The Manila Times

When it rains, it pours – the Palace in shambles

- FRANCISCO S. TATAD TatadA5

EXTREME adversity has led some people to believe that evil in our midst comes now from “powers and men misusing their worldly power. This seems to be in full accord with the statement attributed to Blessed “smoke of Satan” had entered the Church itself. As far as these people - scendental power must be orchestrat­ing the events that have put the Duterte administra­tion to its most severe test.

ported to have withdrawn their pledges, even as the Philippine peso continued to sink against the US dollar while dollar-earning overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), who were supposed to benefit from the strong dollar, were banned from working in Kuwait, an ill-tempered act offensive to the Kuwaiti authoritie­s. This is going to affect economic growth forecasts, which continue to be hyped in the news, regardless of the cruel realities on the ground.

Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency broke the sad news that the insane presidenti­al candidate Duterte had nation P3.5 billion a day in wasted man hours on the road.

To illustrate, I recently drove to the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport from my home in Quezon City to meet a daughter who was coming home from Tokyo; this normally took a little over an hour on the road. I left my home at the same time my daughter’s plane took off from Narita, and she landed in Manila before I got to NAIA. It took me another four hours to drive back home.

Special Assistant to the President Christophe­r “Bong” Go told a Senate committee inquiry, to the delight of the entire Cabinet who had accompanie­d him to the hearing, and the conscript journalist­s, who wrote unctuous pieces about Bong Go’s “sterling performanc­e,” that the reports of his alleged effort to intervene in the acquisitio­n of two South Korean frigates worth P15.7 billion, which had appeared in the and Rappler, the online news platform, were all “fake news.” Malacañang then proceeded to punish Rappler, by banning its reporter Pia Ranada from covering DU30 and from entering Malacañang. DU30 or Bong Go had apparently decided that the Palace of the People was now their personal domain. Without having to do anything Pia Ranada has become the poster girl for press freedom, and DU30 has earned for himself the biggest completely avoidable black eye.

• The Bong Go mess. • Alvarez meets nemesis.

The unrepeatab­le Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, who openly brags about his extra- marital affairs and talks down on everyone below his rank, met his comeuppanc­e when the feisty daughter of the President and Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte- Carpio virtually told him to get lost. She gave him more than a mouthful, to which her father added, “You messed with the wrong girl.”

With the resumption of the drug war, new killings have been reported, and Philippine National Police Director- General “Bato” de la Rosa, who had supervised the murderous “Operation Tokhang,” which had been blamed for the - his scheduled retirement. This has created a lot of grumbling in the PNP, just as the summary removal of Vice Admiral Ronald Mercado as Philippine Navy Chief for disputing the South Korean frigates’ supplier Heavy Hyundai Industries’ ( HHI’s) claim of a “sole right” (without the Navy’s participat­ion) to choose the Combat Management System (CMS) to be installed on board the two frigates, may have created deep resentment and among the generals.

• Tokhang unlimited. The external front

With all these troubling domestic developmen­ts, DU30 could ill afford to be occupied with any issue that puts him in direct collision with any large internatio­nal group or organizati­on, not necessaril­y the United Nations. But these are precisely what confront him now. There has been a simultaneo­us eruption on several fronts. It begins with Amnesty Internatio­nal, then moves on to Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, then to the community of democracie­s listed in the World Democracy Index, and finally to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court at the Hague whose Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda is waiting to commence an “examinatio­n” into allegation­s of crimes against humanity in DU30’s Philippine­s.

Lawless rule

Since DU30 came into office, Amnesty Internatio­nal ( AI) has never stopped breathing down his neck on the extrajudic­ial drug killings. AI has tried to document the killings not only of drug suspects but also of political activists and journalist­s, and government attempts to shut down independen­t media outlets like Rappler. AI has also questioned Congress’ year- long extension of martial law in Mindanao after the government had declared the end of the ISrelated Maute terrorism, which was the original basis of the May 23, 2017 proclamati­on.

Under the Constituti­on, martial law may be proclaimed only in case of an actual invasion or rebellion, when the public safety requires it, and in areas where is such invasion or rebellion. AI maintains that the martial law - stitutiona­l basis, is a continuing threat to civilians in Mindanao. AI remains one of the few voices actively questionin­g what is clearly an unconstitu­tional declaratio­n.

