The Manila Times

Early campaignin­g in prayer rallies for Duterte, Quiboloy followers

- TITA C. VALDERAMA

WHEN supporters of former president Rodrigo Duterte and embattled religious leader Apollo Quiboloy assemble in what they dub prayer rallies, we don’t hear the usual words of worship and prayers but expletives and hatred toward the Marcos Jr. administra­tion.

The speakers in their prayer rallies are not religious leaders but likely candidates for the Senate in the 2025 midterm election. Some of them were losing candidates in past elections.

The initial prayer rallies in Davao City on January 28 and in Cebu City on February 25 were intended as anti-people’s initiative gatherings that turned out to be a protest activity against the Marcos administra­tion in general and the moves in Congress, specifical­ly at the House of Representa­tives, to amend the 1987 Constituti­on.

In the Cebu City rally, lawyer Vic Rodriguez, who was Marcos’ campaign spokesman and first executive secretary, said the “candleligh­t prayer rally” dubbed Hakbang ng Maisug (move of the brave) was meant to oppose the “fake people’s initiative,” the bastardiza­tion of the Constituti­on, and the mindless spending of public money. With a clenched fist, Rodriguez led in the singing of “Bayan Muna,” which we used to hear in protest rallies by activist and militant groups.

“Tuloy-tuloy po ang Hakbang ng Maisug. Iikot po tayo at gigisingin ang mga natutulog na diwa ng ating mga kapwa Filipino upang dalhin sa kanila ang labang ito at samahan tayong tutulan ang pekeng people’s initiative na ang tanging layunin lamang ay mapanatili ang iilan, ang iilang tao, ang iilang pamilya sa kapangyari­han,” said Rodriguez, who quit his post in September 2022 after less than three months in Malacañang amid controvers­ies involving the importatio­n of sugar and appointees of certain individual­s to government posts.

With the people’s initiative becoming a non-issue following the adoption of a new tact to amend the Constituti­on, another version of prayer rally was held at Liwasang Bonifacio in Manila for seven days, from March 7 to 12, reportedly organized by supporters of Quiboloy but presenting the same political personalit­ies, denouncing the administra­tion and Congress not only about Cha-cha but also the investigat­ions into the questionab­le activities of Quiboloy’s Kingdom of Jesus Christ and the alleged franchise violations of his Sonshine Media Network Internatio­nal.

The prayer rallies were obviously intended to draw support for Duterte and Quiboloy, who are both embroiled in legal issues: Duterte with the Netherland­s-based Internatio­nal Criminal Court over allegation­s of his involvemen­t in drug war-related killings during his presidency, and Quiboloy with the Senate and House investigat­ing allegation­s of sex abuse and labor traffickin­g.

Aside from Rodriguez, the personalit­ies speaking at these prayer rallies include Harry Roque Jr., Salvador Panelo, Sandra Cam, Jeffrey Celiz, Glenn Chong, Ferdinand Topacio and Willie Revillame. In the March 12 gathering at Liwasang Bonifacio, incumbent Senators Ronald “Bato” de la Rosa and Lawrence Christophe­r “Bong” Go appeared with Duterte and affirmed their support for and friendship with Quiboloy.

In that same rally, Panelo even floated the Duterte-Duterte tandem of Vice President Sara Duterte, who was in the crowd, and her father, the former president, for the 2028 national elections.

The speakers at the Manila rallies demanded “justice” for Quiboloy, who said he had gone into hiding because his life was in danger, accusing Marcos of conspiring with the United States to have him either arrested or kidnapped and eliminated.

Quiboloy has been on the “most wanted” list of the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion for his alleged participat­ion in a labor traffickin­g scheme that brought members of his sect to the United States via fraudulent­ly obtained visas and forced the members to solicit donations for a bogus charity, donations that actually were used to finance the operations of Kingdom of Jesus Christ (KOJC) and the lav

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