This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 37, October 23-29, 2005
News
Analysis Is GMA-Church
Clash Looming? With
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s enforcement of the calibrated preemptive
response policy, more and more Catholic bishops and even lay leaders are coming
out with statements opposed to her government’s actions. Is the country’s most
influential church then headed for a collision with the present administration? BY
ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO With President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo’s enforcement of the calibrated preemptive response (CPR)
policy, more and more Catholic bishops and even lay leaders are coming out with
statements opposed to her government’s actions. Is the country’s most
influential church then headed for a collision with the present administration? In its Sept. 13 statement,
released a week after the killing of the impeachment complaints against Arroyo,
the influential Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) did not
call for a people-power uprising, but it encouraged the Catholic faithful to
continue the “search for truth.” Arroyo has long been facing
calls for her resignation or removal from power because of her government’s
implementation of what cause-oriented groups describe as “anti-national and
anti-people” policies. These calls recently intensified following renewed
allegations that she cheated her way to victory in the 2004 election, where she
was supposed to have received a fresh mandate three years after being catapulted
to power through a popular uprising. CPR On Sept. 22, Arroyo
announced the enforcement of the CPR policy, which entails a blanket restriction
on all rallies without permits. She enforced the policy amid escalating protest
actions calling for her resignation or removal from office and with the said
policy intended to quell mass demonstrations. The CPR goes a step further
than Batas Pambansa Blg. 880, which, although prohibiting rallies without
permits, also provides that applications for rally permits are considered
approved if not acted upon by the concerned local government units within two
days from filing. “This is like the President amending the law,” said Bayan Muna
(People First) Rep. Satur Ocampo in a recent interview with Bulatlat. The calibrated preemptive
response policy has been used as basis for forcible dispersals of rallies even
before the ralliers could get to the planned rally site. This, even as labor
lawyer Remigio Saladero, Jr. has argued that “In the first place, the police
have no business being where the rally is.” BP 880 provides that police should
stay at least a hundred meters away from the rally site. The latest rally to bear
the brunt of the calibrated preemptive response policy is the Oct. 21 march by
some 7,000 demonstrators belonging to the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP
or Philippine Peasant Movement), Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan or New
Patriotic Alliance), and the People’s Movement Against Poverty (PMAP) to the
foot of the Don Chino Roces Bridge, a few steps away from the presidential
palace. Police blocked all points leading to Malacañang Palace, thus provoking
scuffles with the ralliers, who had to content themselves with holding their
program at the corner of Nicanor Reyes and C.M. Recto Streets for the rest of
the day. That was a full week after
the dispersal of a prayer procession along C.M. Recto led by Bishops Antonio
Tobias, Deogracias Yñiguez, and Julio Labayen; former Vice President Teofisto
Guingona Jr., former Executive Secretary Oscar Orbos, former Sen. Wigberto
Tañada, Sen. Jamby Madrigal, and Ocampo. The marchers, who included
scores of nuns and priests, had staged a prayer action at the Plaza Miranda in
Quiapo, Manila to demand a stop to “immorality” in government, and had intended
to march to the San Beda Church, which is near Malacañang. They were carrying
not placards but mostly rosaries and an image of the Virgin Mary, and they had
refrained from chanting anti-Arroyo slogans. This did not prevent the police
from hosing them down and hitting them with truncheons. Before that dispersal, the
targets of the CPR policy had been those who may be described as “the usual
suspects,” those belonging to groups described as leftist. The Oct. 14 prayer
march was so far the first people’s assembly led by personalities aside from
“the usual suspects” to be forcibly dispersed. Sharp condemnation The dispersal of this
particular rally drew sharp condemnation from influential leaders of the
Catholic Church, the biggest religious denomination in the Philippines. As of
2004, the Catholic Church had 66.4 million members out of 81 million population. One of the first to issue a
statement of condemnation was Jaro Archbishop Antonio Lagdameo, incoming
president of the CBCP. He said the “violent dispersal” of the prayer march was
“uncalled for and objectionable.” “The prayer assembly and
rosary procession that were held there were part of a crusade by civil society
for truth, honesty, credibility and integrity in government – a crusade for good
governance, which is sadly lacking and very much needed for economic progress,”
Lagdameo added. Meanwhile, Archbishop Oscar
Cruz of Lingayen-Dagupan said in a short essay written two days after the
dispersal: “The
(administration) just committed a double violence: violence against people
having a peaceful assembly and violence against the constitution regarding
respect for human rights. It was not enough to stop or disperse the people’s
assembly. They were subjected to the indignity and ridicule being the helpless
targets of water cannons – inspite of all prayers and pleadings. The event and
the sight were very familiar during the martial law regime.”
Curz did not end there and has even coined a new equivalent for CPR, the
abbreviated name of calibrated preemptive response: concrete progressive
repressions. Under concrete, progressive repressions, said Cruz, “People must
first secure government’s permit before they could gather and speak. And when
they do, the country becomes like a (police state).” And
now, it is not only bishops like Lagdameo and Cruz who have raised their voices
against the calibrated preemptive response policy. Evangelist Mike Velarde,
leader of the Catholic charismatic group El Shaddai, went on record Oct. 17 to
express anger at the dispersal of the Oct. 14 prayer march. “The
suppression of prayer rallies led by responsible religious leaders is a clear
sign of disrespect for faith and beliefs,” Velarde said, “which must not be
tolerated by the faithful and the people regardless of religious affiliation.”
The charismatic lay leader also said that he plans to talk to the President
about withdrawing the calibrated preemptive response policy. This statement by Velarde
is significant, first because he is a known ally of Arroyo, to whom he serves as
spiritual adviser. His condemnation of the Oct. 14 dispersal is his first
expression of displeasure with Arroyo. Problems for Arroyo What makes this move by
Velarde more significant is that he is by no means a non-influential person. His
El Shaddai group claims five million followers all over the country, and
politicians have been known to court his support for their electoral bids. The
late Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin was even once reported to have
lamented that Velarde was more influential on the Catholic faithful than the
bishops and priests. As if that were not enough,
Cruz has told media that more and more bishops now “see more signs” about what
is happening in the country. “I do not think I have still to hear a bishop who
is rejoicing because of what happened,” said Cruz, who is also a member of the
CBCP. “Not because they are bishops but because it is
really offensive to human dignity.” Cruz has also disclosed
that what happened last Oct. 14 will surely be a factor when the CBCP Permanent
Council meets next month for a joint session. Already, he sees that more and
more rallies will arise out of the Oct. 14 incident. As if to prove him correct,
the crowd that participated in the Oct. 21 rally in commemoration of World
Peasant Day was estimated at about 7,000 – definitely bigger than the rallies
that were violently dispersed before that, which numbered less than a thousand. Arroyo enforced the
calibrated preemptive response to quell protests against her continued stay in
office. The strong-arm tactics this policy entails have not served her well, and
by antagonizing both clerical and lay leaders of the country’s most numerous
religious denomination, she has only created more problems for herself. Arroyo could certainly use
a lesson or two from her predecessors Ferdinand Marcos and Joseph Estrada, in
whose ousters multitudes of Catholics played considerably important parts.
Bulatlat © 2005 Bulatlat
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