This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 24, July 24-30, 2005
Going through the Impeachment Maze
Pro-Arroyo allies seem to be
putting obstacles to the impeachment against the incumbent president which is
expected to be filed in the House on July 25. But opposition congressmen and
lawyers involved in the impeachment move are not about to give way to the
dilatory tactics. BY DABET CASTAÑEDA On July 25, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
will be the first president of the Philippines who will deliver a State of the
Nation Address (Sona) with an impeachment complaint on her doorstep. Lawyer Oliver Lozano filed the complaint
last June 27, the day the President made a public apology for “talking to a
Comelec official” given her anxiousness to protect her votes and what she
described as a “lapse in judgment.” Rep. Rodante Marcoleta of the Alagad
party-list group which is identified with the Iglesia ni Kristo (INK, Church of
Christ) endorsed the complaint. The INK supported Macapagal-Arroyo in the May
2004 elections and Alagad’s association with INK spewed speculations that the
party-list representative is an administration ally. The opposition bloc in the House accused
Marcoleta of being used by the administration to abort the impeachment
proceedings. Marcoleta has denied this in a previous interview. Human rights lawyer Neri Colmenares, a
member of the impeachment prosecution team, explained that the original
complaint was weak and had a big probability to be junked by the House Committee
on Justice. If this happened, it would delay the impeachment proceedings for a
year because the rules provide that no public official shall be filed an
impeachment complaint in the same year. Meanwhile, for the last two weeks, House
opposition representatives spearheading the President’s impeachment have accused
Malacañang (the presidential palace) of bribing their colleagues in exchange for
junking the complaint. House insiders confirmed that the President herself has
been making calls to the members of the House to sign the manifesto of support
for her. In fact, House sources said the Palace has
become too desperate that it had called Rep. Ronaldo Zamora to trash the
complaint in exchange for large sums of money and funds for his projects. Zamora
is the head of the impeachment prosecution team. According to Colmenares, the House needs 78
members (or one-third of the total membership of 236) to sign or endorse the
complaint to hasten the proceedings by giving the Articles of Impeachment
directly to the Senate. The latter, in turn, would act as a jury. The opposition
said that it has more than 50 signatories as of press time. Hitches Last July 20, rumors were rife that
Marcoleta withdrew his endorsement prompting opposition House members to confirm
their previous allegations about him. This prompted opposition Rep. Rolex
Suplico to also endorse the impeachment complaint. If no one else endorsed it
and Marcoleta’s withdrawal proved to be true, the House would be forced to
consider the complaint as “dead.” Meanwhile, the impeachment prosecution team
has been meeting every day to complete the amendments to the Lozano complaint
which they plan to file on July 25, the day of the President’s SONA. In an interview, Marcoleta said he felt
offended by the opposition’s move to amend the complaint without consulting or
at least informing him about it. On the first part of the interview, he said he
had no plans of withdrawing his endorsement but said that he would not endorse
the amended version. He also wonders if amending the complaint is
allowed by the House rules on impeachment. The 13th Congress has yet
to adopt the new set of rules on impeachment. In such a case, the rules of the
previous Congress apply. The rules which were used during the
impeachment trial of former President Joseph Estrada do not mention anything on
amendments. Further, the Supreme Court has declared this as illegal. In this case, Colmenares said the ruling of
the Supreme Court would have suppletory effect over the impeachment proceedings.
This means that amendment to the complaint is allowable as long as a copy of
which has not reached the accused, in this case, Macapagal-Arroyo. In a brisk turn of events, the accused may
have put one over the complainants. In the afternoon of July 21, the President
filed her reply to the original Lozano complaint that could mean no amendments
would be entertained without permission from the House Committee on Justice
which is perceived to be dominated by representatives allied with the
administration. And to make things worse, this could only
happen when the 13th Congress opens its second regular session on
July 25. But the impeachment team is not about to
give up, Colmenares said. Describing it as only a “tactic” by the administration
to delay the impeachment proceedings, he said they will not let the
administration dictate upon them and will push through with the filing of the
amended complaint on Monday, a few hours before the President delivers her SONA.
Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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