Business World

Soliman, former DSWD chief who quit in protest of Arroyo rule, dies at 68

- Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

CORAZON “Dinky” N. Soliman, the Social Welfare secretary and civic leader who quit amid allegation­s of vote cheating by then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, died on Sunday. She was 68.

“Her passing was sad news,” Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo said in Filipino in her weekly radio program on Sunday. “She was a good person.”

Ms. Soliman, who tested positive for coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) and survived in August, died due to complicati­ons from renal and heart failure, according to media reports.

“Rest in peace, my dear friend,” Former Finance Secretary Cesar Antonio V. Purisima said in a Facebook post. “We will miss you.”

Ms. Soliman, who later served as Social Welfare secretary in the government of the late Benigno S.C. Aquino III, oversaw the expansion of the state’s flagship poverty alleviatio­n program.

She also headed the Aquino government’s Cabinet cluster on human developmen­t and poverty reduction.

Ms. Soliman headed the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) under Ms. Arroyo, who became President in 2001 after a street uprising that toppled Joseph E. Estrada.

She and at least nine other Cabinet secretarie­s and agency heads quit their jobs in 2005 in protest of Ms. Arroyo’s alleged rigging of the 2004 presidenti­al elections.

Ms. Soliman had also criticized President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s deadly drug war that has killed thousands of drug suspects. She was part of a coalition of former government officials and civic leaders who opposed the Duterte government.

“Her stature as a civil society leader will be missed and will forever inspire future public servants,” Senator Risa Hontiveros-Baraquel said in a statement.

Ms. Soliman, who hails from Tarlac province in northern Philippine­s, was born on Jan. 27, 1953.

She got her B.S. and master’s degrees in Social Work degrees from the University of the Philippine­s Diliman. She got her master’s degree in Public Administra­tion at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

Ms. Soliman is survived by her husband Hector and their two children. —

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