The Philippine Star

Teddyboy is new DFA chief

Faeldon takes over BuCor

- By HELEN FLORES

Philippine Permanent Representa­tive to the United Nations Teodoro “Teddyboy” Locsin Jr. confirmed yesterday he will replace Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano, who will run as Taguig City representa­tive in next year’s elections.

Candidates began registerin­g on Thursday for the midterm elections scheduled for May 13, 2019.

More Cabinet members are expected to quit and run for elective positions.

“I was asked, I said yes,” Locsin said on Twitter, referring to President Duterte’s offer for him to be the next foreign affairs chief.

Duterte appointed Locsin as the country’s envoy to the UN in September 2016 at a time when the country had an uneasy relationsh­ip with the internatio­nal organizati­on over the administra­tion’s war on drugs.

“I didn’t say no when asked as I didn’t when he told me I

was UN ambassador,” Locsin, a lawyer and former journalist, said.

“I will be secretary of foreign affairs which includes the UN; I will have a direct hand until the architectu­re of sovereign independen­ce in all matters of state that my team started to erect is remitted. Talent that doesn’t exist outside DFA (Department of Foreign Affairs) will complete it,” he also said on Twitter.

“Still UN work is like sharpening a blade every day,” the diplomat said.

Locsin was Makati City representa­tive from 2001 to 2010. He served as speechwrit­er and press secretary of the late president Corazon Aquino and was a publisher and editor-in-chief of Today newspaper from 1993 to 2005.

Cayetano, Duterte’s running mate in the May 2016 polls, joined Duterte at the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations Leaders Gathering in Bali, Indonesia this week.

It was his last overseas travel as foreign secretary as he will file his certificat­e of candidacy next week.

As he prepared to leave, Cayetano yesterday called on officials and employees of the DFA to give their full support to Locsin.

“I think he could do a better job than I did but he needs your support,” Cayetano said in his message after leading the flag retreat ceremony at the DFA-Office of Consular Affairs ASEANA in Parañaque City.

“It’s tailor made for him. I’ve seen him in action and I’m looking forward to great things he’ll be able to do for the country and for the OFWs,” he added, referring to overseas Filipino workers.

Cayetano also thanked the DFA personnel for making the reforms at the agency possible, specifical­ly the “fast, efficient, accessible and secured passport services.”

Under Cayetano’s leadership, the DFA implemente­d the e-payment system, the Passport on Wheels program and the OFW portal that was able to assist thousands of applicants since the projects were launched in January.

Meanwhile, former foreign affairs secretary Albert del Rosario also welcomed Locsin’s appointmen­t. “As a lawyer, journalist, businessma­n, politician and diplomat, Amb. Teddyboy Locsin Jr. is known to be highly intelligen­t, articulate and independen­t-minded,” Del Rosario said in a statement yesterday.

“There is no doubt that – with his multidisci­plined skills to be combined with personal conviction towards advancing our national interest at all times – Amb. Locsin will be able to more effectivel­y move forward our nation’s defined foreign policy pillars encompassi­ng the promotion of our national security, enhancemen­t of our economic diplomacy and the promotion of the welfare of our Filipinos overseas.”

Former Philippine National Police chief Ronald dela Rosa filed his certificat­e of candidacy for senator at the Commission on Elections yesterday, leaving the Bureau of Correction­s as director general.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said Dela Rosa will be replaced by retired Marine captain Nicanor Faeldon, who is currently the deputy administra­tor for operations of the Office of Civil Defense and former Bureau of Customs (BOC) official.

Faeldon resigned from the BOC in August 2017 when he was dragged into the P6.4-billion shabu shipment.

There are rumors, however, that Faeldon is planning to run as Mindoro governor.

The OCD has yet to be furnished with Faeldon’s new assignment and officials could only shake their heads upon hearing the news.

“Being a newcomer at the OCD, he has yet to prove his worth and now he is being given a new assignment as BuCor director, a highly sensitive post,” one of the Camp Aguinaldo officials, who asked not to be named, said.

Another official expressed hope that Faeldon will not commit the same “blunder” at the BuCor, referring to the P6.4-billion shabu shipment that remains unresolved with regard to the mastermind­s even after various investigat­ions.

The officials said Faeldon’s new appointmen­t would show that he is really one of the “trusted” men of the President.

Nearly 320 seats in the two-chamber legislatur­e and more than 17,000 local government positions, from 81 provincial governors to about 1,600 municipal councilors, will be contested nationwide.

The performanc­e of candidates identified with or who used to be officials of the administra­tion in the midterm elections is usually perceived as a vote for or against the current government.

Good choice?

Senate President Vicente Sotto III and Senators JV Ejercito and Loren Legarda hailed the appointmen­t of Locsin as foreign affairs secretary.

“One of the best appointmen­ts ever. Excellent choice. The Philippine­s cannot be bullied with him as DFA chief,” Sotto said.

Sotto, chairman of the Commission on Appointmen­ts, said he expects Locsin to breeze through the bicameral body once his nomination to the DFA is taken up.

“Teddyboy Locsin, although a fighter, I know, will always square his actions and circumscri­be his passions within due bounds,” Sotto added.

Ejercito said the DFA would certainly benefit from his long experience in public service.

“As our country navigates a world facing trade wars, the resurgence of protection­ism, violent extremism, transnatio­nal crimes and territoria­l disputes, I am confident that he can ably represent the interests of the Filipino people before the internatio­nal community,” Ejercito said.

“The global challenges that we face are indeed formidable but so is our incoming foreign affairs chief,” he said, adding that Locsin’s appointmen­t was exceptiona­l.

Legarda, chair of the Senate committee on foreign relations, congratula­ted Locsin, saying he is fit for the job, “honed by his long years of experience in public service, both as a journalist and a public official.”

“A lawyer by profession and worked with various Philippine presidents, Teddy has vast knowledge of national and local issues surroundin­g the country and how the dynamics of world politics affect our nation,” Legarda said in a statement.

“His stint as Philippine permanent representa­tive to the United Nations seemed to have foreshadow­ed his appointmen­t as the country’s top diplomat. I am certain he will not waver in protecting our people and our nation’s interests,” she added.

Legarda said she would work with Locsin in advancing the Philippine­s’ diplomatic relations with other nations and upholding the four pillars of Philippine foreign policy.

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