The Philippine Star

How fragile a state is the Philippine­s?

- JARIUS BONDOC

This online post by a Philippine Military Academy graduate, 1965, was relayed to Malacañang: “I used to think the country is fast approachin­g a failed state. Now I’m convinced we’ve arrived at a failed democracy.

“[This is due] to Supreme Court inaction on the mandamus petition by TNT Trio. And Senate and House of Reps indifferen­ce to the admission by Comelec Chairman George Garcia that, in Sen. Koko Pimentel’s words, ‘Our entire election system is one large private network pala’.”

Fund for Peace rates “fragile,” formerly called “failed,” “states.” In truth, the Philippine­s improved in a list of 179. From 49th in 2021, it became 50th in 2022, then 61st in 2023.

Consistent­ly 1st to 12th in those three years were strife-torn Somalia, Yemen, South Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Syria, Afghanista­n, Sudan, Central African Republic, Chad, Haiti, Myanmar, Zimbabwe.

Always topmost were sturdy Norway, Iceland, Finland, New Zealand, Switzerlan­d, Denmark, Canada, Ireland, Luxembourg, Sweden, Netherland­s, Australia.

Ratings come every first semester, to encompass the previous year’s second semester events. FFP started researches in 2005. Published in 2006.

The Philippine­s’ 2023 jump reflected mid-2022’s transition from Rodrigo Duterte to Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

TNT Trio now assails Marcos Jr. and VP Sara Duterte’s purported landslide election. Most damning proof is Comelec chief Garcia’s admission in a Senate hearing. That is, 20,300 precincts transmitte­d within the first hour an incredible 38 percent of votes from one mysterious private IP address.

TNT Trio consists of former informatio­n-communicat­ion technology secretary Eliseo Rio, ex-Comelec commission­er Gus Lagman and ex-Finance Executive Institute president Franklin Ysaac. Computer experts, clergymen and retired generals and colonels back them.

But the PMA grad quoted above sees undemocrat­ic inaction by the three branches of government.

* * * Given ongoing crises, can the Philippine­s stay at 61st? or will it drop as steeply as it rose from 50th?

The Philippine­s has had bumpy FFP ratings. From 59th among 177 states in 2008, it fell to 53rd in 2009 then 51st in 2010. Those three years witnessed massive corruption like the National Broadband Network-ZTE scam, the Maguindana­o massacre of 58 journalist­s and a politician’s kinswomen and devastatin­g typhoons.

Further drops: from 59th of 178 countries in 2013 to 52nd in 2014, onto 48th in 2015. Factors: the world’s worst Super Typhoon Yolanda and the Mamasapano massacre of 44 police commandos by Moro rebels.

Then, from 54th in 2017 to 47th in 2018. Reason: 7,000 killed in Duterte’s war on drugs.

Again, from 54th in 2020 to 49th in 2021, due to pandemic-induced hunger,

The Philippne Constituti­on turns 37 years old as I write this article and going back into history, our present Constituti­on is said to be only the seventh revision of our country’s basic law since our independen­ce from Spain in 1898. Interestin­g fact isn’t it?

This brings us back to the drawing board and whether or not we should go ahead with making the suitable changes in response to the needs of joblessnes­s and corruption.

Divide the 179 countries into three and the Philippine­s will be at the top of the bottom third. Just above Solomon Islands, Honduras, Eswatini, Papua New Guinea and Columbia.

Or, at the bottom of the middle third. Below Nicaragua, Timor-Leste, Guatemala, Tanzania and Lesotho. Recall that Filipinos helped Timor build a civil government after seceding from Indonesia in 2002. FFP uses four rating categories: • Cohesion – security against rebellion, terrorism, criminalit­y; factionali­zed elites, clans, religions, races, ethnicity; political, judicial, communal exclusion; power struggles, election credibilit­y;

• Economy – poverty, jobs, incomes, inflation, fiscal debt, business failures, devaluatio­n, foreign investment­s; education and work opportunit­ies; flight of the middle class;

• Politics – transparen­cy and accountabi­lity; confidence in state institutio­ns and processes; civil disobedien­ce, insurgency; integrity of elections; corruption, profiteeri­ng; marginaliz­ing or persecutin­g opposition groups; human rights, rule of law; provision of basic utilities;

• Social – access to safe water, food; disease, epidemics; high population growth rate or skewed distributi­on; environmen­t and weather disasters; refugees, displaceme­nts; external hostility, disabling.

Where is the Philippine­s today? Moro secession is settled, but the Muslim autonomous region remains the poorest. Razed by Islamist extremists, Marawi remains un-rebuilt. Rody Duterte’s “Mindanao separation” can re-ignite Moro passions. Communist rebels have been licked, the Armed Forces declare, yet red-tagging persists.

Fifty percent of Filipinos call themselves “poor” and 30 percent “near poor;” hunger prevails (Social Weather Stations). Food prices are soaring, supplies dwindling.

Wages are low, workers seek overseas placements. The fiscal debt is ballooning. With little funding for education, low-income students flunk internatio­nal exams in Math, Science and Reading.

Political dynasts reign: 75 percent of legislator­s, 85 percent of governors, 67 percent of mayors. Malacañang and Congress grant each other hundredbil­lion-peso pork barrels. A weak Opposition merely watches as ruling political factions combat.

Justice is for sale. Petty criminals go to jail; plundering politicos go scot-free. Automated elections are opaque. Investors judge the Philippine­s 116th most corrupt out of 180 countries.

Six million families do not own houses. The poor suffer floods, typhoons, droughts, landslides.

And China is bullying Filipinos out of their own fishing grounds and petroleum resources.

* * * Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8 to 10 a.m., dwIZ (882-AM).

Follow me on Facebook: https://tinyurl.com/Jarius-Bondoc the current times. As I mentioned earlier, I consider myself to be a “forever student” on this matter, but as far as my learnings go, I continue consulting more experts on this topic in pursuing the vision I share with my friends and advocates.

Progress is truly now or never for the Philippine­s and hope remains in simply doing these things in good faith.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines