A
word from GO Labor
WHAT is that tired saying? The fish
is caught through its bloody mouth.
In this February 9, 2008 reply to the
Jan. 21 and Feb. 5 columns of Ducky Paredes, sacked
agrarian reform secretary Heherson Alvarez only managed
to nail his own coffin by confirming that the has
everything to do with the lie that had been peddled to
President Arroyo by his ally Christopher Carrion.
What lie is that? That he, Alvarez,
had allegedly been appointed by the board of the
Philippine Mining Development Corporation (PMDC) as its
chief executive officer (CEO). Straight from the horse's
frothy mouth, Alvarez claimed in his letter to Malaya.
"My appointment as CEO has nothing to
do with the loan."
Really? Let the minutes of meeting of
the Nov.16 PMDC board meeting bear the truth that,
contrary to the claim made by Alvarez in his
letter-reply to Malaya and the claim made by Carrion in
his Nov. 23 letter to the President, Alvarez was never
appointed by the PMDC board as CEO.
Let us quote below a part of the
minutes which should expose Carrion and Alvarez for what
they are.
"It was the consensus of the board
members in the executive sessions to respectfully seek/
request the guidance of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
on this CEO issue."
Alvarez can choose to split hairs or
to hide behind semantics all he wants on the PMDC loan
from the Development Bank of the Philippines for the Mt.
Diwalwal mining project. But the fact remains that the
loan was shelved by DBP until such time that the CEO
mess had been threshed out.
The DBP had said that Alvarez acting
as concurrent PMDC chair and CEO runs against "good
corporate governance."
Interestingly, Alvarez had chosen to
remain silent on his getting fired by the President as
DENR chief in a manner that should have shamed him
enough never to aspire for any government office.
The main issue about him is his
incompetence, his self-interest and his heaping problems
at the doorsteps of Malacañang. Clearly, Alvarez is
clueless.
Obviously, President Arroyo dumped
back PMDC to the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) not wanting to have anything more to do
with Alvarez. Now, it's already the job of Environment
Secretary Lito Atienza to weed him out of the PMDC
before he destroys this agency. - ELEUTERIO
TUAZON, GO Labor, President
'The
AFP remains solid'
THE AFP has focused on a renewed
drive towards achieving peace in our time. It has proven
time and again the sheer capability in repelling the
enemies of peace. It has driven them back and defeated
them battle after battle and it was always done with a
clear objective with the highest good for the greatest
number of Filipinos - its most vital consideration.
The present political conditions
besetting our country today have not in any way agitated
our soldiers. But this situation has made them aware of
their role as soldiers. The AFP is solid and we don't
hold on to military adventurism.
I believed that there are groups who
desperately want the seat of power and governance, there
are those who continuously plot for the demise of the
government using violent and extra-constitutional
methods. Yet the military has stand firm in its
commitment to strictly adhere to the mandate of the
constitution and to the chain of command. Many of our
soldiers have learned their lessons and would never
allow themselves to be used or used again by any group
and individuals to be an instrument of any politically
motivated exercises and erroneous plan of overthrowing
the present government.
The time is ripe to extend our hand
in friendship and in brotherly understanding. All of us
need not be divided by issues of faith and creed. All of
us need not grow apart because of ideology and
philosophy. There is enough room for diverse opinions
and even crashing convictions in our society.
The present democratic space allows
enough leeway for everyone to express one's sentiments
or aspirations -so long as they remain within the bounds
of law and morality.
As soldiers, our commitment to our
country is to strive harder to be the kind of men and
women who can truly be entrusted with the defense and
security of our nation and with the very lives of more
than 70 million Filipinos. - MAJOR EUGENIO
JULIO C OSIAS IV
Group Commander, 7th Civil Relations
Group, Civil Relations Service, AFP Camp General Emilio
Aguinaldo, Q.C.,
crg7_crsafp@yahoo.com.ph
Are
the NPA hitmen back?
THERE has been a spate of killings
attributed to the hit squad and armed elements of the
New Peoples Army. In Compostela Province the NPAs
strafed houses killing innocent civilians. In Davao City
the NPA liquidation squad seemed to have resurfaced
after a long hiatus following the rise of their mass
base popularly known as Alsa Masa.
Most recently, the scion of the low
profile Ferrazini family was liquidated by motorcycle
hit squad which city hall authorities and police and
military intelligence was the handiwork of the NPA
"sparrows". There is not much noise coming from the
militants and the religious sector but the Davao City
Mayor Rodrigo Duterte condemned the killing of
civilians. The mayor who is known for his
open-mindedness towards the leftist struggles is
perceived to have a modus vivendi with the communists in
that his understanding of their struggle will stay
provided they will not resort to harming civilians or
assault private installations. This means that while the
military and police operatives are the NPA's legitimate
targets, the NPAs too will be considered the same way by
the government forces.
The series of assaults and execution
of civilians is an affront to Mayor Duterte. If we know
the mayor he will not take this sitting down. While he
has filed an irrevocable resignation as chairman of the
Regional Peace and Order Council he still remains as
head of the Peace and Order Council of Davao City. Even
as he is on official leave, the mayor prompted to make a
countermove against the NPAs. Already the mayor has
hinted he will provide necessary logistics to make Task
Force Davao operational again. We are certain that the
mayor will take up the challenge should the NPAs make
another try to gain foothold in the Davao City.
On the other hand it is foolhardy for
the CPP-NPA to try their luck in Davao City anew. They
must be reminded that they had been repulsed and
uprooted in this city, not by the military, or the
police or by the vigilantes, but by the might of their
own mass base who became victims of oppression and sense
less execution of the NPAs. If Mayor Duterte is mad, so
too are his constituents. Together they tell the NPAs,
"go fight our case elsewhere". - EDGAR PALMA,
Kidapawan City,
edpalma1960@yahoo.com
Sleeping with the enemy
There has been, of late, a clamor for
change, and some people have looked towards mass actions
and people power to vent such desires. But is this the
right way to call for change? The nation lays claim to
toppling corrupt regimes through two people power
movements in the past but has it really brought us
genuine reforms?
Those who might be heeding this call
for change (especially our Church leaders who would be
urging their parishioners to join), may well be advised
to take a look at the personalities behind these moves
against the present administration: the United
Opposition, the Black and White Movement, the Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan, Bayan Muna, Anakpawis, Gabriela and
Akbayan. Are these the types of people whom we are now
trusting to advocate change for our country? Must we
sleep with our erstwhile enemies just to attain the
change that we all seek?
I believe that people power has lost its meaning. The
people have grown tired of heeding such calls. No true
change emanates anyway from such exercises so what's the
point? It's high time that the people who join such
movements realize that they only end up being used by
those who wish to manipulate the situation for their own
selfish ends. - MINA ACHAPERO, Paranaque City,
minaachapero@gmail.com