Thursday, September 24, 2009

NICANOR PERLAS: SIX PILLARS PLATFORM


The Six Pillars


My platform has six pillars. The first deals with eradicating the massive poverty, inequitable growth, lawlessness, and conflicts that plague our country. Our first pillar aims to Eradicate Poverty and Enhance Quality of Life for all, through, among others, a vibrant broad-based economy, social justice and peace.


The second addresses the pervasive corruption that is tearing the social fabric of the nation and rupturing the hearts and minds of Filipinos. Our second pillar therefore seeks to Advance Moral and Effective Governance in all institutions of society and all situations in life.



The third concerns itself with stopping the massive destruction of our ecology and our environment. Our third pillar seeks to Uphold the Integrity of Creation and respectfully partner with it as our source of life.



Our fourth pillar seeks to Build Partnerships for Social Justice. We want to introduce a new approach to real participatory governance and authentic democracy. No one can solve the problems of the country alone… tayong lahat ang kailangan upang mabago ang ating bansa. This means government working together with civil society and business in the pursuit of social justice and creating a better country.



The fifth pillar strives to Promote Creative Education and Inner Change. Better schools, colleges and universities, drawing out the many talents, intelligences, and potentials of students, are crucial. Equally as important is self-directed education and transformation. At the end of the day, it’s important to also address the factor of inner change—taking responsibility for changing our hearts and minds. No one can do our inner work for us. And there can be no genuine change in a system or institution if the people who work there do not change. Depressed, apathetic, and poorly trained people cannot create visionary and high-performance organizations, much less a world-inspiring country. Individual and cultural transformation are the foundations of the other pillars.



And then finally, the sixth pillar of the platform aims to Mainstream Visionary Initiatives. There are thousands of promising initiatives throughout the country in a wide variety of fields that already point the way forward to another, much better Philippines. We will reward innovation. We will systematically discover, magnify and multiply these existing success stories.



This platform with its six pillars recognizes that everything is interconnected and requires a multidisciplinary approach. Ang lahat ng bagay ay magkaugnay. Reducing poverty, for example, is not simply about appropriate government policies that strengthen the economy, creates jobs and minimizes the adverse aspects of globalization. Poverty reduction also requires significant advances in peace, culture, including education, health care, sanitation, clean water, housing, micro-finance, nutrition and of course, agriculture and asset reform among others.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

MABUHAY!


The air is seething with news about the status of the Visiting Forces Agreement with the United States. Sen. Miriam Defensor spoke against it, saying among other things that we have been given lower remuneration compared to other nations which did not even have any agreement; that the visit does not say how long it would be; that the US has been giving to us equipment that are already classifiable as "ukay2." I did not catch anymore the rest that she had said but one thing for sure this issue of American soldiers going back to our shores is really problematic. Even Ernie Makahiya, head of Ganap Partylist spoke against it.

What is it really that attracts Americans to our shore? I have heard that the places for their so-called Balikatan exercises are full of oil and other natural resources that somehow, prospecting clandestinely is part of them. Then of course some generals maybe could not resist the allure of the Filipino women who could be selling their bodies for dollars, although I shudder to think of this really. But it is a real possibility. In fact, we could start counting the number of Amerasian children who could be born during the term of this VFA.

Knowing that Americans are really a pragmatic lot, I think that they would not even proffer the idea of their being here as part of that messianic mission of policing the world. I think also that is already passe and the phrase has got to be obliterated from world vocabulary (don't you think Mr. Schott?) US as the Superman of the world is really not a heavenly image anymore since there is an opposite reaction to that and which is: we can develop our own superpowers -- and not necessarily violent ones, not necessarily using arms, and other military warfare.

Rather, I do think that the US should go back to their turn-of-the-century tactics here in the Philippines, wherein the soldiers were heavily involved in teaching the people -- in educating them as the Spanish colonizers denied it to our early, early grandparents. But of course, today we have our own educational institutions now, and capable of educating our own people. So what need do we have for American teachers --who could probably collaborate with us instead on making their military sector less prone to using war all the time to solve war problems.

