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Again on the Catholic Church’s gay problem

Amidst fresh allegations by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the child sex abuse scandal involving the Catholic Church remains in limbo. Abp. Viganò writes: “The silence of the pastors who could have provided a remedy and prevented new victims became increasingly indefensible, a devastating crime for the Church.”
Silence is the last thing needed in these times. And one area in which silence is most deafening happens to be, as Mary Eberstadt famously puts it, the “elephant in the sacristy”: homosexuality in the priesthood.
Attempted deflections on the scandals make reference to clericalism or lack of religious formation. While indeed important factors, such would be incomplete if no account is taken of the homosexual culture that lurks within the clergy.
Not an issue, however, is priestly celibacy and this was already discussed in my previous article “The Catholic Church’s gay problem” (June 27, 2018).
Instead, Crisis Magazine’s (and Thomas More College’s) Tony Esolen explains it this way: “the whole of the meta-crime was homosexual. That is, we do not have examples of womanizing priests or priests with fetishes for girls going out of their way to recruit other such priests, forming a tight little cabal, covering for one another, suborning young men into this wicked way of life, issuing veiled threats against anyone who would go public, and snubbing those who did not approve. There was no network of abusers of girls. This network was about men who wanted to do things with boys and men.”
The numbers support it: John Jay College of Criminal Justice’s study “The Causes and Context of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Catholic Priests in the United States, 1950-2010” show that 80% of the sexual abuse cases were committed by priests with homosexual leanings.
Of such, Penn State professor Philip Jenkins (“The Myth of the Pedophile Priest”) says that only 1.8% of said priests are pedophiles.
The difference between the two, as Jenkins explains it, is this: “many people are confused about the distinction between a pedophile and a person guilty of sex with a minor. The difference is very significant. The phrase ‘pedophile priests’ conjures up images of the worst violation of innocence, callous molesters like Father Porter who assault children 7 years old. ‘Pedophilia’ is a psychiatric term meaning sexual interest in children below the age of puberty.
church
But the vast majority of clergy misconduct cases are nothing like this. The vast majority of instances involve priests who have been sexually active with a person below the age of sexual consent, often 16 or 17 years old, or even older. xxx In almost all cases too, with the older teen-agers, there is an element of consent.”
Stephen De Weger, in his article “Vatican II, the sexual revolution and clergy sexual misconduct” (June 2017), cites psychologist Sheila Murphy in that the “sexual revolution of the 60s, along with the ‘window opening’ of Vatican II, played a part in an increase of clergy sexual activity with adults, resulting in spikes of such activity in the 70s and 80s.”
And indeed, perhaps it’s no coincidence that the drop in reported sexual abuse cases happens at a time when many of today’s priests and seminarians (at least in the US) are under the age of 45 and heterosexual.
Msgr. Charles Pope thus encourages us to the logical and commonsensical conclusion: “the statistical evidence of the recent scandals shows a highly disproportionate level of homosexual involvement.”
“All this demonstrates that seminaries and the priesthood are not good places for those with deep-seated same-sex attraction. It does not take an anthropology or psychology degree to figure this out. Putting a man with same-sex attraction in a seminary is no more advisable than putting a heterosexual man in a woman’s dormitory where he shares shower facilities and close quarters with women.”
The Catholic Church itself is already replete with guidance on this matter, it just needs to apply such rigorously: there is the 1961 Instruction on the Careful Selection and Training of Candidates for the States of Perfection and Sacred Orders (prohibiting gays from entering seminaries) and the 2005 Instruction Concerning the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in view of their Admission to the Seminary and to Holy Orders.
Pope Francis, as Msgr. Pope tells us, reiterated that policy of not admitting “to the seminary or to holy orders those who practice homosexuality, present deep-seated homosexual tendencies or support the so-called ‘gay culture.’” Predictably, this “was underreported, likely because it does not fit the narrative the press wants to create regarding Pope Francis.”
The point here is not to gay bash but to look at the Church’s sex abuse scandal with clear eyes towards correction. As for homosexuality itself, we refer to then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger’s words: “human person, made in the image and likeness of God, can hardly be adequately described by a reductionist reference to his or her sexual orientation.”
 
