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Month: February 2007

House unlikely to suspend Cayetano

Have the slick operators in Congress put one over Mike Arroyo? The braggart in Malacañang wanted Alan Peter Cayetano expelled from the House of Representatives for daring to expose an alleged loot in a German bank. Of course, for the right price, there were more than enough in the House of Representatives to do his bidding.

But after railroading a suspension recommendation, Rep. Rodolfo Cajes (NPC, Bohol), chair of the ethics panel, said the House may not be able to effect the suspension due to lack of material time.

Have they gotten what was mentioned in the committee hearings as “regalo”? Wasn’t Mike Arroyo shortchanged?

Panel seeks 45-day Cayetano suspension


In the still -to- be -released survey of Pulse Asia for senatorial candidates, Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano has moved up to number four from last November’s number 8 spot. In the past months, Mike Arroyo has unleashed his dogs in the House of Representatives against Cayetano.

Malaya’s Wendell Vigilia reports on the latest on Mike Arroyo’s crusade to catapult Cayetano to the Senate:

THE House committee on ethics yesterday recommended the suspension of Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano (NP, Taguig-Pateros) for 45 days for saying presidential spouse Jose Miguel Arroyo maintained a bank account in Germany.

The recommendation will go to the House plenary where a two-third vote or 154 is needed to impose sanctions on a member.

Trillanes files candidacy

From Malaya:

Accused mutiny leader Lt. (s.g.) Antonio Trillanes IV yesterday filed his certificate of candidacy (COC) for senator at the office of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) in Manila.
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With the filing, the military said Trillanes is deemed separated from service.

He will not be allowed to go out of his detention cell in Fort Bonifacio to campaign because the military retains jurisdiction over him. If he wins in the senatorial race, the military court will continue trying him.

Quarters of detained major broken into; rifle, laptop taken

THE quarters of detained Army Maj. Jason Aquino in Camp Aguinaldo was ransacked Saturday noon by unidentified persons who carted away a military-issued baby Armalite and a laptop computer, among other items.
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Aquino’s wife, Maria Fe, said nobody was home when the intrusion happened because she and her daughters left the house at about 10 a.m. They were surprised to see their things scattered when they returned about 2 p.m.

“I don’t believe it’s a simple theft,” she said, saying their family quarters, Unit 668 on Arevalo street, is inside a military camp. The compound with 10 units has only one entry and exit gate with a guard post outside.

Govt paid P450,000 to MNLF

Update: Gen. Dolorfino admits before the Commission on Appointments they were both hostaged and hosted. CA approved his promotion. Click here.

Was it Ransom for the release of Gen. Dolorfino? Or was it compensation for kin of fatalities in clashes?

What is certain says Regino Bengco, Malaya’s Malacañang reporter, is that government gave money to the MNLF. Here’s Bengco’s report:

Government negotiators yesterday said they gave money to the Moro National Liberation Front but said it was for relatives of MNLF fighters slain during mis-encounters last month, and not for the release from “restraint” of a general and several companions held for two days in an MNLF camp in Sulu.

Jesus Dureza, presidential adviser on the peace process, confirmed the payment during a press briefing in Malacañang after he, Maj. Gen. Mohammad Benjamin Dolorfino, and peace process undersecretary Ramon Santos made a courtesy call to Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita.

Reports said that “goodwill money” of P450,000 was given to the MNLF.

Reporters Sans Frontieres slams Arroyo administration

This report by Reporters Without Borders came out last week and has been commented on in previous posts but i’m posting it here for the record and for future reference.

Philippines – Annual report 2007

Despite new arrests of murderers, the authorities failed to stem the wave of violence against journalists. At least six were killed in 2006. And the press also found itself facing a new enemy: José Miguel Arroyo, the husband of President Gloria Arroyo, who took out a raft of defamation suits.

While her husband was lodging “defamation” complaints against more than 40 journalists, President Arroyo said, on 18 November 2006, that her government was “respectful of press freedom, an institution of Philippines democracy”. On the same day, journalist Ellen Tordesillas, a stern critic of the government received an email warning her: “Your days are numbered”. Murders, assaults, arrests, abusive law suits and censorship were the hallmark of 2006 in this country.

The problem is Ebdane

Gloria Arroyo’s ever reliable operator Hermogenes Ebdane asked the correct question, “What’s your problem?” during his first press conference as defense secretary last Thursday.

But he was wrong in directing that question to Charmaine Deogracias of NHK TV, who asked a legitimate question about how allowing soldiers to transport election materials would affect the objective of insulating the military from politics. Ebdane should have directed the question at himself.

We could have helped him answer that question by playing the Hello Garci tapes, particularly the June 5, 2004 5:01 p.m. part where former Comelec Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano was giving instructions to a certain “Boy”.

AFP maintains “no hostaging” line

From Malaya:

MNLF ‘frees’ general

Demand for international meet on 1996 peace pact is met

by Victor Reyes

MORO National Liberation Front members sympathetic to detained former leader Nur Misuari yesterday released a Marine general and several companions who they “held” for two days following a dialogue in their stronghold in Sulu.

Maj. Gen. Ben Mohammad Dolorfino, commander of the National Capital Region Command, left the MNLF base in Bitan-ag complex in Panamao town around 3:40 p.m., hours after sharing a lunch of roast calf with the MNLF group led by Ustadz Habier Malik.

Jesus Dureza, presidential adviser on the peace process, said confusion and misinformation about a tripartite meeting among government, the MNLF and the Organization of Islamic Conference prolonged the stay of Dolorfino at the MNLF camp.