I am very amazed at how a certain general could even put a black or white proposition to the authorities -- "if I don't get 30,000 men, I quit" - and to which if I were there, I would always say, "Thank you, quit." Actually since 2003, when Bush allowed the invasion of Iraq, I had created helmets out of those jelly cups, painting them olive green, then sticking them on styrofoam with a toothpick. I told myself these should stand for every helmet of a dead American soldier in Iraq, as the NYT had been running statistics of the dying and dead soldiers in that war at that time. I think it has reached 4,000 now.

For someone involved in alternative healing -- which seeks to prolong life through alternative health products -- I find it anathema to really send people to war, any war, regardless of any assurance that they would come back alive. It is a very simple idea for me that to be alive is to live long, and not to live dangerously, but rather to savor every minute of one's life here on earth in great joy. But it seems those generals have a different idea; perhaps they view the war just like a game of chess, where you mate your enemy with many pawns sacrificed on the wayside. In other words, they treat their soldiers as objects to be thrown into the battlefields or the chessboard, regardless of the ethics of the war.

And what is not right? What is not glaringly right? For me a foreign flag in our Philippine soil with a soldier not of our own, is not glaringly right. I can feel for the Afghans, Pakistanis and the Iraquis when they view foreign soldiers on their shores imposing their authority, whereas they have their own leaders. I can feel revolted the same way they are when I see a foreign flag flying more highly than our own. I can feel for the women of those countries when their sons, brothers and husbands are treated like second class citizens (of course the women would be third class already there given the highly conservative societies where they exist) unable to talk back, always trying to smile, to massage the egoes of the foreign powers who could shoot them at any time should they become stubborn or recalcitrant in following orders.

It is 2009 and I have been thinking and praying that this millenium should already bring about a full flowering of minds and spirits (in living bodies) not anymore of carcasses or corpses. And so what can be done about these warheads? Let us rethink and rethink and rethink -- if instead of buying bullets, etc., why not spend on books, or the writing of books in the languages of the Afghans, Pakistanis and Iraquis on what is democracy? on what is self-esteem; on what is national dignity; on how to be financially independent? Etcetera, etcetera?

US of A has a lot of universities and graduates highly qualified to serve the interests of the country and make it act progressively. The resources in them are also huge compared even to those in our country, the Philippines. I believe that the military budget in the whole world, not just in the USA should be devoted solely to educational purposes. When military planes fly, why can't they drop radios and tv sets with cable connections so that they would have a plethora of stations and channels to choose from? Or why not drop paintbrushes, oils and coloring books and other art materials? Why not send Beyonce to teach the girls there how to read musical notes or how to do trilling of the voice (skip the gyrating because they could be shocked by it.)

Let us sow the seeds of democracy without guns.

So. Let us also empower the women of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq in order to make them have a say in the running of their government.

Let us make them understand that the veil is beautiful but not for all time wearing especially when one has to do manual work; let us make them learn technology and open their eyes and minds into the infinite knowledge they can have through the internet; no not only knowledge but also opinions from which they can learn and thereby learn how to shape their own.

Yes, from this small corner of the globe I know how to dream, dream big of a peaceful happy world. I hope everyone is dreaming with me and doing something concrete to make it happen. Mabuhay!

Come to think of it, our word for victory is Mabuhay which means Long Live! I think our language was originated by people who think and act humanely and who valued human life immensely. Mabuhay tayong lahat, Mabuhay ang Mundo!

