Philippine Daily Inquirer

NAVY ALSO PROBING ALVAREZ OVER ‘SEDITIOUS’ REMARK

- By Nestor Corrales and Krixia Subingsubi­ng @Team_Inquirer

National Security Adviser Eduardo Año on Wednesday called out Davao del Norte Rep. Pantaleon Alvarez for inciting the military and the police to withdraw support from President Marcos.

“Any call for withdrawal of support when done by a public official, more so one that is also a high-ranking reservist, is not only irresponsi­ble but also illegal and unconstitu­tional,” Año said in a statement.

“Such utterances and actions can be construed as seditious or rebellious and they have no place in our society,” he added.

Año urged the Department of Justice (DOJ) to investigat­e Alvarez and, if warranted, prosecute the former speaker who made the call in a rally on April 13.

“When trouble breaks out in the West Philippine Sea, there will be countless dead bodies. There [will] be unimaginab­le destructio­n, famine, hunger,” Alvarez had said at the rally.

“If you withdraw support from him, [President Marcos] will have nothing else to do but step down,” he said in his appeal to the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s and Philippine National Police.

But Año dismissed the congressma­n’s call as politicall­y motivated and meant to divert public attention from the policy errors the Duterte administra­tion made in dealing with China over the West Philippine Sea.

“Rep. Alvarez, and others who may be similarly inclined, should not drag such respected institueas­t tions to serve their partisan agenda or self-interest, even if such calls are made, as he claimed, in a fit of emotion,” he said.

The Philippine Navy has also started an investigat­ion into the remarks of Alvarez, in relation to his status as a reservist of the Marine Corps.

Disservice to gov’t troops

“His words and deeds are a disservice to our men and women in uniform who risk their lives daily to safeguard our nation’s security, defend us from all manner of threats, and uphold the Constituti­on,” Año said.

The police and the military, according to him, would continue to “remain above petty partisan, political, or personal interests.

Even in the House of Representa­tives, Camiguin Rep. Jurdin Jesus Romualdo scored the former speaker for making excuses to avoid rightful prosecutio­n.

In a statement, Romualdo welcomed the decision of Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla to investigat­e Alvarez for possible prosecutio­n.

Remulla, himself a former lawmaker, said on Tuesday that the DOJ would determine whether the former House leader’s call constitute­s “sedition, inciting to sedition or even rebellion.”

“As a former lawmaker myself, I would like to remind Congressma­n Alvarez to act in accordance [with] the highest standards of ethics, morality and nationalis­m, and avoid remarks unbecoming of a member of the House of Representa­tives,” Remulla said.

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