This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 32, September 18-24, 2005
`Rats’ Mar Macapagal-Arroyo
Visit in New York
Mainstream media
reported the President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s trip to New York and the
resulting protest actions organized by various cause-oriented groups there.
According to them, Macapagal-Arroyo was put in a “stage of discomfort,” based on
feedback from those close to her.
BY AUBREY SC MAKILAN The government is currently
euphoric over the so-called success of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s trip
to New York to attend the United Nations summit and world leaders’ forum from
Sept. 12 to 15. After all, she was the first Filipino leader, the first Asian
head of state and the first woman leader to preside over a summit of the United
Nations Security Council (UNSC). Conspicuously missing from
the government’s press releases is the fact that she was hounded by “rats” while
in New York. These are not long-tailed rodents belonging to the genus rattus,
but rapid action teams (Rats) that followed Macapagal-Arroyo for during her New
York visit. The protest actions,
however, were staged even before Macapagal-Arroyo’s
departure from the Ninoy Aquino Centennial Airport in Parañaque City last
Sept. 12. Three days
before her departure, members of the League of Filipino Students (LFS) and
Anakbayan (Nation’s Youth) rallied at the U.S. Embassy in Manila to condemn the
trip to New York, saying Macapagal-Arroyo has “no right to speak in behalf of
the Philippines in front of international leaders.” In New York
and New Jersey Sept. 10, a chapter of Anakbayan held a press conference to urge
the international community to condemn Macapagal-Arroyo. The day after
saw Anakbayan members distributing stickers to jeepney drivers in Quezon City
with messages “God knows Gloria does not pay,” “Barya na lang ang kaya sa
umaga dahil sa OPH (The people only have loose change in the morning due to
oil price hikes),” and “Bayad muna bago baba, drayber at pasahero ang kawawa”
(Pay first before alighting, driver and passengers are pitiful). This activity
was also done in preparation for the transport strike to be held on the day of
the president’s departure. Immediately after the
transport strike last Sept. 12, students, some of them still dressed in school
uniforms, went to the airport to stage a different kind of send-off ceremonies
for Macapagal-Arroyo. Chanting
“GMA, you can run but you can't hide” and “goodbye
and good riddance.” Around 200 activists from the League of Filipino Students (LFS)
likewise staged a sit-down protest. The youth group Anakbayan
called Sept. 12 as a “day of youth and civil disobedience.” After the
12-hour flight to San Francisco,
Macapagal-Arroyo took a chartered flight to
New York City. According to reports, the government booked four first-class
seats, six business class seats and 24 economy seats for her entourage.
Rat sightings On
the eve of her arrival, the first Rat was seen
along Fifth Avenue in
Manhattan where members of the New York Committee for Human Rights in the
Philippines (NYCHRP) and Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan or New Patriotic
Alliance)-USA chapter and the NY Coalition for Gloria’s Ouster held
an “unwelcome party” in front of the
Philippine Consulate office. The organizers said Rats’
“Gotta-Go-Glo" tour which trailed Macapagal-Arroyo helped expose her fake and
illegitimate regime to the world. “We're not surprised since
Arroyo and other rotten, stinky and garbage leaders of states will be in New
York this week for the UN assembly,” said Berna Ellorin of Bayan-USA. “Rats are
always attracted to the foul stench of garbage, Gloria Arroyo being the most
rotten of them all.” In the afternoon of Sept. 15, NYCHRP and Bayan
USA participated the Troops
Out Now Coaltion (TONC) rally on the issues concerning the Palestine and
Philippines at the UN meeting. The
protesters, in black shirts with their Rats paraphernalia, then proceeded to the
Philippine Consulate, just a few blocks from the TONC rally point, the place for
the final public appearance of Macapagal-Arroyo in
New York. Arcy Yuson of
Anakbayan revealed that some of the protesters came holding folded-up placards,
waiting for their colleagues in front of the Consulate because the New York City
Police Department (NYPD) and security officials threatened them with arrest if
they didn't move, “even though all we were doing was standing on the sidewalk,
waiting." Despite the
threat, protesters unfurled a gigantic, blimp-sized banner reading "Oust the
US-Arroyo Regime - Bayan USA," which the public stared at during the
presidential multi-car grand entrance to the event site. Ellorin
asserted that anti-Arroyo groups in New York have responded to "humiliate and
expose this fake head of state where ever she goes,” especially at the
Consulate’s exhibit. The protest
put her in a “stage of discomfort," said Ellorin citing response from visitors
to the Philippine Consulate who saw Macapagal-Arroyo during an art exhibit. About 90
protesters were across the street from the Consulate calling for her ouster.
