Sun.Star Davao

My country today

- JUN LEDESMA

(First of three parts)

Welcome delegates and guests to the 31st Associatio­n of Southeast Asia Nations summit and the Asean 50th Anniversar­y. The Philippine­s is populated by over 105 million people of diverse ethnic tribes and cultures, religious affiliatio­ns living in unique harmony.

We are an archipelag­ic country made up of 7,641 islands with a total area of 301,780 square kilometers. The Philippine­s is the 34th largest economy in the world, the 13th in Asia and the third largest economy among ASEAN nations. The largest islands are Luzon where the capital and central government is located and Mindanao, the southern-most island where the President of the Philippine­s, erstwhile Mayor of Davao City known in internatio­nal survey ratings as consistent­ly one of the top 10 most peaceful city in the world. The City is also consistent­ly cited as the Most Child Friendly and most competitiv­e city based on independen­t surveys. As against the national growth rate of 6.9% (WB statistics) Davao City maintains its growth at 9%.

I have to make a few citations for our guest to be able to appreciate the country which have just gotten rid of the vicious ISIS terrorists and negative propaganda waged by a moribund opposition which for several decades ruled the country and nearly pushed us on the edge of a failed state by sheer ineptness and acquiescen­ce to corruption and crime.

Over the years, the President of the Philippine­s always comes form the national capital region or Luzon. The oligarchy made NCR their exclusive domain and presides who the chief executive will be and where the largest chunk of the government budget will be spent. That is why you see massive infrastruc­tures only in Metro Manila which is the core territory of NCR. In its periphery too are economic zones, That is why you have a situation where most of the best paying jobs are in NCR. Conversely population and over physical developmen­t of MM grew and we see as among the biggest problem that beset Manila is traffic congestion.

Over the years the given notion is that no one from Mindanao will ever be elected President. I am laying this as a factual predicate to explain the glorious mystery why Duterte, pictured by his irate political adversarie­s as a killer and a bad-mouth politician who does not know the nuances of diplomatic language and niceties.

For several decades Filipinos were ruled by peons of the economic elite in Metro Manila. We have a President before, Ramon Magsaysay, who fought for the the rural poor. He was dubbed as “the man of the masses”. But his reign was abbreviate­d when he died in a plane crash. Those who followed him later had very little regard for the places outside of NCR. Pres. Ferdinand Marcos made a big difference as he implemente­d the land reform law under the dictum of land for the actual tillers, mas

sive infrastruc­tures outside of MM, supported farmers with various support program among them Masaganang 99 for rice farmers, masaganang maisan for Corn farmers, biyayang dagat for fishermen to name a few. In Mindanao, he opened several irrigation projects, opened new concreted road network and energized 80% of the entire island utilizing hydropower as source. But Marcos imposed martial law. His first two years was to be his golden era but soon that devolved into one of the tragic history in the country when abuse in the military and greed by some of his known cronies reigned.

Marcos was ousted in a bloodless people power led by then Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and INP Chief Fidel Ramos. The EDSA event also saw for the first time the participat­ion of the Catholic Church with Manila Cardinal Jaime Sin calling the flocks to join and protect Enrile and Ramos from the military wrath. Of course, things were made easier with flyby of American jets over Malacanang Palace where the ailing Marcos was holding fort. The rest is history. Fifty years had elapsed and sadly the decadence that followed after him made the dictatoria­l regime looked better.

Pres. Corazon Aquino came to power not be the mandate derived from the snap elections. She was installed as President by the revolt of about 2-million Manila inhabitant­s with the support of Uncle Sam and the Catholic Bishops of the Philippine­s. She was the choice because her sponsors knew too well the mawkish attitude of the Filipinos. Ninoy Aquino was assassinat­ed on his return from the USA and the nation grieve and who else would best serve their agenda but the housewife of Aquino.

Her reign as president (to include two years of being a revolution­ary leader) did not contribute anything to the country except euphoria the dictator is gone. She was invited to speak in the US Congress and came home as an “icon of democracy”. But early on her presidency she bastardize­d the agrarian reform program of Marcos with her Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Program that mandates land for the landless. Many of the lands landed in the hands of speculator­s, office workers and wheeler dealers who do not own land, yes, but abhors the smell of the earth. Corporate farms like Hacienda Luisita which was owned by Aquino-Cojuangco clan was spared as tenant farmers were made co-owners via stock certificat­es issued to them. The tenants grudgingly received the paper document but they remained vassals of the hacienda. Farmers protested but they were mowed down by machine guns in Mendiola near Malacanang and in the gates of Hacienda Luisita.

The Cory government failed the people. She freed the CPP/NPA leaders, she discontinu­ed the Bataan Nuclear Plant, she refused to use the standby generators imported by the Marcos government to stave off power shortage, She stopped all the Marcos programs for farmers and fishermen. Manila Internatio­nal Airport was renamed Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport. To insure her absolute hold of the legislativ­e body and the local government­s, she declared revolution­ary government and proceeded to padlock the parliament and replaced all duly elected local officials. As one of the early sign of her insincerit­y she dumped Salvador Laurel with whom she had a covenant that when things settles the former will be the Prime Minister and run the government while she just become a ceremonial head.

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