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.jemygatdula.blogspot.com
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Twitter @jemygatdula

Trapped in the 17th century

It’s been two years and three months into the six-year term of the provincial despotism that became a national affliction in 2016 by promising to deliver the changes that have long eluded the Filipino people. It should be evident by now that it is at the very least underperforming — or at the worst, rapidly bringing the entire country to ruin.
The inflation rate was at a nine-year high of 6.4% last August, but is likely to go further up as fuel and food prices surge to unprecedentedly higher levels.
There’s also a rice crisis the Duterte regime has denied responsibility for, and blamed instead on its former National Food Authority (NFA) administrator.
The Philippine peso is declining in value and has become the weakest currency in Southeast Asia. Philippine unemployment is the worst in the region at 9.1%, or 4.1 million of the labor force, while the underemployed, according to Ibon Databank, is at 6.9 million, which add up to 11.1 million unemployed and underemployed.
“The economy,” notes Ibon, “is in a precarious situation of high inflation, high unemployment, slowing growth, rising interest rates, swelling trade deficits, a failing peso, and stagnation of agriculture and Filipino industry.”
But rather than address these and other problems, the regime has instead focused on silencing critics and encouraging a level of human rights violations unprecedented since the Marcos martial law regime, even as it manufactures various excuses for the nationwide imposition of martial law such as its “Red October” tale of a leftist-rightist conspiracy reminiscent of one of Marcos’s own deceptions in 1972.
Despite the continuing killing of suspected drug addicts and petty traders, the number of which human rights groups have pegged at over 20,000 so far, the campaign to rid the country of illegal drugs that was a major plank of the Duterte campaign platform in 2016 is foundering on the rocks of government corruption and selective application.
While small-time suspected drug pushers are summarily killed, the big- time drug lords and smugglers continue to dump their products into the Philippines. At least two huge drug shipments are unaccounted for, and their existence even dismissed by President Rodrigo Duterte as mere rumors. What amounts to a war against the poor has also left in its wake thousands of widows and orphans. As the murder of breadwinners continues, a humanitarian crisis is developing and adding to the poverty and desperate straits that already afflict millions.
Meanwhile, the promise to forge an independent foreign policy has resulted in imperialist China’s unchallenged dominance over the West Philippine Sea. China’s occupation of the Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone is going on without the country being any less dependent on US economic and military aid, in the context of which the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) are still in force.
By all the rules of logic and common sense, the Duterte satisfaction rating should be plummeting. It did fall in the second quarter this year because of the surge in the prices of prime commodities. But it has recovered in the third, according to survey group Social Weather Stations (SWS).
Although his rating dropped from +65 last June to +41 among the well-off classes and from +52 to +45 among the poorest Filipinos, increases in his rating from, among other sources, the middle class and Luzon, have offset them. From the +45 “good” rating he received last June, Mr. Duterte received a +54 “very good” rating in the Sept. 15 to 23 SWS survey.
False and misleading reports rather than lack of information about what’s happening help explain this increase in his satisfaction rating despite his regime’s only too obvious failings. The orchestrated efforts of online trolls and the government propaganda machine’s liberties with the facts are reaping dividends for the regime in terms of continuing public approval.
But there are even more fundamental reasons, among them the regime’s success in controlling the public mind through the dominance in the public sphere where opinions are shaped of Mr. Duterte’s profanity-laced narratives on the drug problem, the terrorist threat, the supposed conspiracy to oust him from office, human rights, extrajudicial killings, and the International Criminal Court among others.
What this suggests is far from flattering to Filipino political culture. The country’s heroes — Dr. Jose Rizal, the lawyer Apolinario Mabini, the law student Emilio Jacinto, the worker Andres Bonifacio — were all children of the Enlightenment, and passionate in their commitment to liberty, equality, human rights and the rule of reason.
But most of those who pay lip service to these exemplars’ contributions to the Filipino nation eagerly approve of such false, simplistic solutions to complex problems as the execution, without due process and the presumption of innocence, of alleged wrongdoers. They buy into the absurdity that human rights don’t matter to human lives, and cheer regime attacks against critics, protesters and the free press despite Constitutional protection. They laugh at Mr. Duterte’s jokes about rape and extrajudicial killings; they applaud his religious bigotry and his disdain for criticism and dissent.
The rest of the planet is in the 21st century, but like their idol, they’re trapped in the 17th — in the pre-Enlightenment age when absolute rulers had the power of life or death and women were chattel. For them it’s as if the reform and revolutionary periods of Philippine history never happened.
Unlike the calculating and self-aggrandizing presidents the country has been plagued with, Mr. Duterte is in contrast also perceived by many as a straight-talking leader whose profanities are indicative of his earnestness rather than of a troubled mind. Other presidents at home in Filipino and with at least some familiarity with the English language are perceived as too cerebral and therefore unsympathetic to the many.
Mr. Duterte’s incoherence, bumbling ways and makeshift approach to governance feed into the anti-intellectual bent of those from whose lips so often fall what they think is the supreme insult: masyadong marunong (too intelligent), which they throw at protesting students and anyone else who dares criticize regime policies or who fact-check its claims. But there is also the culture of low expectations summed up in the expression puwede na (it will do), which is the very opposite of excellence as a political and governance value.
It is these characteristics of Filipino political culture that have been as instrumental as deceit in keeping in power the dynasties that have managed to make themselves look like true servants of the people rather than their masters. Mr. Duterte and his equally clueless bureaucrats are “satisfactory” because they are not “masyadong marunong” and what they’re doing is “puwede na.”
Rather than high expectations, logic or common sense, what fundamentally account for the regime’s satisfaction rating are most Filipinos’ limited demands on government and their supposed leaders, and the continuing reign of ignorance and unreason in this benighted land.
Rizal argued more than a century ago that against unreason only the power of education can prevail. Unfortunately, among those institutions that are charged with the responsibility of public enlightenment, both the educational system and much of the media are failing in that task, and as a consequence are once again putting this country of lost hopes in the same perils as those that almost destroyed it in 1972.
 
