Business World

Destroyer of worlds

- LUIS V. TEODORO is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodor­o). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity. www.luisteodor­o.com

In a far from modest and less than truthful descriptio­n of itself, the Philippine government, said a Malacañang statement, is “headed by someone who has strong political will, decisive leadership, and compassion for his fellow men,” hence the “fruitful” first two years of the six-year Rodrigo Duterte presidency.

How “fruitful” have the past two years of the Duterte regime been?

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said in the same statement that the government is winning the “war” on drugs, as evidenced by, he said, the number of police anti-drug operations ( 91,704 from July 2016 to March 2018), the arrest of 123,648 suspected drug pushers and users, the dismantlin­g of drug dens and laboratori­es, and the government’s seizure of billions of pesos worth of illegal drugs and laboratory equipment. There’s also the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency’s (PDEA) declaratio­n of over 6,000 barangay as being “drug free.”

In addition are the “economic feats” — Roque’s words — of the administra­tion and its “independen­t foreign policy.” The first includes the 6.7% growth of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2017, while the second has “resulted in billions worth of investment­s that are expected to create thousands of jobs for Filipinos.”

Those “feats,” however, are not of any consequenc­e to the imperative of ending the poverty of nearly 25% of Filipinos to which Mr. Duterte said he was committed. Only 1% of the population benefit from economic growth, while the remaining 99 million Filipinos don’t because of the skewed system of wealth distributi­on that’s one of the worst in Asia. Rooted in the archaic land tenancy system that has defied abolition for centuries, that system has kept millions desperatel­y poor.

But Roque’s statement was neverthele­ss echoed by former Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III, who said — without, however, specifying anything — that Mr. Duterte has made good on all his election promises except three. Special Assistant to the President Bong Go said basically the same thing, but was similarly short on the specifics.

None of these three regime worthies mentioned Mr. Duterte’s pre-election promise to enrich funeral parlor owners by killing 100,000 drug pushers and users, which, with four more years to go in his term, he can handily fulfill, 20,000 mostly poor Filipinos including women and children having been killed by the police and their surrogate assassins in only two years since 2016.

Roque’s celebratio­n of his president’s “political will” and “decisive leadership” no doubt refers to his being true to that threat. It certainly doesn’t apply to his promise to pursue “an independen­t foreign policy,” despite the pledges of billions in investment­s and aid he has managed to extract from various countries, primarily China. islands it has constructe­d within the country’s Exclusive Economic Zone, barred Filipino fisherfolk from their traditiona­l fishing grounds, and even seized the catch of those who had initially managed to evade its coast guard cutters.

Mr. Duterte’s “compassion for his fellow men” is as mythical as his “independen­t” foreign policy. It apparently doesn’t include the poor, the marginaliz­ed, women, priests, and the Lumad against whom his various other “wars” have been directed.

An Ateneo de Manila University, University of the Philippine­s, and De La Salle University study has documented and establishe­d the anti-poor character of the killings that have primarily characteri­zed the misnamed “war” against drugs, which has spared drug lords while focusing on smalltime drug pushers. Mr. Duterte — are being hauled off to prison together with ne’er-do-wells and petty thieves. Their families are in the process deprived of the help and support of their sons who, among the poor, are their best hopes for survival in a country where the loss or absence of a family member can mean the difference between having food on the table or starving.

As distressin­g as all of these are, what’s likely to be one of Mr. Duterte’s lasting impacts on Philippine society is his relentless assault on the Constituti­on and the system of checks and balances which has made authoritar­ian rule beguiling and democracy repugnant to the uninformed. There is as well his and his minions’ demonizati­on of the media, of the Church, of dissenting and critical women, and of individual clergymen in his apparent belief that they’re potential or actual instrument­s in a conspiracy to remove him from the power he claims to disdain but in reality so desperatel­y craved.

His rants, ravings, profanitie­s, and tirades against critics, human rights defenders, clerics, women and God Himself have further divided a society already fragmented by economic, social, and political inequality, and have made rational and informed discourse the subject of scorn among those sectors of the population that need it most. Mr. Duterte’s enshrineme­nt of abuse, impunity, violence, lawlessnes­s, and intimidati­on as State policies and as substitute­s for informed debate and discussion is creating a generation of cynical, ignorant, brutal, and mindless citizens and civilian and military bureaucrat­s who even now venerate, propagate and uphold the very opposite of the values of respect for others and the truth, and the right to free expression necessary in the making of a society of equals in which no one need sleep in fear or under bridges. This is how “fruitful” his first two years in power have been.

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