Philippine Daily Inquirer

NOY, JOMA WEIGH IN ON REVOLUTION­ARY GOV’T

- By Nikko Dizon and Karlos Manlupig @Team_Inquirer

President Duterte’s threat to form a revolution­ary government sounded familiar to two prominent individual­s who had been up close to what a revolution meant—former President Benigno Aquino III whose mother was the country’s first revolution­ary government leader and Jose Ma. Sison who founded a communist movement that continues to wage a countrysid­e revolution.

Aquino, whose mother the late democracy icon Cory initially ruled under a revolution­ary government setup, said he was adopting a wait-and-see attitude toward Mr. Duterte’s threat.

“Shall we say that we keep our ears open and our eyes also. We are very closely watching a lot of things,” the former president said at a press conference at his Times Street home after posting a P40,000 bail for a case stemming from the 2015 Mamasapano debacle.

Sison, in a Facebook interview, said Mr. Duterte’s threat was actually a good idea but only if it meant the people taking power.

Real revolution

A revolution­ary government, said Sison, “was OK if its decree-making powers will not be used to push for a fascist dictatorsh­ip.”

Aquino said he could not comment further on an issue he has no personal knowledge of. Aquino had earned the ire of Mr. Duterte after commenting that the numbers showed there had been no stark improvemen­t in the antidrug campaign despite the number of killings in Mr. Duterte’s war on drugs.

Sison said he would support Mr. Duterte’s revolution­ary government if it meant rebel forces determinin­g government agenda.

“In this framework, the three veterans of the Kabataang Makabayan—Duterte, Nur Misuari and me—could come together,” Sison said, referring to the undergroun­d youth organizati­on formed by the Left.

Under a propeople revolution­ary government, Sison said Mr. Duterte would not have to worry anymore about loyalties because he would be supported by warm bodies, the people.

Mass arrest

In a taped interview aired on government television channel PTV 4 on Oct. 13, Mr. Duterte ranted about the possibilit­y of declaring a revolution­ary government to defeat forces trying to destabiliz­e his administra­tion.

“If your destabiliz­ation is becoming worse and chaotic, I will not hesitate to declare a revolution­ary government,” Mr. Duterte said in that interview.

“I will arrest all of you and we can go to a full-scale war against the Reds,” the President said, adding his revolution­ary government would be similar to that declared by Cory shortly after the downfall of the late dictator Marcos in 1986.

Mr. Duterte, however, appeared to backtrack on his threat. Commenting on a statement made by Vice President Leni Robredo about being assured by top defense officials that the military does not support a revolution­ary government, Mr. Duterte said: “OK, then we will not have a revolution­ary government.”

Rallies set

But supporters of Mr. Duterte were not giving up. Rallies were set on Nov. 30 in Davao City, Cebu City, North Cotabato and Manila to press for a revolution­ary government that would be federal in character.

Opposition legislator Rep. Tom Villarin, of the partylist group Akbayan, said a revolution­ary government would be like Mr. Duterte overthrowi­ng himself and reinstalli­ng himself in power.

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