Ellorin confirmed from the visitors that attendees inside the gallery heard them
from inside the Consulate building, disrupting the flow of the evening's event. Allied
organizations that joined the BAYAN-USA's Fifth Avenue protest calling for
Arroyo's ouster included the International Action Center, Committee Against
Anti-Asian Violence (CAAAV) Organizing Asian Communities, Troops Out Now
Coalition, The Million Worker March, NY Labor Against the War, Fight Imperialism
Stand Together (FIST), Be Not Afraid, Black and White Movement, Contak
Philippines, and Movement for a Free Philippines, as well as individuals
traveling to New York from Los Angeles and the Philippines. Even a handful of
ticketed guests to the Consulate who originally came to see the exhibit opted to
join the protest across the street instead. On the same day, an
Oust-Arroyo picket was also held in front of the Philippine Consulate in Los
Angeles and an outdoor teach-in and picket on the
political crisis was sponsored by the Justice Not War in the Philippines
Campaign (JNW) also in
New York. JNW,
launched in February 2003 in NYC, is working
hand in hand with other anti-war formations in the Philippines and in the US
against US military intervention and repression in the Philippines and around
the world. UN
Security Council resolutions Foreign Secretary Alberto
Romulo earlier said that the president would be facing world leaders and the
international press with confidence after the impeachment case was “killed” at
the House of Representatives last September 7. After the meeting, the UNSC
unanimously passed two resolutions. Resolution 1624 called upon all 191 UN
member-states to "prohibit by law incitement to commit a terrorist act or acts"
and to "deny safe haven" to anyone even suspected of incitement. Meanwhile,
Resolution 1625 called on member-states to adopt measures, including
preventive-diplomacy initiatives, to prevent conflict in Africa. The adoption of the first
resolution was considered a personal coup for British Prime Minister Tony Blair
after the worst “terrorist” attack on British soil. Included in Macapagal-Arroyo’s
schedule were bilateral meetings with Chinese President Hu Jintao, Malaysian
Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi and “informal talks” with US President George
Bush. In
question The NYCHRP and the
Philippine Forum have consulted with their lawyers concerning the apartment of
Philippine Consul General to New York Cecilia Rebong at the Trump
Tower in Manhattan, which reportedly
costs $10,000 a month. The two-bedroom apartment is located near the United
Nations headquarters in Manhattan. Rebong, who
started occupying the apartment last July, earlier admitted that the government
shoulders the rental, but said it had the approval of the Department of Foreign
Affairs (DFA). Rebong added that the apartment intended for her at the building
owned by the DFA along 66th
Street is being renovated. Protesters,
however, said that they expect taxes and other fees they pay to the government
to be used for better service to migrant workers and not for profligate spending
of government officials. Rebong, who
couldn’t find an alternative, said the contract for the rental will end early
next year. Despedida On Sept. 16, a "Goodbye and
Good Riddance, Gloria" Despedida Party was held in front of the Consulate. With giant cardboard rat
cut-outs and rat masks in tow, various Rats went around New York calling for
Macapagal-Arroyo’s ouster. "[NYC Mayor Michael] Bloomberg was right when he recently declared a rat
infestation problem in the city (as) we are experiencing the foulest stench from
a rotten, illegitimate, and fake president in our midst,” said Ellorin. “Now it
is time for the people of the world and the rats of New York to take out the
garbage by ousting the Arroyo regime." ”We Filipinos in the U.S.
are one with the Filipino people all over the world in calling for the ouster of
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and the establishment of a multi-sectoral transitional
council to decide the next best step for our suffering nation," she said.
Bayan-USA also announced
that the Filipino contingent to the coming national anti-war demonstration in
Washington
DC on Sept. 24 will also echo calls for her
ouster alongside the demand for the pull out of U.S. troops in the Philippines.
Meanwhile, anti-Arroyo
protesters in the country have already planned for demonstrations upon Macapagal-Arroyo’s
return to the Philippines
Sept. 17. Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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