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

On popularity

Sudden fame is a like an intense fever. Its symptoms vary from vertigo, dizzy spells to blurred vision and breathlessness. The perception and depth of field alter as the cranium swells beyond normal proportion.
Some people are afflicted by celebrity blindness, deafness, numbness and selective amnesia. They forget who they once were, and who were their old friends. They are impressed by new shiny ones (who may only be opportunists and fair-weather users).
Victor Hugo once wrote, “Popularity? It’s glory’s small change.”
When a new star shoots up from the shadows of obscurity to the dazzling limelight, he develops an attitude. The narcissistic syndrome “I, me, myself” overshadows whatever good qualities he may possess. He sees, hears and remembers nothing and nobody but himself.
Not a few individuals become thoroughly self-absorbed — to the exclusion of other people. Obsessed with projecting a glossy image, the new star attempts to reinvent himself or enhance his packaging. In extreme cases, his personal story is sometimes edited and embellished to include some minor details such as nonexistent medals, awards. Significant events in the past may have been “altered” to the point that history is told in a different perspective. In the recent past, this expert manipulation of the truth has been embellished or suppressed to favor the various stars. Whatever is conveniently packaged can be convincing to the innocent or gullible public.
In politics and showbiz, fame and immense popularity come at a high price. The ego gets a tremendous boost but there are corresponding psychic losses. The lack of privacy and the eventual loss of equilibrium and sense of balance.
The degree of arrogance or pompousness is determined by a simple formula. Roughly interpreted, the altitude of one’s flight of fancy and delusion would be equivalent to the number of levels (or classes) one has climbed.
Speed accelerates this self-inflation process. The star tends to think of himself as better than his peers, colleagues and rivals.
In keeping with the new status and self-aggrandized persona, he demands recognition, respect, deference or sycophancy.
Woe to the lesser mortals and underlings who cannot keep up with him. The height, speed and breath of a new star’s instant expansion and fame have a transforming or distorting effect.
When people do not immediately recognize him, the star temper flares.
“Don’t you know who I am?”
The infamous line is uttered by the arriviste who thinks that he deserves instant recognition and special attention, preferential treatment — in restaurants, airport terminals, hotels, public places where there is an audience.
Newly elected or appointed officials change when they assume a position of power. Just like film and movie stars, they expect special favors, extra courtesies, freebies as a matter of fact, as their right and privilege.
Supercilious stars intimidate others when they can get their way.
At the gate of an exclusive village, a visiting politician hollered at the guard when his limousine was not allowed to pass late at night. The policy of “no sticker, no entry” was being enforced. However, the star expected to be exempted because of his title and position.
When the star was stopped, he said, “Don’t you know who I am?”
He called his bodyguards to berate the guard. Later, he had him picked up and brought to the station. This incident was seen on CCTV. It was a tasteless, petty show of arrogance and power.
One interesting anecdote reveals the main difference between one who is important and one who is trying to look important.
A distinguished government official had an impromptu but unpleasant encounter with the officer of an exclusive club. The officer was shouting at a driver for a minor offense. The official (who was the boss of the driver concerned) intervened and offered to correct his driver.
The club officer imperiously asked, “Are you a member?” The official replied, “Yes.” Then he identified himself and his position in the judiciary.
The club officer did not recognize the low-key official and pompously asked, “Don’t you know who I am?” He stated his name and boasted his exalted position. “Remember, the name is _____!”
The unassuming official quietly replied, “I know your father and grandfather. And I am honored to have been associated with them.”
That gesture is what can be described as “Class.”
An avid observer of the social scene commented, “If one has to ask another person, ‘Don’t you know who I am?’ It means that the other does not!” The person asking is not recognizable or is unknown to others.
There is a story about the famous award-winning actor Gregory Peck and his friend who could not find a table at a crowded restaurant. “Tell them who you are,” urged the companion, hoping to get VIP treatment.
“If you have to tell them who you are,” Gregory Peck reasoned, “you aren’t anybody.”
 
