This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 19, June 20, 2006
BY AUBREY MAKILAN The new impeachment
complaint, dubbed as the “People’s Case” against President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
will be gathering more private individual complainants until its filing on June
26 at the House of Representatives. Private lawyers and
complainants launched the People’s Case at a forum at the Manila Polo Club in
Makati City last night. University of the
Philippines professor Randy David said the impeachment process “is the only
constitutional procedure left” to put an end on the crisis of the legitimacy of
the current administration. “It is to defend what
remains of our democratic institutions from the relentless assault to which we
have been subjected by a reckless politician and her civilian and military
allies,” he said. Although David said that
impeachment is the last constitutional order, he does not believe that Arroyo
would answer “in her conscience” questions in court. “She was there to use every
legal technicality available in order to avoid moral and criminal
accountability,” he said. He added that he has no
illusions that the voting in the House of Representatives would be any different
when it “killed” the impeachment complaint last year. Private complainants and
other pro-impeachment individuals and groups are planning to hold a vigil June
25-26 to avoid a possible duplication of the complaint, which happened last year
when lawyer Oliver Lozano filed the first complaint. The
filing is set on June 26, when the one-year ban on the filing of an impeachment
complaint against the president expires. Unlike the Lozano complaint
last year, lawyer Harry Roque said that in the new impeachment case, Macapagal-Arroyo
would be made to answer charges of killings of activists. Bayan Muna Rep. Satur
Ocampo said that Karapatan human rights group records show that there have been
687 victims of political killings since Macapagal-Arroyo assumed presidency in
2001. Aside from being “widespread and systematic,” Ocampo said the killings
were done in a “treacherous” manner. Although Ocampo said they
still do not have the final number of endorsers in the House, the House minority
members would try to obtain by June 26 the 79 votes needed to have the complaint
approved by the House. But despite the legal and
political characteristics of the complaint, David said the new impeachment case
aims to “actively engage the people” in the resolution of the crisis. More private complainants
are encouraged to sign the “People’s Case” before its formal launching on June
22, at 12 noon at the Club Filipino in San Juan city. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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Posted 11 a.m. June 20, 2006