ANALYSIS
Repeating History
Repression invites more resistance than fear, and usually succeeds in
achieving the exact opposite of its intention to intimidate.
By the Center for People Empowerment in Governance (CENPEG)
Posted by Bulatlat
The Arroyo
regime is focused on survival, but is instead succeeding in strengthening
already widespread opposition to it. The reason for this is simple and
fundamental: it cannot confront head-on the issues that have bedeviled it
since May this year because, as many suspect and as is probably the case,
it did steal the May 2004 elections.
Over the last
five months the Arroyo regime has therefore done its all to (1) prevent
the truth about the May 2004 elections from seeing the light of day, in
the furtherance of which it has been led to (2) suppressing the right to
free expression.
Last summer it
threatened to charge the media organizations that dared air or print the
“Hello, Garci” tapes with violating the anti-wiretapping law, and the
protest groups demanding Arroyo’s resignation or forcible removable from
office with sedition and inciting to sedition.
The Justice
Department’s National Bureau of Investigation also raided a printing press
for the alleged offense of printing posters that depicted Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
as a viper-haired Medusa, after arresting and charging with sedition three
young men it accused of pasting the posters on metro Manila’s grimy walls.
Indeed the
justice department has been busy trying to find loopholes in the country’s
laws that would enable the regime to prosecute its perceived enemies. What
it cannot find in the laws, it has itself concocted.
Only a month
or so ago it unleashed Executive Order 464 under the provisions of which
no official of the Executive Department can testify in any hearing in the
House or Representatives and the Senate without Arroyo’s permission.
Before EO 464
the regime had announced a “no permit, no rally” policy in blatant
violation of Article III Section 4 of the Philippine Constitution which
expressly prohibits the passing of any law infringing on the free press,
free expression and the right to assemble peaceably for the redress of
grievances.
Eventually it
went even further, announcing some weeks ago the now infamous CPR
(Calibrated Preemptive Response) policy towards demonstrations and other
street mass actions.
Both
supplanted a supposed “maximum tolerance” policy that was only
sporadically implemented, and allow the dispersal, most of the time
violent, of demonstrations and rallies.
It was under
the authority of the CPR policy that the police, incidentally with
undisguised glee, turned fire hoses on a prayer rally last October 14 in
which former Vice President Teofisto Guingona, Senator Jamby Mardigal,
Party List Representatives Satur Ocampo and Joel Virador, and Bishops
Antonio Tobias and Deogracias Iñiguez were in attendance..
As
anyone--apparently except the curious assortment of “exes” (an
ex-anti-dictatorship President’s daughter, ex-journalists, ex-activists
and ex-Marcos generals) that now run Malacañang—would have expected, the
attack on the prayer rally has aroused widespread outrage and begun the
process of unifying a divided Church. Even El Shaddai’s Mike Velarde, an
Arroyo ally, has in fact expressed outrage over the incident.
As Bishop
Tobias pointed out during the weekend, the attack is also uniting the
Catholic bishops, who only last July 8 had hesitated in demanding the
resignation of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Expect attacks
similar to Friday’s to continue and to worsen. The one thing one can rely
on about the Philippine political elite, particularly Arroyo and company,
is its incurable reliance on repression and more repression in answer to
the legitimate grievances of the citizenry. But expect too the growth of
resistance to the regime’s suppression of free expression, and, quite
possibly, the unleashing of the Second Wind of the oust-Arroyo movement.
The obvious
and historical fact in this country and elsewhere is that repression
invites more resistance than fear, and usually succeeds in achieving the
exact opposite of its intention to intimidate. Arroyo and company should
review their martial law history and learn from it if they expect to avoid
repeating that part of it which ended with Ferdinand Marcos’ fleeing the
country in well-deserved disgrace.
Contact
Person: Luis V. Teodoro, Executive Director
(632) 929-9526
Oct. 20, 2005
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