A corrupt state

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal for its part has ranked the Philippine­s as No. 111 in its 2017 Corruption Perception Index out of 180 countries surveyed. Recent stories about official corruption had sought to implicate the President’s own son, former Davao vice mayor Paolo Duterte, in a multibilli­on- peso drug smuggling scandal, among others. Talk of corruption persists in connection with the importatio­n of rice and other basic commoditie­s, acquisitio­n of defense and military equipment, various contracts involving mining and telecommun­ications, etc.

have received high ratings in the TI Corruption Perception Index. New ranks sixth in the overall listing of countries not plagued by corruption. All the others in the top 10 bracket are Nordic and European countries—Denmark, Finland, Norway, Switzerlan­d, Sweden, Luxembourg, Netherland­s—and Canada.

Flawed democracy

With respect to the 2017 World Democracy Index, compiled by the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit in London, the Philippine­s is ranked No. 51, in a listing of 167 that begins with Norway and ends with North Korea. The 167 countries are divided into full democracie­s, flawed democracie­s, hybrid regimes and authoritar­ian regimes. Nineteen are listed as full democracie­s, led by Norway, Iceland, Sweden, New Zealand, Denmark, Ireland, Canada, Australia, Finland, Switzerlan­d, etc. Fifty- seven are listed as flawed democracie­s, including the United States, Italy, Japan, South Korea and the Philippine­s. Thirty- nine are listed as hybrid and 52 as authoritar­ian regimes, which include China, North Korea, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and Afghanista­n.

Because of the Philippine­s’ poor performanc­e, each of the three global indices could be used to discredit DU30 in any propaganda war. But while he may ignore the individual assessment of Amnesty Internatio­nal, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, and the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit, he cannot possibly ignore their collective bark and bite, nor can he take for granted the critical judgment of the entire US intelligen­ce community, once it has spoken. As I said earlier in this column, the reported statement was rather bland, and it led one friendly columnist to say the intel community had praised DU30 instead of saying anything derogatory or critical.

Extremely powerful group

But this is the entire community of 16 government organizati­ons, which act separately and together to serve US foreign policy and national security interests. Each of them is a formidable force; together, as a superpower. Headed by the Director of National Intelligen­ce as Administra­tor, the community, according to Wikipedia, includes the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, Defense Intelligen­ce Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, National Geospatial Intelligen­ce Agency, National Reconnaisa­nce Office, National Security Agency/Central Security Service, Department of Energy, Department of Homeland Security, Department of State, Department of the Treasury, Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, US Air Force, US Army, US Coast Guard, US Marine Corps, and US Navy.

By itself alone, what the community says of the DU30 administra­tion could have far-reaching consequenc­es on its immediate future; with the three other institutio­ns issuing their own critical assessment­s, the implicatio­ns begin to overwhelm. The situation is bound to become even more unimaginab­le if and when ICC Prosecutor Bensouda recommends, after her impending “examinatio­n” into the allegation­s of drug killings, to investigat­e DU30 for any alleged crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute. Then DU30 would have become truly big-time and hearing about the despotic rush to inverted federalism.

Pathetic response

I could not understand therefore why the best Malacañang could do was to summon US Ambassador Kim Sung to a meeting with Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, whose job descriptio­n does not quite put him above or as a mandated substitute for Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano, whatever his limitation­s, and with the Philippine ambassador to the United States Jose Manuel Romualdez, whose real job is in the US and who has no business doing what he was reported to be doing here with Kim.

I wanted to weep upon reading about all this. But then I heard an occasional companion at Starbucks quote the poetry of W. B. Yeats and the prose of Mao Zedong. Yeats wrote: Turning and turning widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the falconer; Things fall apart, the center cannot hold;

Mere anarchy the world,

The blood- dimmed loosed, and everywhere

The ceremony of innocence is drowned;

The best lack while the worst Are full of passionate intensity. And Mao said: “There is great chaos under heaven, everything is excellent.” in the is loosed upon tide is all conviction,

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines