they helped elect in 2016 by contributing heavily to Mr. Duterte’s campaign war chest.
All these have alerted human rights defenders, victims of human rights violations, and the surviving members of the broad resistance movement that fought the Marcos dictatorship because of its toll on Filipino lives and fortunes and on the nation as a whole, to the imminent danger of the Marcoses’ once more ascending the pinnacles of power and their imposing on this country a repeat of their dead patriarch’s horrendous 21-year governance record. (Marcos, Sr. was first elected in 1965.)
The numbers in that record speak for themselves. A hundred thousand (100,000) political and social activists, student, worker and farmer leaders, opposition politicians, doctors, nurses, social workers, Moro and other indigenous peoples, artists, writers and independent journalists, among others, were arrested and detained during the Marcos tyranny, and in hundreds of cases tortured in military and police-constabulary camps and “safe houses” all over the Philippines. Some 3,500 were also murdered and hundreds more forcibly disappeared, never to be heard of again.
A $360-million foreign debt the elder Marcos had inherited in 1965 from the previous Diosdado Macapagal administration had ballooned to $28 billion by the time he was overthrown in 1986. The country is still paying off that debt 32 years later and will continue to do so until 2025. During Marcos’s reign as absolute ruler, billions of dollars in public funds and foreign loans were also diverted into Swiss bank accounts or spent on million-dollar shopping sprees, and on real estate, jewelry and art purchases in the United States, Europe and other countries.
In the same period, the number of Filipinos living in poverty increased from 41% of the population to nearly 60%, while a war raged in Mindanao and other parts of the archipelago. At the same time, Marcos’s dependence on, and empowerment of, the police and military transformed them from institutions subordinate to civilian authority into power brokers whose support has become crucial to the stability and survival of any regime including the present one. Despotism has since become a constant threat, although it has assumed a different, though still recognizable form in the awful present.
But it wasn’t only the economy and the institutions of the country’s already limited democracy — the courts, Congress, the free press — that the regime savaged. The arrest, detention, torture and extrajudicial killing of poets and other writers, and of visual artists and journalists, also set Philippine cultural life and development back because of the many killings, because many of the survivors were prevented from practicing their craft, and/or were forced to leave for other countries.
Contrary to the revisionist version of history Marcos, Jr. and his trolls, media hacks and other propagandists are peddling, what happened from 1972 to 1986 wasn’t just between his father and the late Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr., whom the regime assassinated upon his arrival from the United States on Aug. 21, 1983.
It was a struggle between the dictatorship of a bureaucrat capitalist with a boundless appetite for pelf and power, and the Filipino people to whose legitimate demands for the democratization of Philippine governance and society he responded by making himself president for life and absolute ruler, and by arresting, imprisoning, torturing and murdering the best and brightest of at least two generations.
It should be obvious why those who survived the Marcos siblings’ father’s brutal rule and those aware of both history and the roots of the country’s present state of penury, injustice and uncertainty cannot forget that past — which is what both Imee and Ferdinand, Jr. mean when they urge the people to “move on.”
Not only does forgetting the past risk its repetition. From that past may also be traced much of what’s wrong with the present, among them corruption, the monopoly over political power by a handful of dynasties, widespread poverty and underdevelopment, continuing human rights violations, political instability, social unrest, and the perennial threat, already morphing into reality today, of the return of authoritarian rule.
As if they had yielded to the widespread demand for accountability, the Marcoses are asking “what more” their critics want. The answer, though exceedingly clear to anyone with an ounce of understanding of the present, eludes them still. But it is both evident and simple enough: what they want is for the Marcoses rather than the rest of the country to move on.
They can do that not only by acknowledging and apologizing for the suffering their late patriarch’s rule caused hundreds of thousands of men and women, as well as for the deaths in, and injuries to, entire communities, the damage to the entire country, and the foul legacies of martial rule that still haunt us all today. They can also return to the people the billions stashed away in foreign bank accounts and vaults all over the globe.
Most of all should they move on by putting a stop to their constant and unrelenting attempts to inflict themselves on the people of a country who have long suffered and resisted the terrors of being ruled by the most incompetent, most brutal and most self-aggrandizing political class in Southeast Asia. Only by seriously and honestly abandoning their presidential and other political ambitions, and only then, can the process of truly and earnestly moving on begin — towards this country and its people’s reaching some closure on the darkest and most destructive episode in recent Philippine history.
 
Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility.

www.luisteodoro.com