This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 27, August 14-20, 2005
Dilatory Tactics Could Backfire vs Arroyo The dilatory tactics in the
impeachment proceedings orchestrated by allies of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
are quickly catching up on her. Unwittingly, these are only exposing the
President’s intent to obstruct justice and, hence, may just expedite her ouster
from Malacañang. BY DABET CASTAÑEDA Last week’s early suspension of the House
Committee on Justice (CoJ) hearing on the impeachment complaint lodged against
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (GMA) tends to give credence, so observers
said, to allegations by both opposition and militant groups that the President’s
House allies are out to delay the impeachment process. To the disappointment of the jam-packed
crowd at the House’s Andaya Hall who attended the first impeachment hearing
against Arroyo Aug. 10, committee chair Rep. Simeon Datumanong (2nd
District, Maguindanao) suspended the hearing after 30 minutes of petty squabbles
on seating arrangements, availability of microphones, and the question on who
has the right to participate in the hearings. But most of all, everyone thought
it was a rather small venue for a big spectacle. Datumanong is a member of the Lakas-Christian
Muslim Democrats, the biggest party affiliation in the House led by Speaker Jose
de Venecia (4th District, Pangasinan) who, in turn, is a staunch ally
and defender of the President. Motion to dismiss On the same day, Pedro Ferrer, an unknown
lawyer from Far South Mindanao, filed a motion to strike the seven supplemental
complaints of original complainant lawyer Oliver Lozano, the Lopez complaint and
the amended Lozano complaint. The last one was filed on July 25 and endorsed by
41 congressmen, hours before the Arroyo’s State of the Nation Address.
Ferrer, who is the President’s defense
counsel to the impeachment case, said in a press conference that the amended
complaint should be considered second complaint because it introduces
substantial amendments to the original. If this is so, the Arroyo lawyer said, it
violates the Constitutional rule that bars more than one impeachment complaint
against the same government official for one year. However, in a separate press conference Aug.
11, Bayan Muna general counsel Neri Colmenares said Ferrer’s ground to strike –
or dismiss – the amended complaint is “legally untenable.” Colmenares, who is also a member of the
impeachment prosecution team, said the amended complaint is not a “second
complaint.” A complainant, he said, can amend his or her complaint before it is
filed or, in impeachment proceedings, when it is deemed initiated. “That is a
matter of right,” he said. The impeachment rules adopted by the 13th
Congress say that a complaint is deemed initiated when it has been referred to
the CoJ. In the case of the impeachment complaint against Arroyo, it was deemed
initiated when de Venecia referred it to the CoJ on July 25. The Speaker
referred all three complaints plus the president’s answer to the first one. However, Colmenares said that when the
complaint has been initiated, the complainant has to ask for a leave of court or
permission from the CoJ to amend his complaint. “But in this case, the amended
complaint was actually timely because it was filed before it was referred to the
CoJ,” he said. Who’s afraid of the amendments? On the other hand, the rules also say that
an amendment should have a leave of court when an answer to the complaint has
been filed by the accused. The President and her counsel have been
accused of jumping the gun on the House opposition when it answered the original
Lozano complaint even before the complaint could be initiated. Ferrer told reporters the President asked
him to draft the answer to the complaint between July 9 and 12. It was finally
filed on July 19 at the Secretary General’s office of the House. “Any party accused of any crime or any
offense has the right to defend himself or herself,” he said. “We are not
preempting, we are just following the rule of law (referring to the one-year ban
on filing an impeachment complaint against the same government official).”
On the other hand, Colmenares said the
answer filed by Ferrer on behalf of the President was a “mere scrap of paper”
and is “not valid under the rules.” An answer could only be filed, he said,
after 1) the CoJ has deemed it sufficient in form and substance, and 2) when the
CoJ orders the accused to do so. “Therefore, the answer was premature,” he said.
In relation to this, human rights activist
Marie Hilao-Enriquez, one of the complainants to the impeachment case, said that
the reason for Arroyo’s motion to dismiss the amended complaint was that the
President is afraid to face the human rights violations charged against her. Hilao-Enriquez went to the Aug. 10 hearing
together with the other complainants from people’s organizations. She is the
secretary general of the human rights group Karapatan (Alliance for the
Advancement of People’s Rights). The first complaint by Lozano only tackled
the violation of public trust in relation to the President’s apology and
admission that she talked to an election officer during the canvassing of votes
after the May 2004 national elections. The amended complaint held three grounds for
the President’s impeachment including culpable violation of the Constitution;
bribery and graft and corruption; and betrayal of public trust. The charges
include receiving of payoffs from jueteng (illegal numbers game),
electioneering and the killing of political dissenters. The CoJ has yet to determine what complaint
it will tackle in its hearings. Colmenares however said most of the prosecution
lawyers would resign if the committee decides to hear the original Lozano
complaint. Magic 79 However, the best resort to speed up the
impeachment proceedings is for the list of congressmen endorsers to reach the
magic number of 79 or 1/3 of the 236-member House. At the filing of the amended
complaint, only 41endorsers were listed. The complaint needs 38 more signatures
for the Articles of Impeachment to be immediately transmitted to the Senate
which, in turn, would act as jury. The impeachment rules adopted by the 13th
Congress allow what the opposition calls a “creeping impeachment.” This means
that when 79 signatures have been gathered, the CoJ hearings would stop and the
plenary shall vote on roll call. This is the only constitutional provision that
allows the minority to rule over the majority. Since the Plenary always supersede the
committee decisions, the Speaker should then transmit the complaint to the
Senate. The CoJ has 60 session days to determine if
the complaint is sufficient in form, substance and probable cause. But even if
the CoJ can determine so but the endorsement signatures do not reach the magic
number of 79, the complaint will be dead on the water, Colmenares said. One year
is allowed until another complaint against the President can be filed. Since it is still a numbers game, Colmenares
said that Malacañang is exhausting all means to dodge congressmen from endorsing
the complaint. The allegation finds its basis from the testimonies of
Representatives Rolex Suplico (5th District, Iloilo) and Eulogio
“Amang” Magsaysay (Party-list, Ave) that they were being bribed by allies of the
President to prevent them from supporting the complaint. Colmenares said they would not hesitate to
file the necessary charges, whether in the ethics committee or as a criminal
complaint “pag napatunayan namin na may bribery na nangyari” (if reports
about the bribery were confirmed). Backlash But by delaying the impeachment proceedings
through political maneuvering and alleged bribery, the pro-Arroyo House members
are getting more flak especially from the common folk who just want the truth
come out and that those responsible for the current political crisis are held
accountable. Opposition Rep. Allan Peter Cayateno (Lone
District, Pateros-Taguig), who is an ex-officio member of the CoJ, chided
Datumanong for holding an executive session instead of conducting a public
hearing. House rules say that an executive session is
only deemed possible when the subject of the inquiry is a threat to national
security and public interest. “Does this now mean that the threat to the
President’s tenure is a threat to national security?” he asked. But more importantly, Colmenares said this
attempt only proves the intention of Arroyo to obstruct the people’s search for
truth. What is at stake here, Colmenares added, is
the credibility of Congress in handling this case. “If the proceedings would
lack credibility, there is no way to stop another people power,” he said.
Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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