OF WORDS IN POLITICS




the heat is on. presidential aspirants are drawing in many supporters -- whether the candidates are from the ruling party or the opposition. but i would like to clarify to my friends and colleagues in media, as well as all political activists:
let us stop using the term, "administration candidates." to use the word "administration" makes it sound as if they are legitimate people holding on to power and that all their actions are correct. we are in a political contest. and this administration does not even have an ounce of legitimacy. so to say that GT is an administration bet, does not speak of being legal. instead, we should call them Lakas-NUCD bet, or Kampi bet. Let us call the candidates by the names of their parties in order to remove the illusion that they are legitimately being endorsed.

the game presumes that every candidate is being tossed into the arena by their supporters, their parties. hence there are no administration bets here. to say the candidates are by administration is to say that the people also endorse them. that is mistaken I think. it will also deceive the people into thinking that it is all right for these candidates later on to promote themselves using the resources of the government because they are "administration candidates."

let us preserve the pristine character of our politics so that they would not be tainted by covert moves to make what is a corrupt practice, legitimate.

also words could really muddle any situation resulting in negative consequences to the people. what do you think?

Monday, September 21, 2009

President Obama: "We didn't win last year's election together at a committee hearing in D.C. We won it on the doorsteps and the phone lines, at the softball games and the town meetings, and in every part of this great country where people gather to talk about what matters most."
MANILA - A voter needs almost 8 minutes to fill up the ballot to be used in the country's first automated elections in May 2010, initial results of a time-and-motion study conducted by the Commission on Elections (Comelec) and other groups revealed Friday.

Students of the First Asia Institute of Technology and Humanities in Tanauan, Batangas on Friday participated in a mock poll in their school to test the electronic ballots to be used in the actual 2010 elections. A total of 1,000 2nd year to 4th year college students, all of voting age, used improvised ballots which had the names of 339 possible candidates for 32 electoral positions in the 2010 elections.

The mock poll is a joint project of Youth Vote Philippine, Former Senior Government Officials, Comelec and Politicalarena.com.

Organizers said the time-and-motion study is meant to determine how long it would take a person to fill up the ballot. This, in turn, would help Comelec determine if 11 hours is enough for an estimated 1,000 voters per clustered precinct to cast their ballots on election day.

"We will find out the actual average of all the voting times. This will help us determine if 11 hours is enough time for all voters in each clustered precinct to cast their ballots," Mildred Ople of Youth Vote Philippines said.

A TV Patrol World report said each student averaged about 7 minutes and 51 seconds or almost eight minutes to fill up the ballot, according to initial results of the time-and-motion study. One first-time voter said he was thrilled to use the new ballots, which only required voters to shade a circle beside the name of the candidate of their choice.

"I now have a glance or preview on how to vote in the elections," he said.

Organizers said the results showed that voting stations should allow at least 12 voters to fill up their ballots simultaneously to allow all 1,000 voters in each clustered precinct to cast their ballots before precincts close.

A brownout was also simulated during the mock poll to show if it would affect the process. During the actual election day, technology consortium Smartmatic-TIM is expected to provide generators to provide backup power.

The Comelec is expected to conduct a mock election using the Smartmatic-TIM machines on the second week of December.

Several groups earlier criticized Comelec for not conducting proper time-and-motion studies before approving the poll automation contract with Smartmatic-TIM. With a report from Ina Reformina, ABS-CBN News


as of 09/19/2009 2:20 AM
MANILA - The Commission on Elections (COMELEC) on Wednesday has asked the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) and the Civil Service Commission (CSC) to issue guidelines to allow employees to register as voters even on weekdays - and that the time they spent registering be considered official time.

The COMELEC, in a statement, said the suggestion covers private and public employees, so that they may be able to register as voters for the 2010 national elections.

COMELEC Resolution No. 8669, dated September 15, requested DOLE "to issue the appropriate circular/guidelines urging private employers to allow their employees to file their applications for registration, transfer/reactivation, changes/correction/inclusions/reinstatement of entries of registration records even during weekdays, and to consider their temporary absence from work on official time."

Meanwhile, the COMELEC in Resolution 8668, said that "government employees who as first time voters, or who desire to transfer/reactivate/correct/change/reinstate their registration records, deserve broader opportunities to exercise their right to suffrage through the filing of their applications for registration/transfer/reactivation/correction/change/reinstatement of registration records during weekdays."

