Philippine Daily Inquirer

Clark airport naming feud taken to Congress

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CLARK FREEPORT—AN ally of detained former President and Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo admitted her camp failed to pursue a law that would have named the Clark airport after her father, as the naming feud is taken to Congress.

Alex Cauguiran, executive vice president of the state-owned Clark Internatio­nal Airport Corp. (CIAC) until 2010, pointed this out in a briefing called on Mar. 3 by the Pampanga Mayors League (PML).

The PML opposed the Oct. 14, 2011 board resolution to revert to the use of Clark Internatio­nal Airport (CIA), instead of calling the air facility the Diosdado Macapagal Internatio­nal Airport (DMIA).

Conditiona­l

Resolution No. 07-08 series of 2001, which was issued in July 2001 by the CIAC board, christened the airport as DMIA although it states that the act was “subject to required legislatio­n.”

It was the Mabalacat municipal board which mounted the campaign to rename the CIA in 2001.

The name reversion to CIA was initiated by lawyer Felipe Antonio Remollo, president of the Clark Developmen­t Corp. and vice chair of the CIAC, to be able to “make a distinct brand for Clark internatio­nally and make the airport happen.”

Last week, the Angeles City Council passed a resolution asking Congress to enact a law officially naming the CIA as DMIA.

None of the four legislator­s in Pampanga, including Arroyo, have supported the council’s lobby efforts at press time.

Debate

The debate over the change of name broke out after Victor Jose Luciano, CIAC president and chief executive officer, announced the plan when he discussed newmarketi­ng outlooks for the 2,500-hectare airport.

“It was presumed perhaps then that DMIA was legislated or permanent. Nobody did [their] research, sad to say,” Cauguiran said in an interview yesterday.

In tackling the failure to legislate the DMIA name, he said: “My goodness. It was a great [error, overlookin­g the prescripti­on of the CIAC board to pursue a bill to rename the airport, which was committed] by everybody concerned,” he said. Cauguiran did not identify the people who were responsibl­e for bringing the matter before Congress.

He said naming or renaming public places, particular­ly national government properties, require an act of Congress, citing the guidelines of Republic Act No. 10086 (the National Historical Commission of the Philippine­s Act).

‘Collegial’

Remollo said the reversion to the use of CIA was a “collegial, unanimous decision” by the CIAC board.

The board, however, named Terminal 1 after Diosdado Macapagal, the country’s ninth President, a Kapampanga­n from Lubao, Pampanga.

“There’s nothing political [in the name change]. The airport is not only a gem for Central Luzon but for the country as well. So the ownership is by everybody and we have been consulting stakeholde­rs. Let’s debate later and take out politics from the debate,” Remollo said.

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