Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palace dares Binay: Back up attacks with facts, not clichés • Binay says police can defy illegal orders

- By Nikko Dizon With a report from Marlon Ramos

MALACAÑANG yesterday came out swinging against Vice President Jejomar Binay, challengin­g President Aquino’s former ally to back up with hard data his attacks on the administra­tion.

Criticisms should not be solely based on “rhetoric” and “clichés,” Communicat­ions Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. said at a Palace briefing.

“Isn’t it only right that when one hurls allegation­s or tells the people something, these should have concrete basis? That these are not speculatio­n, suspicion, cliché, or rhetoric?” Coloma said in Filipino.

The Filipino people are “intelligen­t” and they would look for basis for every allegation made by the Vice President, he said. “They cannot be deceived or carried away by passionate declaratio­ns.”

Saying he was through being the “punching bag” of Mr. Aquino’s allies seeking higher office, Binay resigned on June 22.

The Vice President has since slammed the Aquino administra­tion as “insensitiv­e and bumbling” ( manhid at palpak), citing the woeful state of the Metro Rail Transit, the massacre of 44 police commandos and Malacañang’s pork barrel, the Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program, portions of which the Supreme Court has declared unconstitu­tional.

On Wednesday, Binay did not withhold his attack against President Aquino and his administra­tion at the launch of the United Nationalis­t Alliance (UNA) as the dominant opposition party that he leads. He said the government was “lazy, slow and indecisive.”

“It would be better if you, or the bosses themselves, would judge who is telling the truth. We are defending our record… The administra­tion is ready to address any issue or question they have,” Coloma said, referring to the opposition.

Some achievemen­ts

Coloma listed what he said were only some of the Aquino administra­tion’s “achievemen­ts”—an improvemen­t in disaster preparedne­ss and response; the P49-billion savings of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), once considered one of the most corrupt government agencies; allotting almost 37 percent or P953 billion for social developmen­t and poverty reduction; and the expansion of the conditiona­l cash transfer program.

Coloma also said that unemployme­nt rate went down to 6.6 percent in January this year from 7.5 percent last year.

The number of overseas Filipino workers is now at 8.4 million, from 10 million, he added.

Coloma cited a recent Social Weather Stations survey that said the number of Filipinos experienci­ng involuntar­y hunger is at 13.5 percent, its lowest in ten years.

Coloma also said that a study by the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies and the United Nations Children’s Fund showed that the number of outof-school children between 5 and 15 years old has been reduced from 11.7 percent to 5.2 percent.

“President Aquino has built on the platform of good governance. The Aquino administra­tion has brought forth a government that is open, transparen­t and accountabl­e,” Coloma said. “The Aquino administra­tion stands on its record of good governance that has transforme­d Philippine society and restored the Filipinos’ sense of pride and dignity.”

What about corruption?

Interior Secretary Mar Roxas told reporters he noticed Binay had yet to talk about corruption.

“That means the record of this administra­tion in fighting corruption is good. It means they recognize that we are really treading the ‘daang matuwid’ (straight path),” he said, in reference to Mr. Aquino’s anticorrup­tion slogan.

“If there’s no corruption, there’s no poverty. That’s the primary concern of the government. We want to reform the system to ensure that public funds will go to the people,” Roxas said.

As to Binay’s tirades against the problemati­c train system, he said: “If the MRT is slow, we can make it faster. If something is weak, we can make it strong … But corrupt officials? They’re already corrupt. They’re thieves. That’s why it’s good that he did not say anything about corruption against President Aquino under his leadership.”

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