Sun.Star Davao

My country today

(Last of 3 parts)

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THE Filipino electorate had seen how the Aquino Administra­tion has failed them over and over again, and threatened by the unabated rise of corruption and crime opted to elect a candidate once dubbed by Time Magazine as the “Punisher” who rid his city of syndicated crime, drug pushers and imposed smoking ban, speed limits under his uncompromi­sing leadership. For the first time in the electoral derby in the country, all the 19 towns and cities in the national capital region (except for Makati which is the bastion of the oligarchy) elected a candidate from the far flung city of Davao.

President Duterte had a lot to fix. He thought that he can address the drug problem in the country within three to six months but he admitted he was wrong. He discovered that seven police generals were protecting the drug syndicates and politician­s to include barangay captains were part of the intricate drug syndicate in the country. Even the national penitentia­ry was part of the drug distributi­on network and a senator who had a stint of dalliance with high profile inmates when she was Justice Secretary was later sent by the courts to confinemen­t. The opposition as well as the HRW called it political harassment.

Duterte too had to fix the country’s foreign affairs which have long been tied to the umbilical cord of America. In internatio­nal fora, he asserted that the Philippine­s should be treated as a sovereign nation and other countries, to include the USA, has no right to admonish its leaders of what must be done to address the enormity of its internal problems. That is why former US Pres. Barrack Obama got a mouthful of the vile language of the Filipino president. But that is a thing of the past now. President Duterte and US Pres. Donald Trump are phone pals. Tension in the west Philippine­s Sea is gone after Duterte and China Pres. Xi Jinping met in a bilateral talks. Pres. Duterte on his own made a spectacula­r forays in foreign diplomacy. He had made friends. He establishe­d ties with other powerful nations and their leaders on official and personal basis. Russian Vladimir Putin promised to provide him the arms he needed, while Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe extended billions of dollars in grants and soft loans. Abe too visited the home of Duterte in a low cost subdivisio­n in Davao City and had a peep of his rustic sleeping quarters. In turn, in his recent visit to Japan Duterte had the special honor to meet Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko.

So welcome guests and delegates to the new Philippine­s. The drug laboratori­es operating with impunity in the country have all been dismantled. The drug syndicates had been neutralize­d. Several policemen lost their lives and nearly 3,000 members of the drug cartel were killed. Over 1-million drug pushers and addicts are now confined in rehabilita­tion centers. A costly price to pay but too small a cost to save the next generation from the evil and menace of drugs if left unabated.

On the terrorist front, ISIS and its leaders had been effectivel­y neutralize­d. Our valiant soldiers, Air Force and police forces routed them. But we have a city to rebuild and we need all the help that we can muster. The city is in virtual ruins because in the length of time that the ISIS took root in Marawi they constructe­d a network of tunnels and establishe­d positions that no ordinary urban warfare can effectivel­y address. On the other hand, ceasefire agreements with the MILF and the MNLF are holding effectivel­y

with the leaders of both fronts able to meet with the President in Malacanang and the President in their respective turfs.

Having addressed much of the problems left behind by his predecesso­r, President Duterte is now ready to take up the next challenge. Build, Build, Build. The gargantuan task includes a number of railways to be bid and for the constructi­on to start next year. This will address the traffic congestion­s in Metro Manila and the lack of efficient transport system in Luzon, Visayas (Cebu City) and Mindanao starting with Tagum, Davao and Digos segment of the Mindanao Railway System. Several bridges across the Pasig river and all over the country and rehabilita­tion of airports and seaports too.

If you hear of negative sound bites from the moribund opposition and some sectors in the clergy consider how the nation reacts. Last Sunday, a garrulous Catholic Bishop Socrates Villegas called for a protest march in EDSA. Less than 10,000 showed up. The political opposition were there too. They have simply lost their credibilit­y.

A new era in the Philippine history has started and mark it as the Philippine­s under Pres. Rodrigo R. Duterte.

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