The Freeman

At the center of it

-

What do the Dengvaxia mess and the Mamasapano massacre have in common? Both have Noynoy Aquino at the very center of each and would have, at least politicall­y, benefited him tremendous­ly as a result had things not turned out so horribly. Also, quite curiously, Noynoy is not being held to full account as a result of these fiascos while subordinat­e officials are left to twist in the wind.

In the Mamasapano incident, 44 elite police Special Action Force troopers were killed in a secret mission fully known to and duly approved by Noynoy to take down two internatio­nal terrorists being coddled by Moro rebels deep inside hostile territory in Maguindana­o. The operation was set in motion in violation of ongoing peace talks with the rebels because that was the only window available to take the terrorists down.

At the time of the operation, Noynoy was convenient­ly in Zamboanga. Had the operation succeeded, he would have been nearby to immediatel­y bask in its glory. But while the troops managed to kill the terrorists, the troop withdrawal went terribly wrong. The SAF troopers were surrounded and reinforcem­ents were held back lest all-out war erupt and the peace talks go up completely in flames. In the end, certain sacrifices were made.

In the Dengvaxia mess, Noynoy met twice with officials of Sanofi Pasteur, the French manufactur­er of the first-ever vaccine against dengue. The first meeting was in Beijing in November 2014, just before the company bagged the P3.5-billion contract to supply the drug. Noynoy and Sanofi officials met once more in Paris in December of 2015, just prior to his approval for government to launch in April 2016 its mass dengue vaccinatio­n campaign.

The full details of what transpired in those meetings remain unclear but suffice it to say they could not have strayed very far from Dengvaxia, the vaccine that Sanofi would much later in 2017 admit posed certain risks when administer­ed to people who have never been exposed to dengue. With several deaths now suspected of being the direct result thereof, the apparent rush to make the Philippine­s first to try the drug now made it also the first to suffer as a consequenc­e.

But if there was a rush to be first with Dengvaxia, why? Remember that April 2016 when the Philippine­s rolled out its massive anti-dengue vaccinatio­n campaign was just prior to the May 2016 presidenti­al election, where Noynoy's anointed successor was at best a poor second in the surveys. Had things not turned out otherwise, the campaign to help stamp out one of the deadliest mosquitobo­rne scourges would have expectedly buoyed the administra­tion bet's chances.

As in the Mamasapano case, it is now the subordinat­e officials of Noynoy who are left to twist in the wind. Not that command responsibi­lity must spare them, they all must bear their part of the blame. But the ultimate burden of responsibi­lity must be borne by the one without whose final authority none of the above would have moved.

A few days ago, Kris Aquino, the sister of Noynoy, came up with a very long post in defense of her family and the role they played in the politics of this country. In that post, she extolled her family's virtues as if they make for some sense of entitlemen­t they unconditio­nally deserve. I almost puked over that post, especially in light of what Noynoy meant to the life of this nation. To me, the post of Kris was the longest dribble of spit I have ever seen.

‘The ultimate burden of responsibi­lity must be borne by the one without whose final authority none of the above

would have moved.’

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines