Philippine Daily Inquirer

How do you share a home with bad neighbors?

- NOT QUITE THERE CHIT ROCES-SANTOS

Just when it was feeling so right to be flying back home, my husband nudged me to divert my eyes from the movie I was watching, to the immigratio­n form for foreign arrivals.

By some perhaps serendipit­ous mistake, we were each provided a copy of it. Strangely, the instructio­ns on the form had Chinese translatio­ns— they used to be in English only. Asked when the form began to instruct in Chinese, a Filipino stewardess on our Qatar flight said she had noticed it “about two weeks ago.”

All this would not be so disturbing had we not observed stranger things happening before we left.

In the middle-class subdivisio­n of Moonwalk, in Parañaque, new tenants from China courted trouble when they displayed unacceptab­le behavior and total disregard of the village associatio­n’s rules. By their lack of respect for any kind of rules or manners, one could only suspect that these Chinese were undesirabl­es banished from their own country. Matters were made worse when, from elsewhere, more of them came down on the vil

lage, apparently summoned as reinforcem­ent against the Filipino community.

It’s happening in a number of other places in the metropolis and elsewhere. Our own condominiu­m building is occupied mostly by Chinese tenants. Four of them, all male, lived right above us, making the strangest noises—furniture being dragged, ball dribbling, feet stamping—in the middle of the night.

We somehow got them out, only to be replaced by another Chinese foursome, all female this time and comparativ­ely much better behaved, so far. We don’t know, though, if they share the responsibi­lity for the unsanitary garbage disposal we’ve been observing.

Exclusive

Facebook posts showed stores exclusivel­y for the Chinese. Some of them supposedly have been closed for lack of permits. But, if visas are issued to new Chinese arrivals right at the airport, why would permits for those stores be a problem?

Indeed, why would anything be a problem for the Chinese?

Before their human invasion, there were, on their account and with Duterte’s imprimatur, island grabbing, coral reef destructio­n, establishm­ent of military installati­ons in our own territory and various other assaults on our sovereignt­y. But any conflict with China, however righteous, is precisely what Duterte dissuades us against. It’s suicide, he tells us.

In fact, he gave the Chinese our own sea, and made our own fishermen who used to make their livelihood there feel it was they who were intruding. When a Chinese patrol rammed a Philippine fishing boat in those waters

and abandoned its crew, who had been thrown overboard, Duterte was quick to exonerate the Chinese.

For a while, the fishermen seemed prepared to let it go, but some of them are beginning to complain.

Emotive issue

Indeed, China is proving to be an emotive issue. The masses of street protesters outside the legislativ­e building on the day of the President’s State of the Nation Address took it up as the main issue. Surely, they derived some inspiratio­n from the Hong Kongers’ continuing massive demonstrat­ions against a proposed law for the extraditio­n of criminal suspects to China for trial.

The surveys clearly show that Filipinos distrust China, and with good reason. The Chinese are bad enough as neighbors, imagine sharing a home with them!

Many Filipinos seem able to stomach corruption or overlook ineptitude or take presidenti­al indecencie­s in speech or even insults to God—perhaps rationaliz­ing that God can certainly take care of Himself—but losing our only country to the uncouth, unprincipl­ed and godless could very well be the last straw. Our history has proven that nothing unites us like a common enemy.

Doesn’t it smell fishy that our leaders are not with us in the fight for sovereignt­y, territory, resources, and even jobs for the ordinary Filipino? Duterte seems prepared to lose everything we have just to stay in China’s good graces, while our neighbors’ leaders are prepared to call China’s bluff.

President Joko Widodo sent a strong message to China and anyone else who would threaten Indonesia’s sovereignt­y. This despite the fact, that unlike the Philippine­s, Indonesia has no defense treaty with a super nuclear power, like the United States.

But rather than boast, as Duterte did, about riding a jet ski and planting flags, which would be quite impossible to do, blogger Max Defense noted, “… without fanfare he (Widodo) did plant flags in Natura Islands, made it known to the whole world that Natuna Islands and its 200 nautical mile EEZ are Indonesia’s domain, and is for the Indonesian people.”

Indonesia’s assertiven­ess, according to the same blog, went as far as blowing up foreign vessels and arresting fishermen from China, Malaysia and Indonesia, to show its intoleranc­e for illegal fishing in its waters.

It’s the obvious righteous reaction of a true patriotic leader. Anything else would smack of treason.

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