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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to
search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts
Vol. VI, No. 29 Aug.
27 - Sept. 2, 2006 Quezon City, Philippines |
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For
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Iskandalo
Cafe
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Copyright 2004 Bulatlat bulatlat@gmail.com |
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STREETWISE
Bad Governance
Times like this, even a
staunch opponent of the Arroyo administration would wish that government
will get its act together, do whatever needs to be done with dispatch, in
an organized way and with maximum effect. Alas, that may be asking too
much if we go by Malacañangs track record and the most recent
pronouncements of the besieged president, Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
BY CAROL PAGADUAN-ARAULLO
Business World
Posted by Bulatlat
The images of oil-drenched beaches, mangroves, sea creatures and stoic
fisher folk caused by the biggest oil spill affecting the once idyllic
Guimaras Island off Iloilo province are heart-wrenching. Not knowing any
better, we would be cursing our bad luck or whatever destructive fate the
gods have chosen to bestow upon our seemingly hapless country.
But outside of the bad weather, none of the factors that caused the
sinking of the Solar I, an oil tanker owned by Sunshine Maritime
Development Corp. and chartered by Petron, were natural and
uncontrollable. Of course, blame may be assigned to the captain of the
ship for having decided to continue the trip despite precarious weather
conditions. The same or even more so can be laid on a neglectful and
corrupt government, its lax regulatory mechanisms as well as on its gross
ill preparedness for handling such man-made disasters.
Prevention is certainly better than cure, more so when it comes to damage
to the natural environment. The fact that the tanker hired by Petron to
transport 2.4 million liters of oil is a single-hulled one increased the
risk of spillage of toxic material once oil containers were breached. A
senator has looked into the financial health of the tanker owner and is
unimpressed that it had the necessary capitalization and operating funds
to guaranty the safety of its cargo load. Has the highly profitable oil
company, Petron, been scrimping on safety measures and the public welfare?
Current shipping routes are not set with the objective of protecting
sensitive marine areas such as the Guimaras Strait, home to one of the
most productive fishing grounds in the country as well as a popular
tourist attraction with its white sand beaches, marine sanctuaries,
unspoiled coral reefs and mangrove forests. Has the government been
sleeping on the job, as usual, or perhaps their regulatory powers have
been effectively neutralized by “consideration” from crass commercial
interests.
Most disturbing has been the excruciatingly slow response of government,
Petron and Sunshine Maritime with an underlying tendency to finger-point
as to who should do what and, most especially, who foots the initial
clean-up, the relief operations for displaced coastline communities, not
to mention the long-term rehabilitation bill.
It took two weeks and the hue and cry from environment groups, the
Guimaras local government and the Philippine Coast Guard before Malacañang
stopped dragging its feet and created a multi-agency task force to deal
with the national emergency. Petron chose to ignore Coast Guard warnings
that the leakage was a continuing one and was very quiet about its
liabilities while it trumpeted providing emergency livelihood to farmers
turned clean-up crew. The ship owner was nowhere to be found.
But the worst is yet to come. It’s a race against time to plug the leak
in the submerged tanker or suck out the remaining fuel from it. Otherwise,
the initial serious and long-term damage done to the marine ecosystem in
Guimaras could envelope the entire Visayas region. Already three coastal
communities in Negros Occidental have been adversely affected and Cebu
is seriously threatened.
Times like this, even a staunch opponent of the Arroyo administration
would wish that government will get its act together, do whatever needs to
be done with dispatch, in an organized way and with maximum effect.
Alas, that may be asking too much if we go by Malacañang’s track record
and the most recent pronouncements of the besieged president, Mrs. Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo.
Note that we’re not talking here about the recent massacre of the
impeachment process against Mrs. Arroyo on charges of stealing
public funds, cheating her way to the presidency, lying to
the nation through a grand cover-up, and willfully allowing a
policy of extrajudicial killings in her “all-out war” policy
against the Left in this country.
(As an aside, that apparently, was a lesson in realpolitik courtesy
of the grizzled, cynical and highly-rewarded pro-GMA, anti-impeachment
House Majority. Here is their superficially erudite line: they had the
overwhelming numbers to defeat the impeachment petition; to hell with
determining the truth, achieving justice and resolving the political
impasse gripping the nation through the only remaining, strictly
constitutional means available. Thank you, honorable men and women of the
13th Congress.)
At this point allow us to take some recent examples of what kind of
governance the Arroyo regime is capable of.
The evacuation of thousands of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) endangered
by the highly destructive Israeli bombardment of Hezbollah-controlled
territories in Lebanon was marked by interminable delays, disorganization,
recrimination, unavailable funds and a pathetic dependence on
international charity and humanitarian aid.
At the end of the day, the OFWs were lucky to be back alive, with nothing
to show for their misadventures abroad but their scrappy belongings and
forlorn looks. Indeed, the future looks bleak except for Mrs. Arroyo’s
promise to retrain them to become “super maids” and thereby up their
chances of getting rehired in the war-riddled Middle East. Too bad there
are still no jobs for them right here.
As to the nursing board exams leakage, Malacañang decided, after the
controversy grew larger and more stinky, that there will be no retake of
the tainted part of the licensure examinations because, according to the
pragmatic words of Executive Secretary Ermita, the “sin” of a few cheaters
should not be visited on the majority of examinees who are honest.
Considering that the leakage appeared to involve several board examiners,
the head of the Philippine Nurses Association (PNA), a score of deans of
nursing schools and several review centers, it is not just the integrity
of the last board exams that has been compromised but the future of the
bourgeoning industry producing nurses for U.S. and UK hospitals. (Not that
such an outcome is necessarily bad but that’s for another column.)
Such a dire scenario should have been a cause for worry to an
administration that knows that the Philippine economy is being kept afloat
by OFW remittances (including those from hundreds of thousands of
nurses).
Unfortunately, the latest Malacañang decision merely reflects the deep
erosion of moral values and standards of the current political leadership
of this country.
Good fruit cannot come from a rotten tree. Business World / Posted by
Bulatlat
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