The Philippine Star

Unfulfille­d promise

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There are no events to celebrate the 12th anniversar­y of the second people power revolution. And the man who lost the presidency in the peaceful revolt remembers the event with bitterness, despite his many public pronouncem­ents that he has forgiven his enemies.

EDSA II, however, still has lessons to impart to our exuberant democracy, foremost of which is that popular revolts need a great deal of work and follow-through, if we want to build a strong and prosperous republic. The original people power revolt in 1986 was a mass uprising against a corrupt and oppressive dictatorsh­ip. EDSA Dos was a continuati­on of the first revolt – an expression of public disgust over corruption at the top levels of government.

Today a return of authoritar­ian rule is unlikely, but human rights violations persist along with deepseated corruption, posing a stiff challenge to the administra­tion that won power on an anti-corrup- tion platform. And in a dramatic reversal of fortune, Joseph Estrada – convicted of plunder but immediatel­y pardoned – is freely campaignin­g for another elective position, while the person who replaced him through EDSA Dos is being held without bail for plunder.

While there are those who remember EDSA Dos mainly with disappoint­ment, the event deserves to be marked annually for its unfulfille­d promise of change. The uprising was a manifestat­ion of Filipinos’ yearning for clean and efficient government. The yearning is still there, and the promise of EDSA II is not impossible to fulfill. But it requires a lot of hard work, commitment and perseveran­ce. Democratic institutio­ns must be strengthen­ed and reforms must be made irreversib­le. Some reforms have been achieved in recent years. The anniversar­y of EDSA II should remind the nation of how much more needs to be done.

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