The move, said COMELEC spokesman James Jimenez, showed the agency's "resolve to empower [the] broadest number of workers... by making sure that they will be able to cast their votes in the 2010 elections."

as of 09/16/2009 11:08 PM

Friday, September 18, 2009

SUGGESTED POLICIES FOR PEOPLES' PRIMARIES

FOLKS, AS WE ENTER THE MOST SIGNIFICANT POLITICAL PERIOD IN OUR LIFE, WHERE WE SHALL ELECT HIGH OFFICIALS, LET US MULL OVER THE KINDS OF POLICIES THAT WE SHALL REQUIRE OF THEM:


Policies
Economic policy

PEOPLES’ PRIMARIES SHALL lean towards creation of jobs through the use of our natural resources, instead of labor export. It shall keep a close watch on government spending to prevent corrupt deals and expenditures. It shall also keep a close link with organized labor in order to make them active partners in running the government.
Teachers also shall be recruited to beef up the membership of the Peoples’ Primaries as they are the most advanced in terms of appreciating socio-political issues. PP shall work for less taxation for those at work.

CULTURE
Peoples’ primaries shall stimulate the Filipino peoples’ love of country through education and culture.

Foreign and military policy
Foreign policies shall be based on respect for our national identity, independence and integrity. PP shall also give due recognition to our war veterans and those disabled soldiers and the families of those who have fought and died in Mindanao, and other wars elsewhere in the country.
Education
All students in public schools and universities shall be given a chance to study on loan-for-pay-after-graduation basis. Higher budgets for scholarships shall be allocated.

Environment vs Labor
Peoples’ Primaries shall support efforts that promote clean air, alternative fuels,
Healthcare
Peoples’ Primaries shall promote free health care and services down to the barangay levels. PEOPLES’ PRIMARIES women’s right of women to choose to use artificial contraceptive devices.

Gay Rights
Peoples Primaries shall favor measures that will promote the rights of gay individuals.

Other Policies
PEOPLES’ PRIMARIES shall promote the rights of the children, women, the elderly and the disabled.

Religion
PEOPLES’ PRIMARIES SHALL commits to the separation of church and state . All State properties shall be used to accommodate individuals from all religions

PEACE
PEOPLES' PRIMARIES shall promote peace by continuing dialogues with rebels and insuring that agreements are forged with them, on a year by year basis.



WILHELMINA S. OROZCO

Thursday, September 17, 2009

WHY WE ARE WHAT WE ARE AND HOW WE CAN WIN IN POLITICS

The past days have seen many presidential candidates fall on the wayside: Among Ed Panlilio, Mar Roxas, Bayani Fernando, and Noli de Castro. Still standing up are Chiz Escudero, apart from declared nominees: Noynoy Aquino and G. Teodoro who are relatives.

The heat of the 2010 politics is really upon us and there is no turning back anymore. People on radio, in print, on tv, at sidewalks, at cafes etc. are all talking of 2010. Why is this very important to us now?

First of all, people are tired of this administration. We want out of it. No more pictures, no more tarpaulins, no more voice to be heard on tv or radio of the president who was not elected, the "president" without a conscience, the most travelled, has the highest number of military men in the cabinet, etc.

Secondly, we are shaping a new politics. We want to solve the problems of corruption and so we view elections as one big measure to limit the entry of the corrupt into the circles of leadership in our country. Now that is a big question mark: how do we do that?

Folks, do you really think the Catholic church is after change in this country? Look again. It will marginalize well-meaning candidates should they support the reproductive health. They would rather side with the conservatives who turn a blind eye to corruption, than be with those health advocates?

Pray, Folks, the Catholic Church will be facing an irate majority -- who have remained poor despite the clinging to pro-life. What will being pro-life bring except more and more children, a higher rate of population, more mouths to feed, less people to get education as the resources are limited, and less roofs to house them in. As the number gets bigger, of course the resources dwindle.

