E have a letter
that correctly points out just exactly what is wrong with the latest "I am
sorry" statement of the President. She did her first "I am sorry" statement in
2004 after the tapes were discovered of what were allegedly her conversations
with "Garci", then a Commission on Elections commissioner on how she expected "Garci"
to help her cheat Fernando Poe. Jr. from his victory in the presidential
elections.
Her second "I am sorry" statement is on the ZTE broadband
contract, something that this country never really needed and which will just be
another white elephant if it had pushed through. Here is the letter:
"On President GMA’s belated admission that she was informed
of irregularities in the ZTE-NBN deal on the eve of its contract signing, yet
she did not stop it for fear of straining our good relations with China, her
lame excuse simply does not wash.
"On the contrary, had she denounced before the Chinese
government the bribe-giving ZTE officials who were in complicity with equally
corrupt Filipino officials, she could have earned ‘pogi’ points from China
because the Chinese government does not tolerate corruption, it executes corrupt
Chinese officials!
"As reported by international media and posted to the
Internet , two Chinese officials convicted for corruption – one for receiving
bribes exceeding $475,000 – were executed in year 2000, while another one,
convicted for taking $850,000 in bribes, was executed in middle of last year.
"As things stand, if China has not similarly executed the
source of shame to it before the international community – the corrupt ZTE
officials who appeared part of a complicity in corruption at the expense of the
friendly Philippine government – n a loan transaction involving bribes more than
a hundred times bigger than those that called for execution of corrupt Chinese
officials in the past, that is understandable because President GMA, even if
already aware of the corruption in the ZTE/NBN deal, has failed to inform the
Chinese government about it.
"Moreover, even without any legal and diplomatic constraints
in the prosecution of Filipinos who apparently received bribes, why didn’t she
swiftly act against them? Up to now, she has not reported to the nation the
complete details of the corruption and the names of Filipino participants in it.
"As a result, with the President’s utter lack of action
against whoever are the corrupt Filipino officials, as well as her almost
half-year delay in the suspension of the ZTE contract – which had to be aborted
anyway because of a Supreme Court decision against it – she cannot blame the
people if many of them would suspect now that, by personally attending the
contract signing in China instead of stopping it as clearly called for under the
situation, she knowingly allowed and even witnessed the first step in the
commission of a major crime, in the form of staggering corruption in the ZTE/NBN
deal that qualifies as plunder under the law, and that, in effect, she condoned
– or, worse, enabled – the attendant ZTE bribe-giving to prominent Filipino
personalities.
"Understandably, ZTE officials would not give the bribes in
full for as long as there was no signed contract, therefore the President’s
tolerating the signing of the contract right in her presence seems to have made
possible ZTE’s media-reported bribe-giving to certain Filipinos." – Marcelo L.
Tecson
***
What can I tell you, Marcelo. She is a leader who does not
want to talk to the Senate (although she was a senator before she was president)
and who does not like being asked pointed questions about what her government is
doing. One has a right to expect, one would think, that someone like that would
have a pat and reasonable story of what her government is doing whenever the
time comes for her to explain.
Instead, as you point out, she offers lame excuses. Remember
this: On the day she went to China to witness the contract-signing with ZTE, the
love of her life – her First Gentleman – was in the Intensive Care Unit of St.
Luke’s Hospital hovering between life and death. Yet, she apparently convinced
herself that she had to go to China for the contract signing, even as she now
tells us that she already knew then that there was, as Marcellus says in Hamlet:
"Something is rotten in the state of Denmark."
So, if that was the case and she already knew, why, in
Heaven’s name, did she feel that she had to leave the love of your life in the
ICU just to witness the signing in China and to meet with the apparently rotten
Chinese?
I am sure, Marcelo, that like me, you have no acceptable
explanation.
***
Valley Golf and Country Club is promoting to the limit its
9th Don Celso Tuazon Cup which coincides with the 50th year of the golf club.
Don Celso was one of he founders of Valley and his family has been generous
enough to lend his name and their support to a tournament in Don Celso’s honor.
Don Celso truly loved Valley and is even memorialized with a plaque on the South
Golf Course.
This is from Pete Maniego of the Don Celso Tuazon Cup
committee:
"I’ll appreciate it very much if you can promote the 9th DCT
Cup in your column. It’s Valley’s 50th anniversary or Golden Jubilee and we hope
that this year’s tournament will be something special.
"Our giveaways consist of commemorative items with Valley’s
golden jubilee logo such as trolley locker bag, rain jacket, golf shirt, golf
cap, golf umbrella and golf bag cover. We estimate the retail value of these
items to be more than P5,000 per member and guest or a total of around P10,000
for both. This is more than the P4,000 per member and guest or P8,000 per team
registration fee. Moreover, there are practice coupons for the south & executive
courses plus two playing days. We have fabulous hole-in-one and raffle prizes at
stake like in previous years."
***
If your are a Valley member and you have not yet joined, what are you waiting
for? If you are not a Valley member but have a Valley member among your close
friends, get him to join with you as a partner. This tournament is worth
joining; no doubt about that!