Maria Victoria Rufino is an artist, writer and businesswoman. She is president and executive producer of Maverick Productions.
mavrufino@gmail.com

Tracking the journey of the new federal constitution: Where are we now?

The Constitution has the paramount role in defining the fundamental structure of government powers, the rights of citizens, the protection of its wealth and the accountability of public officers, the creation of national institutions, and the expression of the values which our society would bravely fight for.
Changing this important document would significantly impact our life as a nation. Thus, I decided to devote my initial column and a few succeeding ones to the specific differences between the 1987 version and the draft Federal Constitution of the Consultative Committee created by the Office of the President. And just recently, Congress under its new leadership passed its own version.
Hopefully, this would help stir an enlightened, rigorous and critical debate on what to add, subtract or simply embellish the “Basic Law of Our Land.”
The Preamble: One that describes the purpose, history and scope of the Constitution
While “to build a just and humane society” was the goal in the 1987 Constitution, the proposed Federal Constitution expanded it to include the words, “permanent and indissoluble nation,” and one that is united and progressive. To my mind, the aim of inserting the said terminology suggests a picture of a strong, unbreakable state and people.
The National Territory: Aimed at defining what we own for the protection of national wealth and security
Instead of simply enumerating what the national territory consists of, the Federal version establishes the fact of Philippine sovereignty over its territory and that the latter term includes islands, waters encompassed by its archipelagic baselines, territorial sea, seabed, subsoil and airspace. A very striking change is the declaration that sovereignty extends to the islands outside of the archipelagic baselines under the laws of the Federal Republic, the law of nations and even judgments of international courts and tribunals! Even the territories that belong to our country by historic or legal right, maritime expanse beyond the Philippines’ seas are deemed covered, to the extent reserved to it by international law.
Declaration of Principles and State Policies: Lays down the ideological framework for governance
The draft Federal Constitution underpins federalism, national unity and territorial integrity; principles which are not mentioned in the 1987 Constitution. It likewise shifts the role of protector of the people from the Armed Forces to that of the “government.” As such the Armed Forces becomes an instrumentality to secure the people’s sovereignty.
Very significant is the section on Church and State. While both versions uphold its separation, the draft stipulates that relations between them shall be governed by “benevolent neutrality,” probably suggesting noninterference from the former in government matters.
Our current Constitution mandates a policy of freedom from nuclear weapons while the new one broadened the phrase by installing a policy of “freedom from weapons of mass destruction in its territory.” This is relevant to the realities of modern day innovations in weaponry and armaments.
Impressive is the suggested proviso on public disclosure because it removed the clause “subject to reasonable conditions prescribed by law” when it comes to full disclosure of all public interest transactions. In sum, there are no limitations to the policy of full transparency in government activities.
However, what is troubling is that while the 1987 Constitution guarantees full respect for human rights, the proposed federal one deletes the same and in lieu thereof, uses the phrase “ full respect for the person and right to participate in all processes.”
In the realm of business and economic affairs, the draft focused on developing an independent and competitive national economy and removed self-reliance from its objectives. One explanation for this is the fact that today’s global economy is interconnected, very much linked up, and is growing rapidly that we cannot isolate ourselves from the world and shirk from the need to aggressively compete in the international market.
From a rallying point of autonomy for local governments in the 1987 Constitution, the proposed version recognizes the need to enshrine the principle of subsidiarity and federalism.
Particularly disheartening is the deletion of the entire clause on the prohibition of political dynasties and equal access to opportunities for public service in the Declaration of Principles. This is a very critical revision because this particular section of the Constitution serves as a guiding light for those who govern and nails down what each of us can expect from our leaders and officials. Fierce debate on this one shall be expected because the aim of federalism is to decentralize and not to concentrate powers in the hands of a few.
These are only three sections of the suggested Federal charter and yet, we can clearly discern the potential major consequences and implications of the changes. Hopefully, the national discourse on this would be broad and meaningful so that we shall eventually formulate a clear constitutional framework that would effectively deliver the much delayed progress and deep sense of national pride to our people.
 
Ariel F. Nepomuceno is a management consultant on strategy and investment.