Through all these years, the pro-lifers have had their hey day. What do they say now to the poverty? Will married child-bearing couples wait for the government to start livelihood programs before making love at night, curbing their urges as their mind tells them to follow the teaching of priests? I have been reading the Bible and nowhere do I read anything about allowing an unbridled copulatory act.

Maybe it is high time that all those seeking change should already make the priests and nuns pushing the pro-life stance and which curbs the use of artificial devices, even condoms, those harmless devices that could make a night guilt-free, realize that their celibate condition does not match their rhetoric about their issue.

Let us never say that we could lose 2010 all because the Catholic priests and nuns prefer going along with Gloria's pet as his stance matches theirs. Again, if that happens then they are the biggest problem of the people, not the corrupt in the government.

WHY REBELLION IS NOT THE ANSWER TO DISUNITY

Sep 15, 2009 at 10:51 AM

My whole point.

I am not keen on staging armed revolt to replace the occupant of Malacanang Palace.

In my previous posting, I have already outlined the grounds why partisan rebellion is not a solution.

I was part of the framing of the 1986 Constitution as Technical Assistant, hence, I fully understood when Pres. Cory conveyed apology for taking an active role in the extra constitutional process to remove a president. Breach of the collective social contract was committed.

Take the lesson of Vietnam. Did the aggressor, in this case U.S.A. (help)achieve peace in Vietnam by dropping bombs thereby perpetuating the internicine war?

The U.S. and Vietnamese government were compelled to sit across the negotiating table to discuss the peace accords.

I know a bit how to plan for a coup d'etat. It is easy to start trouble. But how and when to stop it, no one can tell. What is etched in my mind when I think of resorting to arms as a means to correct the ills that afflict the birthland is none other than but backlash.

Baka ho ba ang "gamot" ay mas masahol pa pala sa sakit.

The EDSA Dos is clear case that unconstitutional manner of removing elective officials is not the best option.

EDSA I is altogether different. I learned as early as 1978, Pres Marcos is no longer governing the land. Mga "power centres" na. 'Di nga maka basa ng diyario si PFM. Ang nakukuha nia na lang ay mga news clippings pag dating sa national security briefing.

Let's amend the Cory Constitution if we must, if there are provisions that no longer fit to the existing Philippine reality.

But meanwhile, until the Constitution is revised or amended, let us uphold the fundamental law of the land to avert chaos and anarchy.



Bob Gabuna

PARADOX OF UNITY

17 Sept 2009

The paradox of "unity" is what most inhabitants of the 7,107 islands have yet to learn. Yet, it is always easy to recognize immediately whether there is unity or not among the members of a particular group of individuals in any context, at any time in any place.


The "clue" of the paradox of "unity" lies in the "talk". The act of talking/writing about "unity" is the first and immediate indicator that at least one member, particularly the speaker or writer, already thinks and believes that there is no "unity", or it has been "diminished" or it had been "lost" by the group. The more members of the group talk about "unity", the more it becomes validated that there is no "unity", or it has been "diminished" or it had been "lost" by the group!


The paradox of "unity" is that when it is present among the members of a group, no one needs to even think about it, much less talk about it. The paradox of unity is that its real presence is in coherence and congruence in thoughts, feelings, and actions of members of the group. For when "unity" is really present, all members of the group simply focus on the specific action/s that must be done in order to achieve a specified goal/objective.


The paradox of "unity" is that in order to have it, everybody in the group must forget about it. The paradox of "unity" includes the fact that while it is needed at the start for a group to work towards a specific goal/objective, it can only be concretely validated at the end, whether there had been "unity" or none, regardless of the outcome.



JM NEPOMUCENO

CONTINUING DISCUSSIONS ON PHILIPPINE UNITY

Sept 17, 2009

Unity is good if attainable, but if not, let us just move on and skirt it.


ON THE PART OF OUR LEADERS

The DESTINY of a nation depends upon the will of its LEADERS, who are the ones endowed with the God-given OPPORTUNITY and POWER for CHANGE that can propel the nation to greatness.

