BY GERARD NAVAL
ARCHBISHOP Angel Lagdameo yesterday called on
Filipinos to start preparing for a new government, citing the
need for transformation amid rampant state corruption.
Reading a prepared statement at a press
conference, the Jaro (Iloilo) bishop said there is a real need
to have a new government as the current one has been severely
stricken by the "social and moral cancer" that is corruption.
"In response to the global economic crisis
and the pitiful state of our country, the time to rebuild our
country economically, socially, politically is now. The time to
start radical reforms is now. The time for moral regeneration is
now. The time to conquer complacency, cynicism and apathy and to
prove that we have matured from our political disappointments is
now. The time to prepare a new government is now," he said.
Asked if his statement is tantamount to
calling for a public uprising to force President Arroyo to step
down, Lagdameo said it is up to the people to decide what course
of action to take.
"Kailangan ang taong bayan ay magsama-sama
kung paano sila mag-response together dun sa sulat namin na
sinabi naming communal discernment and communal action," he said
in an interview.
Lagdameo clarified he was making the
statement as a bishop and not as president of the Catholic
Bishops Conference of the Philippines.
During the press conference, he was flanked
by four other prelates — Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz,
and Bishops Joel Baylon (Masbate) and Socrates Villegas (Balanga),
and Bishop emeritus Jose Sorra.
Lagdameo said the presence of the four
signifies their concurrence to his statement which he said was
spurred by a letter sent to him by the Association of Major
Religious Superiors in the Philippines.
The AMRSP letter said: "At this time when
people are losing hope and are becoming cynical and apathetic, a
prophetic word from you will be like a Pentecost event, a
rekindling of hope and an inspiration and impetus to take active
part on social transformation."
Lagdameo said corruption has been
continuously growing despite repeated condemnation by the
Catholic Church and calls for widespread reform.
"In the past few years up to today, we have
watched how corruption has become endemic, massive, systemic and
rampant in our politics. The faces and symptoms of corruption
are overprized projects, multi-billion scams of various kinds,
election manipulations, anomalous transactions, bribery of both
high and low, unsolved murders of media practitioners.
Corruption is a social and moral cancer," Lagdameo said.
He noted there have been at least three CBCP
statements denouncing corruption.
Lagdameo said he believes Arroyo is a corrupt
leader and has done little in preparing for a new government
that could make a transition away from a corrupt one.
In his statement, Lagdameo said corruption is
the reason the country could not get out of the quagmire it is
in.
"Corruption impedes economic development,
worsens income inequity and poverty, endangers public order and
safety. Corruption results in bureaucratic inefficiency and
demoralization," Lagdameo said.
The bishops said they are hopeful new leaders
will emerge in the process of "liberating" the country from the
claws of corruption.
"In spite of the seemingly hopeless and
negative prognosis, our liberation may yet serendipitously
happen. We are dreaming, praying and hoping that our country may
yet have the liberators. Yes, liberators who will, in a
courageous peaceful way, effectively and uncompromisingly reform
our country," they said in the statement.
Cruz said corruption under the Arroyo
administration is something that cannot be dealt with by the
human justice system alone.
"Corruption in such an extensive degree in
the Philippines is a crime that cries to heaven for vengeance.
Corruption in this country has become endemic, systemic, from
top to bottom in government. Perhaps they may be given the
punishment they deserve by the human justice system, but that’s
not enough. Someone else in the Higher Authority will punish
them as they deserve," said Cruz, former CBCP president.
The known Arroyo critic said it was not too
long ago when the President received the "distinction" of being
the most corrupt president in the country’s history.
"Though our country is at the 11th place of
the most corrupt from the bottom, we even have a gold medalist
of corruption in our national leader. To say that the Malacañang
occupant is a follower of corruption and not a leader in
corruption is already asking too much. Perhaps, if this is said,
it will take someone from the moon to believe that the head of
corruption is down below and not above," Cruz said.
Press Secretary Jesus Dureza pooh-poohed the4
statements. He said: "The President prefers to focus on her work
rather than waste time on criticism and statements of critics
like the reported claim of Lingayen Archbishop Oscar Cruz that
President Arroyo is corrupt."
"We will continue to focus on our work for
the poor and address a bigger issue which is addressing this
global crisis. It is up to them to make (such statements). The
priority of the President and the government now is to attend to
the bigger issue which will be determinative of our future as a
nation," he said.
Villegas said they are hoping their statement
will continuously bother the public.
"We are not here to bring you peace. We are
here to disturb you. I’m praying to God that after this meeting,
may the Lord trouble you because the trouble that comes from the
Lord is going to make you a better person and it’s going to make
the country a better country," said the protégé of Cardinal
Jaime Sin, archbishop of Manila.
Villegas said that with the current state of
the government, there must be very drastic and dramatic actions
from each and every one.
"If we have been only half less corrupt, we would have more
money to feed our children, more money to put up schools, more
money to bring medicines to hospitals. The problem is not
population. The problem is corruption. Just cut the corruption
in half and we would have enough money to take care of the
poor," Villegas said. – With Jocelyn Montemayor