PACC: DPWH, Congress among most corrupt

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
THE DEPARTMENT of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) led government agencies with the most number of corruption complaints, the Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC) said on Thursday.
The PACC announced at a forum in Intramuros, Manila, on Thursday, Oct. 4, that in the first “six months” of its anti-corruption campaign, it received a total of “411” corruption reports from various individuals.
The PACC’s ranking of government agencies that received the most number of corruption reports is as follows: DPWH, Government Owned or Controlled Corporations (GOCC), Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Department of Finance (DoF), Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Department of Transportation (DoTr), Department of Agriculture (DA), and National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP).
Not included in this partial list are the Bureau of Customs (BoC) and the National Food Authority (NFA). But Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr., in a press briefing at the Palace on Thursday, tagged the two agencies in the collusion over the missing sacks of apprehended smuggled rice in Zamboanga City.
For his part, PACC Commissioner and Spokesperson Greco Antonious Beda B. Belgica said: “I would say that Congress today is the most corrupt institution left. We have 300 demigods who play and treat money as if it is their own. Even after the Supreme Court ruling [against it], they still continue to use the pork barrel system. And in fact, they use this to hostage or blackmail the executive department.”
Mr. Belgica added that “Congress, really, should be abolished.”
Out of the said 411 corruption reports, “59 complaints are deemed verifiable — meaning, complaints that are not anonymous, and these have attached verifiable documents. Unverified reports or anonymous reports, 352 — meaning, these are reports that have yet to be verified, or reports that are outside the commission’s jurisdiction,” John Paul Raña, executive assistant of PACC Chairman Dante L. Jimenez, said in his presentation.
At the Palace, Mr. Roque said: “At 6:45 this morning, I got a text from the Executive Secretary asking me to inform the nation that the President was visibly upset with the missing 23,015 sacks of apprehended smuggled rice in Zamboanga City. The Executive Secretary asked me to tell the nation that the President has ordered an immediate and thorough investigation of this incident, and that instructions were given for both the NFA OIC (National Food Authority officer-in-charge) and Customs Commissioner to immediately place on preventive suspension individuals who may be part of this scheme.”
Asked if both Customs and NFA officials are colluding to make this happen, Mr. Roque said: “Investigation is ongoing, but I think it’s obvious because both agencies had some jurisdiction over the apprehended smuggled rice na parehong opisyales ng (who were both officials of) Customs and NFA….Probably, they have a liability for this.”
He also said Customs Commissioner Isidro S. Lapeña had advised him that “Zamboanga City District Collector Lyceo Martinez and Customs Police District Commander Filomeno Salazar” have been placed under “administrative relief” while the investigation is ongoing.
Sought for comment about Mr. Belgica’s remarks, Mr. Roque said: “Well, I don’t [agree]. All I know is that there’s a decision against the pork barrel system and that if he (Mr. Belgica) says it persists, I hope he will file charges against individuals, that’s their mandate.”
Huwag naman most corrupt (Let’s not say most corrupt). There’s corruption, ‘wag naman most corrupt. Well, as an ex-congressman, (I find) that’s unfair,” Mr. Roque also said.
Mr. Belgica said, “The pork barrel system, the legislative PDAF (Priority Development Assistance Fund) for Congress, and executive pork barrel for executive department are lump sum discretionary funds given to politicians that (are) prone to corruption.”
As for the PACC’s list of most corrupt agencies, Mr. Roque said: “That’s the mandate of the Anti-Graft Commission and I hope they will expedite their investigation so that they can file the corresponding complaints, if warranted.”