UNITY is not an absolute necessity for leaders to do good. President Marcos did not have anybody to contradict him while he was in power during martial law, yet, from the second most progressive economy in the region, he transformed the nation's economy into the basket case of Asia, a stark contrast to the rapid growth and progress attained during that period by the economies of our Asian neighbors--a situation staring in the face of all of us but cannot be seen by some of us who still pay homage to President Marcos.

JUST AS LACK OF UNITY WAS NOT A HINDRANCE TO OUR LEADERS IN COMMITTING WRONGDOING AND ACCUMULATING ILL-GOTTEN WEALTH WHILE IN OFFICE, UNITY WAS ALSO NOT NEEDED HAD THEY OPTED INSTEAD TO DO GOOD AND FIGHT CORRUPTION, INSTEAD OF BECOMING GFRAFTERS THEMSELVES.

In short, if our leaders who can make things happen do not need unity to do evil, they also do not need unity to do good.



ON THE PART OF THE PEOPLE

Even in the US, the Americans have always been divided--into REPUBLICANS and DEMOCRATS--but they are able to achieve what many nations have not achieved despite their lack of unity. In fact, their division provides the needed check and balance against abuses and corruption by whoever among them are in power.

However, the Americans automatically become generally united whenever there is a common threat or issue that they have to address, as was eloquently shown after the US declared war against Japan in WW II.

Thus, just as war can unite the people of a nation against their common enemies, common internal GRAVE ISSUES can unite--though to a lesser degree--the people as and when circumstances warrant, for as long as there are leaders from the people who can inspire collective action--as was seen in EDSA I--but not all the time.


Mar Tecson

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

REACTION: HOW ABOUT THE BONIFACIOS AMONG US?

Mon, 14 Sep 2009 22:13:43 -0700

by MAR TECSON

Hi Bob,

What was wrong was not EDSA 1 nor EDSA 2. What was wrong was the LACK of FOLLOW THROUGH in the institutionalization of needed REFORMS, so that at present, the people are helpless even against blatant corruption and wrongdoing in government.

EDSA 2 came about because there was intentional FAILURE in the nation's GRIEVANCE SYSTEM, by way of SENATORS who suppressed the TRUTH during the Erap impeachment hearing.

There was EDSA 2 because after EDSA 1, there was failure to institute a Grand Jury system that is not afraid to confront even a sitting President. Thus, what we have are senators in the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, lawyers in the Office of the Ombudsman, and CPA's and lawyers in the Commission on Audit who, despite repeated requests/recommendations to them, would not do the obvious, common-sense, and fundamental audit/investigation procedure that can pin down the $130-MILLION alleged OVERPRICING in the ZTE contract--COMPARISON of ZTE CONTRACT PRICES vs. OPEN MARKET PRICES.


Okay, fine, you, and myself, do not want an extralegal change in power. But how about the others who feel aggrieved, especially those who have guns in their hands because they are in the military but not part of those pampered by TRAPOS?

Jose Rizal was against bloody revolution, but how about Andres Bonifacio?

Which is why, in another email, I thought the CIVILIANS have to PREEMPT the MILITARY....

Which is why, by myself, I have worked for years doing what one person can do to help minimize corruption--so that even in modest ways, I can help defuse the clamor for extralegal change in power. However, with COA's belated restoration of selective PRE-AUDIT effective August 1, 2009, the next step in the private sector's anti-corruption work requires group effort, which I cannot do alone. Therefore, I started looking for CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS which may listen to me and with whom I can work. Ms. Gomez's solicitation for good-governance measures conveniently came along through email, hence I tried to see if I can work with them--and this thread started.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

TAKE TWO ON PEOPLE POWER

FROM JM NEPOMUCENO

Now, what really happened in February 1986, beyond the deliberate "romanticizing" of "People Power at EDSA 1986" to continue the "Zarzuela con Moro Moro" since 1935?


