The Philippine Star

Cha-cha to benefit China, politician­s — Bayan Muna

- By JESS DIAZ

President Duterte’s Charter change (Cha-cha) push will result in a Constituti­on that would benefit China and politician­s, leftist group Bayan Muna said yesterday.

“This Cha-cha is not for the benefit of the Filipino people but for the self-serving benefit of politician­s. This Cha-cha is pro-China and pro-political dynasty,” Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate said.

He said presumptiv­e speaker Taguig Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano, Duterte’s chief implemente­r of Cha-cha, has admitted that politician­s would enjoy a longer term of office and term limits would be scrapped.

Zarate added that administra­tion allies also intend to delete provisions in the present Constituti­on that shield Filipino businessme­n from unfair practices of their foreign counterpar­ts and protect the country’s natural resources from foreign exploitati­on.

As examples, Zarate cited two provisions he claimed would be dropped from the envisioned new Charter – those which mandate the state to “develop a self reliant and independen­t national economy effectivel­y controlled by Filipinos” and to “protect Filipino enterprise­s from unfair foreign competitio­n and trade practices.”

“This Cha-cha will not only open up the Philippine­s and its economy, including retail business, to Chinese investors and workers. Under this Cha-cha, the Philippine economy could be controlled not by Filipinos but by China,” he said.

Zarate said Chinese businessme­n have been “gobbling up hardware stores, groceries and other retail businesses run by small- and medium-scale Filipino entreprene­urs.”

“They will also scrap the anti-political dynasty provision, in addition to term limits, to benefit themselves,” he said.

Bayan Muna chairman Neri Colmenares, a former congressma­n, said administra­tion allies plan to delete other Charter provisions that protect Filipino businesses and the country’s territory and resources from foreign aggression.

He said the deletions were contained in the version of a new constituti­on the House of Representa­tives under the leadership of former speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo proposed to the Senate in the last Congress.

Colmenares said one provision that was dropped limits the “exploratio­n, developmen­t and utilizatio­n of natural resources” to projects undertaken by the government, by Filipino citizens or by corporatio­ns “at least 60 percent of whose capital is owned by Filipinos.”

“The deletion means that there will no longer be a constituti­onal barrier to President Duterte undertakin­g joint exploratio­n with the Chinese government or 100 percent Chinese-owned corporatio­ns,” Colmenares stressed.

He pointed out that another section that was scrapped requires the President to “notify the Congress of every contract entered into in accordance with this provision.”

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