Campuses express outrage at being linked to Reds

By Vince Angelo C. Ferreras
UNIVERSITIES tagged as being among the recruitment grounds for communist rebels have criticized the military in separate statements.
“The UP Diliman University Student Council strongly condemns this blatant act of red-tagging students of these universities. It is a clear threat to the students who bravely criticize the government, and the President himself, (Rodrigo R. Duterte),” read the council’s statement on Thursday, Oct. 4.
“The unlawful harassment and the clearly baseless allegations of the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) coupled with the recent order of Duterte to ‘neutralize the CPP’ is undeniably a great threat to the safety of those labeled as members of such group,” the student body also said.
Emilio Aguinaldo College (EAC) said in its statement, “Absent any proof or factual basis, the statement by the AFP should be rectified immediately. Such statement undermines the safety and security of the students of Emilio Aguinaldo College as they are now looked upon as possible communists or rebels.”
University of Santo Tomas (UST) Secretary-General Jesus Miranda said in a statement through The Varsitarian on Oct. 3, “Siguro ang point dito ay kailangan muna ma-prove na bakit kasama ang UST. Ano ang proof na kasama siya? You (AFP) have to prove it.”
He added that AFP might be “stereotyping…because we are a Catholic university and there is a perception that we are against the present government. Is that why we are being tagged?”
The student council of the University of the East-Manila said in its statement, “We are one with all the Filipino People who want a more efficient and effective administration that puts the welfare of the citizens first before the interests of the few. Moreover, we will address the issue and coordinate with our administrators to assure that we, students, are practicing our rights in accordance with what is enshrined in our laws.”
The statement also read, “The USC calls…our fellow students to be more vigilant and more critical regarding information that surface on social media platforms. We want to remind everyone that our voice is powerful, let us use it judiciously.”
In an interview with DZMM on Thursday morning, General Carlito G. Galvez Jr., AFP chief, said the military is still validating the list of universities.
“We’re still validating it kasi apparently…ang ano lang namin they are very worried dun sa nakuha naming dokumento may mga listing, ‘yun andun sa dokumento ng CPP-NPA….” ([Our concern] is that [we] are very worried about the document of the [Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army] on the listing [of schools].)
Other schools tagged by Brig. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr., AFP assistant deputy chief-of-staff, are Adamson University, Ateneo de Manila University, Caloocan City College, EARIST-Eulogio Amang Rodgriguez, De La Salle University, Far Eastern University, Lyceum College, Philippine Normal University, Polytechnic University of the Philippines , San Beda College, University of the East-Caloocan, University of Makati, University of Manila, and University of the Philippines-Manila.
According to Mr. Parlade, the schools are screening films about the martial-law era under Ferdinand E. Marcos. He also cited complaints from parents about their children being “brainwashed.”
Not a few sectors had earlier called on a deeper familiarization among campuses with the martial-law era, amid such controversies as the burial of the dictator Marcos at the Heroes’ Cemetery on the watch of the AFP.
Mr. Galvez in his interview with DZMM said the military is open to a dialogue with school administrators, students, the Commission on Higher Education and the Department of Education.
Presidential Spokesperson Harry S. Roque, for his part, said, “Quite frankly, if you ask me, it (the list) hardly surprises me…But the reality is, none of the schools will openly endorse such a recruitment. And this recruitment is undertaken in a secret manner.”
“But let’s face it, they are recruiting. It’s a statement of fact. But we have no doubt that none of these schools are openly supportive of such initiatives,” Mr. Roque also said.

Election preparations underway ahead of deadline of candidacies

By Camille A. Aguinaldo, Reporter
PREPARATIONS for next year’s midterm elections are underway a week before the deadline period for the filing of candidacies.
Senator Aquilino L. Pimentel III, president of the Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan (PDP-Laban, said the party has trimmed down its list of potential candidates to five or six from the previous 24. However, he did not say if the party could complete a 12-member senatorial slate.
Initial names in the PDP-Laban senatorial slate included the reelectionist senators, Special Assistant to the President Christopher Lawrence T. Go, presidential political adviser Francis N. Tolentino, Bureau of Corrections chief Ronald M. Dela Rosa, Maguindanao Rep. Zajid G. Mangudadatu, Bataan Rep. Geraldine B. Roman, Makati City Rep. Monsour T. Del Rosario III, singer Freddie Aguilar, Negros Occidental Alfredo B. Benitez, and broadcaster Jiggy Manicad, among others.
Mr. Pimentel also said Davao City Rep. Karlo Alexei B. Nograles has backed out of plans to run for senator, while Quirino Rep. Dakila E. Cua now plans to run for governor.
“We will announce next week who remained in the list,” he told reporters after a legislative hearing.
In the Liberal Party, Senator and party president Francis N. Pangilinan said they are still finalizing the list of candidates under their senatorial slate. He said the list had been brought down from 18 to 15 names. Candidates under the opposition slate would need to sign a pledge and commitment to defend democracy and human rights, Mr. Pangilinan said.
“We are still finalizing it but definitely (the commitment) will be issue-based, human rights, defending our democracy, commitment to the upliftment of our citizen on the discussion on inflation,” the senator said.
The opposition party has so far announced three names among its official candidates, reelectionist Senator Paolo Benigno A. Aquino IV, De La Salle University College of law dean Jose Manuel “Chel” I. Diokno, and Quezon City Rep. Lorenzo “Erin” R. Tanada III.
The LP has also allied with different political parties, civil society groups and organizations, such as the Akbayan Citizens’ Action Party, Magdalo party-list, Aksyon Demokratiko, and Tindig Pilipinas, according to the senator.
Presidential spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr., during Thursday’s Malacañang briefing, declined to comment on whether he will throw his hat in the senatorial arena. But Communications Secretary Martin M. Andanar said Mr. Roque will surely run.
“I think it is possible that six to eight (Cabinet members) will step down because a lot of them plan to run for local positions….But right now, Secretary Roque will surely run for senator, but let’s see if there are colleagues who are urging Secretary Roque not to run because he is needed in Communications,” Mr. Andanar said in a television interview.
Without naming names, Mr. Roque said six Cabinet members have expressed their plans to seek elective posts.
Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III, senior adviser of the Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC), told reporters that former senator Lito M. Lapid and his son Mark T. Lapid took their oaths as members of the NPC. Mr. Sotto said the older Mr. Lapid plans to return to the Senate, while the younger Mr. Lapid plans to run as mayor of Porac, Pampanga.
Reelectionist senator Joseph Victor G. Ejercito is set to take his oath as member of the NPC next week, Mr. Sotto said.
In the Nacionalista Party (NP), reelectionist Senator Cynthia A. Villar said only three members of the party will running for senator, including herself, the others being Ilocos Norte governor Imee R. Marcos and Taguig Rep. Pia S. Cayetano.
She said the NP has also allied with Davao City Mayor Sara Z. Duterte-Carpio’s regional political party Hugpong ng Pagbabago.
“We were all endorsed by the Hugpong. We went to Vigan, we went to La Union, we went to all the Region 11 provinces. We already went to various places with them,” she told reporters after a Senate budget hearing.
Reelectionist senators Nancy S. Binay-Angeles of the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) and Juan Edgardo M. Angara of the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) were named presidents of their respective parties last September.
The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has set the period of filing of certificates of candidacy for the 2019 midterm polls from Oct. 11 to 17.

