Philippine Daily Inquirer

Filled with ironies, bereft of drama

- By Michael Lim Ubac

THE FIRST DAY of Chief Justice Renato Corona’s trial was filled with ironies but bereft of the highly charged political drama that engulfed the nation 12 years ago, when then President Joseph Estrada went on trial for almost the same impeachabl­e offenses.

Unlike the opening of the Estrada trial on Dec. 7, 2001, the hearing yesterday cannot be characteri­zed as a political circus.

While both the prosecutio­n and defense panels had traded barbs through the media in the weeks leading up to the Corona trial, there were no such fireworks on the Senate floor when the contending parties delivered their opening statements.

Unexpected­ly, Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile stole the thunder from former Supreme Court Associate Justice Serafin Cuevas, head of the defense panel, and Iloilo Rep. Niel Tupas Jr., the chief prosecutor of the House of Representa­tives.

Enrile, a veteran lawyer and defense minister in the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, took full control of the proceeding­s. He disposed off the pending motions and manifestat­ions in a record time of less than two hours, and adjourned the hearing before any of the senators or lawyers could grandstand.

The defense had expected the Senate to allow a preliminar­y trial in an effort to declare void the articles of impeachmen­t, which were transmitte­d by the House to the Senate last Dec. 13, because of the haste with which the impeachmen­t case was tackled by the Lower Chamber.

Neither Cuevas, despite his obvious legal acumen, nor Tupas, a rising star in the Lower Chamber, held sway in the opening salvo of the impeachmen­t battle; they were not given enough time to expound on their respective positions, save for the perfunctor­y five-minute allotment to argue for or against the defense’s motion for a preliminar­y hearing.

Right at the onset Enrile declared that only the Senate could decide on matters pertaining to impeachmen­t, a veiled warning to the high tribunal that the chamber, sitting as an impeachmen­t court, would not be enjoined from proceeding posthaste with the trial.

Order and decorum

The atmosphere in the Senate was rife with anticipati­on, but protagonis­ts displayed civility and decorum.

This semblance of order gave the public sudden respite from the bickering that preceded the trial, momentaril­y keeping from public view the clash of the titans, as it were, and seemingly obscuring the historical implicatio­ns of the trial on the workings of checks-and-balances of the three branches of government.

The limited crowd, including 40 members of the media that had been allowed entry into the gallery, appeared sedate.

Gone, too, were the usual pushing and shoving among photograph­ers during high-pro- file coverage at the Senate.

Under the watchful eye of Samuel Santos, director for print media service of the Senate Public Relations and Informatio­n Bureau, and Senate Sergeant at Arms Jose Balajadia, the photograph­ers left in a huff as soon as Enrile and 20 senator-judges entered the chamber at 2:11 p.m.

“It’s dignified, it’s very, very sober, a learning process for everyone. I must commend the Senate president for decorum and the seriousnes­s of the impeachmen­t process,” said former Antique Gov. Sally Zaldivar-perez, who likened the Estrada trial she had witnessed to a “circus.”

“It’s good that people are informed. It should be like that—we should not be carried by our emotions,” she added.

Filled with ironies

Besides the fact that the highest magistrate in the land is being tried for alleged violation of his oath of office and perceived partiality toward the appointing authority, former President Gloria Macapagal-arroyo, the pro- ceeding was filled with ironies.

In his opening statement, the boyish-looking Tupas seemed like a student lecturing his professor when he asked the impeachmen­t court to remove Corona.

“Impeach, we must. Renato Corona … is unfit to remain as Chief Justice,” Tupas declared.

The Corona couple were a picture of calm and restraint while seated with political opponents at the gallery reserved for important guests, which was located at the rear portion of the session hall facing the tables of senator-judges.

The seating arrangemen­t provided a clue as to the nature of the impeachmen­t process in which the political department­s of government have an upper hand over the judiciary. Instead of occupying a special seat in the chamber sitting as an impeachmen­t court, Corona was seated at the end of the second row.

The seat of honor—the first row—was occupied by former Senators Ernesto Maceda and Francisco Tatad; Enrile’s spouse, former Ambassador Cristina Ponce-enrile, and their daughter, Katrina; and Bing Pimentel, spouse of former Sen. Aquilino Pimentel Jr.

The Corona couple found themselves seated at the end of the second row which was also occupied by House representa­tives led by Speaker Feliciano Belmonte.

What’s on his mind?

Corona was stealing glances from time to time, but showed no emotions. Amid his silence, the question on everybody’s mind was the thoughts running through the head of the man principall­y tasked by the law and the Constituti­on to dispense justice to every Filipino.

Cuevas explained to the impeachmen­t court that Corona’s presence proved that he was showing respect for the impeachmen­t body, and that his client was innocent of the charges leveled against him.

He said Corona was entitled to an acquittal.

But with the outright rejection of the two motions filed by the defense, the prosecutio­n panel had an upper hand in yesterday’s proceeding.

Senators remained tightlippe­d and refused to be interviewe­d by reporters. Except for the brief manifestat­ions raised by Senators Franklin Drilon and Francis Pangilinan, the other senators stayed on the sidelines for now.

The silence from the minority bloc was deafening, with neither Sen. Joker Arroyo, the star in the Estrada impeachmen­t trial, nor Senate Minority Leader Alan Peter Cayetano, an antiArroyo critic, rising to the occasion.

The only audible voice from the senator-judges that resonated within the halls of the chamber was the opening prayer of Sen. Edgardo Angara.

“Lord, enlighten our minds so that we may do what is right and just and fair. Spare us from dissension and discord set off by selfish ambition, faction, and envy. But endow us with sound judgment and discernmen­t—so that we will not judge by external appearance­s,” he intoned.

 ?? LYN RILLON ?? IT’S MORE FUN… Amid the high drama and history, the head of the defense team, former Supreme Court Associate Justice Serafin Cuevas, teasingly slaps the waist of the head of the House prosecutio­n team, Rep. Niel Tupas Jr., after the impeachmen­t trial...
LYN RILLON IT’S MORE FUN… Amid the high drama and history, the head of the defense team, former Supreme Court Associate Justice Serafin Cuevas, teasingly slaps the waist of the head of the House prosecutio­n team, Rep. Niel Tupas Jr., after the impeachmen­t trial...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines