Special Report
Crisis in the
Philippines
Election
scandal and impeachment send Arroyo government reeling, and Filipinos to
the streets
By Larry Chin
Online Journal Associate Editor
July 27, 2005The
Philippines is set to explode, as President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo faces
impeachment
after being caught in the act of rigging her 2004 re-election, sparking
outrage and threats of popular revolt.
Military intelligence agents opposed to Arroyo wiretapped conversations
between Arroyo and a man believed to be elections commissioner Virgilio
Garcillano. In one of the damning May 2004 conversations, Arroyo is heard
asking Garcillano (addressed by Arroyo as "Garci") if she will win the
election by more than 1 million votes:
"So, will I lead by more than 1 million?"
According to opponents of Arroyo, the infamous "Hello, Garci" phone
call is definitive proof that Arroyo cheated in the election, which she
won by about 1.1 million votes over Fernando Poe, Jr., (who died in
December 2004 after allegedly suffering a stroke), amidst other
allegations of vote manipulation.
Transcripts and digital files of the Arroyo wiretaps, and complete
analysis of the scandal are available from the
Philippine Center for
Investigative Journalism and the alternative investigative site
Bulatlat .
Arroyo
has admitted
that it was her voice on the tape, an absolute confirmation of her guilt,
according to her opponents and critics. Arroyo, however, has only
apologized for a "lapse in judgment". Her attorneys and supporters have
argued that the wiretaps were illegally obtained (therefore inadmissible
as evidence). But the damage is done: just about every Filipino citizen
has heard the tapes. The derision is so extensive, that the "Hello, Garci"
call has been made into a popular
cell phone ring tone.
The
impeachment
case against Arroyo will include charges of betrayal of public trust,
culpable violation of the constitution, graft, corruption, and bribery.
Vice President Noli de Castro may be the target of a separate impeachment.
Arroyo will also be tried, as the commander of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines, for the
murder of
political activists and other civilians, and death squad activities over
the past three years. Ten cabinet members, who recently resigned their
posts, have called on Arroyo to resign. The former cabinet members have
expressed their willingness to testify against Arroyo.
Outraged lawmakers and citizens are promising a "people power"
revolt , if
pro-Arroyo majority forces obstruct or derail the impeachment. The regimes
of Ferdinand Marcos (1986) and Joseph Estrada (2001) were ousted by
popular revolts.
A Lesson for Americans
The new Philippine crisis presents another sobering example of how
people in nations outside of the Anglo-American axis grasp the concepts of
democracy and liberty better than those inside the "elite bubble" ever
will. Filipinos are taking to the streets, raising their collective
voices, and fighting for ethical government. They are being active and
creative
with their protest. They know what is at stake. The yoke of imperialism,
and the stink of corruption, are all too familiar to Filipinos, and they
are taking action.
By comparison, the Bush administration has committed crimes of
unprecedented scope and scale, on a virtual daily basis for nearly five
years. Three consecutive stolen elections, 9/11, the "war on terrorism,"
the USA PATRIOT Act, the invasions and occupations of Afghanistan and
Iraq, Plame/Rove, the Downing Street Papers, Abu Ghraib/Guantanamo and a
long list of other blatant atrocities, have sparked little resistance (or
even interest) among most Americans. Tragic evidence of the triumph of
social controls in the "developed" world.
Pacific Linchpin
The emergency in the Philippines demands careful monitoring, and the
importance of what unfolds cannot be overstated.
The US cannot afford to lose the Philippines, its
key geostrategic pivot
in the Pacific and the South China Sea, and its most important
military-intelligence base in the region. The Arroyo government has been
the Bush administration's top "war on terrorism" ally in
Asia.
(See the six-part series
The United States in
the Philippines: post-9/11 Imperatives.)
The US wiped out a quarter of the Filipino population in its 1899–1903
conquest of the Philippines. In the modern era, through ongoing covert
operations and a series of brutal puppet regimes, the US has made the
Philippines its top regional neo-colony, whose geostrategic importance
increases as the US marches closer to a
cold war with China.
It goes without saying that the Bush administration will follow tradition,
and pull out all the stops to maintain US control over its most precious
Pacific foothold, including doing what is necessary to prevent a popular
revolt in the Philippines that could threaten US interests.
Posted by
Bulatlat
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