Arroyo to economic managers: Act ‘faster’ on inflation

By Charmaine A. Tadalan, Reporter
HOUSE Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo on Thursday urged the government’s economic managers to work “faster” in addressing inflation.
“Gusto ko lang ipahayag ay yung mga economic managers naman natin ay ginagawa naman nila kung anong magagawa nila pero sana naman ay mas mabilis ang pagkilos,” Speaker Arroyo said in an interview with reporters during her medical mission in Baesa, Quezon City. (I just want to say that economic managers are doing what they can, but I just hope they act on this faster.)
When asked whether the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law should be suspended, Ms. Arroyo argued that tax reforms benefit the economy in the long term and shouldn’t be an answer to inflation.
“Ang epekto ng mga buwis sa ekonomiya, ang magandang effect ay pangmatagalan, so kung wala tayong ganun, wala tayong inprastraktura… ‘Yung inflation ay problema ng kasalukuyan. May mga hakbang para sagutin ang mga problema ng kasalukuyan,” Ms. Arroyo said. (The positive effect of imposing taxes to the economy will be felt in the long term, so if we don’t have that we won’t have infrastructure….Inflation is a problem of the present. There are ways to address that.)
“At ang aking hiling naman sa ating economic managers ay actually tama naman ang paraan more or less, pero sana mas mabilis ang implementasyon lalo na doon sa araw na araw na problema gaya ng mga presyo ng bilihin,” she added. (My request to the economic managers is that while they are actually taking more or less the right steps, I hope they implement it faster especially on basic needs, such as prices of goods.)
Ms. Arroyo also emphasized the need to increase the budget of the Department of Agriculture to address inflation: “Isa ngang dahilan kung bakit nagtataasan ang mga presyo ay presyo ng pagkain mismo dahil nagkukulang ang ating produksyon.” (Among the reasons why prices are increasing is the price of food itself, because production is insufficient.)
The statement followed the pronouncement of Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol that legislators at the House of Representatives intend to increase the P55-billion budget of the Department by P20 billion.
“So kung talagang gusto natin ng pangmatagalang solusyon sa problem ng inflation, ayusin natin ang agrikultura,” she also said. (So if we really want a long term solution to inflation, we need to improve agriculture.)
Ms. Arroyo recalled that during her term as President, appropriation for the agriculture sector was 6% of the total budget, which was reduced to 1% after she stepped down.

Nationwide round-up

OFW group files misconduct, human trafficking complaints vs Bertiz

PHILSTAR

MIGRANTE INTERNATIONAL, an alliance of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), filed complaints on Thursday before the House Ethics Committee against ACTS-OFW Party-list Representative Aniceto “John” D. Bertiz III for alleged misconduct.
In a press briefing yesterday, Migrante International Spokesperson Arman Hernando told reporters that they “formalized” their complaint because they see that Mr. Bertiz does not represent the aspirations and values of OFWs.
Mr. Bertiz has been under fire for a series of comments and actions that reflect abuse of power. He has publicly sought pardon for the incidents, but his apologies have sparked further anger.
Among the complainants are former migrant workers Shiela Mabunga and Emmanuel Villanueva, who both testified against the solon.
Ms. Mabunga accused the recruitment agency of Mr. Bertiz, Global Asia Alliance Consultants Inc. (GAACI), of human trafficking after she was deployed to an employer different from what her contract stated.
“Nalaman ko na magkaiba ang employer sa dala kong kontrata at sa aking working visa, ito ay patunay na isang human trafficker ang agency ni Congressman Bertiz (I found out that the employer in my contract and my working visa were different, this is proof that the agency of Congressman Bertiz is a human traficker) ,” she said.
Sought for comment, Mr. Bertiz’s chief of staff, Jun Aguilar, told reporters in a phone message the the representative “can’t still take calls that would be added stress to him, which his doctor asked to avoid.” — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Duterte ‘stronger than a horse’, spokesman says

PRESIDENTIAL SPOKESPERSON Harry L. Roque, Jr. gave assurance on Thursday that President Rodrigo R. Duterte “is healthy” and denied rumors that he was hospitalized last Wednesday when he skipped an event at the Palace.
Mr. Roque said those who wish the President ill should be ashamed of themselves.
“Lalo kayong magnais nang ganyan, lalong lumalakas [ang Presidente] (the more you wish that, the more he becomes stronger),” he said, adding in Filipino that the President is “stronger than a horse.”
He explained that Mr. Duterte just wanted to have a day-off last Wednesday when he skipped a scheduled event of the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp.
“He had a schedule almost every day. He did not really have a day-off. So, the President decided to have private time… I don’t think it was fatigue. He just probably realized he hasn’t had a day off,” he said.
Hours after the briefing, Mr. Roque posted a video of the President attending the Joint Command Conference with the Philippine National Police (PNP) and the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) with a caption: “PRRD arriving at the Joint Command Conference today in Malacañang. He’s not sick! Sorry to his detractors!” — Arjay L. Balinbin

4 more communications vs Duterte filed at ICC — CHR

AT LEAST four more “confidential communications” about President Rodrigo Duterte’s ferocious war on drugs have been filed before the International Criminal Court, Commission on Human Rights (CHR) chief Jose Luis Martin “Chito” C. Gascon said. Mr. Gascon said that these communications were filed as early as 2016. “We are aware that there are other confidential communications that have been submitted both from the Philippines — from non-governmental organizations and victims’ groups — as well as internationally submitted communications,” the CHR head said in an interview on ANC’s “Early Edition” Thursday. — Philstar
>> See full story on https://goo.gl/X9NuUT

Morong Aytas declare 6,600 hectares of ancestral land as conservation zones

MARKING THE start of this year’s National Indigenous Peoples Month, the Magbukun Ayta Indigenous Peoples (IPs) of Sitio Kanawan in Morong, Bataan declared portions of their recently awarded territory as Indigenous Communities Conserved territories and Areas (ICCAs). The event was supported and attended by officials from the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)-Philippines, and other partner civil society organizations. UNDP-Philippines, in a statement, said the ICCA Declaration “is part of the IP group’s bid to protect important cultural and biological sites within their ancestral domain from destruction and degradation.” The Magbukun Ayta’s ICCA is estimated at about 6,600 hectares of land, more than half of the area covered by their Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT), which was awarded in June this year. “We’ve seen an increase in encroachment and illegal settlement from outsiders in recent years. This ICCA declaration is one of the ways we’re pursuing to address the issue and to protect the environment from further damage,” Chieftain Rodelio Tamundog is quoted in the statement. The Ayta Magbukun ICCA Declaration is a culmination of more than a year of documentation-related activities, including boundary delineation, 3D and digital mapping, resource inventory, and indigenous knowledge, systems, and practices documentation. The Magbukun Ayta’s ICCA is planned for inclusion in the global ICCA Registry hosted by the UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre and at the National ICCA Registry upon its launch later this year.

Palparan starts 40-year jail term at New Bilibid Prison

JOVITO S. Palparan Jr., a retired army major general convicted of kidnapping and illegal detention of student activists, has been transferred from the custody of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) to the national penitentiary. It took 17 days for the AFP to execute the transfer. Justice Secretary Mernardo I. Guevarra told reporters yesterday that Palparan, tagged as “The Butcher” by human rights groups, was officially turned over to the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) in Muntinlupa City Wednesday night, marking the first day of his 40-years imprisonment. Palparan was found guilty for the kidnapping and illegal detention of University of the Philippines Los Banos students Karen Empeno and Sherlyn Cadapan in 2006. Philippine Army Spokesperson Lt. Col. Louie Villanueva said that Palparan, along with co-accused Felipe Anotado and Edgardo Osirio were turned over to the Reception and Diagnostic Center of NBP. “It is about time he really serves time. We will make sure those who coddled him accountable for later,” Atty. Edre U. Olalia of the National Union of People’s Laywers, which represented the Empeno and Cadapan families, told BusinessWorld in a text message. — Vince Angelo C. Ferreras

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