From the day immediately following the evacuation of MARCOS from Malacanang by the US military, who exactly "took over" the "power vacuum" that was created?


Did the "MASA" including the "Landless Peasants / Tenants" gain control of the National Government of the Republic of the Philippines? Those who will answer "YES" better review the documented real history from 26 February 1986.


Who assumed absolute power to "take over" starting 26 February 1986? Was it Corazon Cojuangco Aquino by herself alone?


The day after the "MASA" including the "Landless Peasants / Tenants" and the "Middle Class" went back to their respective nooks and corners for "daily living", the LANDLORDS and all others who were relegated to the side-lines by the ousted Dictator came out from their holes and crevices for "take over" of "absolute power".


That was the real "beginning" of the post-Marcos era. If that is not recognized and acknowledged by everybody, then there will be absolutely no point in continuing this discussion to where it should go properly.


Whether one likes it or not, the subsequent unfolding of the CARP "zarzuela con moro moro" from 26 February 1986 up to 30 June 2010 must be evaluated with iceberg-cold objectivity by everyone who still wants to help solve the CARP issue with finality.


Everyone has to be crystal clear on the actual political dynamics that occurred. It should be easy enough even for a High School student to understand that it has been the LANDLORDS who have wrested back absolute power from the ousted dictator over the political and judicial systems, both at the National and LGU levels.


Of course, the illusion that there is an effective "Opposition" representing the welfare and benefit of the "MASA" including the "Landless Peasants / Tenants" and the "Middle Class" (including most of denizens in cyberspace, even in this forum) to play out the "Zarzuela con Moro Moro" from 26 February 1986 up to today.


That is the real bottom-line of where we truly are to this very day, politically.



JM

FROM SOMEONE WHO HAS SEEN NIGHT AND DAY IN THE PHILIPPINES

MY whole point.

I am not keen in staging armed revolt to replace the
occupant of Malacanang Palace.
In my previous posting, I have already outlined
the grounds why partisan rebellion is not a solution.
I was part of the framing of the 1986 Constintution
as Technical Assistant, hence, I fully understood when
Pres Cory conveyed apology for taking an active role in
extra constitutional process to remove a president.
Breach of the collective social contract was committed.

Take the lesson of Vietnam.
Did the aggressor, in this case U.S.A. achieved in
bringing peace in Vietnam by dropping bombs thereby
perpetuating the internicine war?

The U.S. and Vietnamese government were compelled
to sit across the negotiating table to discuss the
peace accords.

I know a bit how to plan for a coup d'etat. It is easy
to start trouble. But how and when to stop it, no one
can tell. What is etched in my mind when I think of
resorting to arms as a means to correct the ills that
afflict the birthland is none other than but backlash.

Baka ho ba ang "gamot" ay mas masahol pa pala
sa sakit.

The EDSA Dos is clear case that unconstitutional
manner of removing elective officials is not the
best option.

EDSA I is altogether different. I learned as early
as 1978, Pres Marcos is no longer governing the land.
Mga "power centres" na. 'Di nga maka basa ng
diyario si PFM. Ang nakukuha nia na lang ay mga
news clippings pag dating sa national security
briefing.

Let's amend the Cory Constitution if we must, if there
are provisions that no longer fit to the existing Philippine
reality. But meanwhile, until the Constitution is revised
or amended, let us uphold the fundamental law of the
land to avert chaos and anarchy.



Bob Gabuna writing from the Arctic Region

VIEWING GENUINE PEOPLE POWER

EDSA 2 always crops up as a topic in many political discussions. Until now, there are many people who view it as an important and therefore "repeatable" measure for unseating officials.

Actually, EDSA 2 is highly different from EDSA 1. Edsa 2 should not have happened because our country was and is already under a new Constitution which Cory's administration herself passed.

In the first People Power, we unseated a dictator, someone who had been in power for 14 years already and who was issuing laws under his name, which is strictly a violation of people's rights then and now. Using arms against him and his cohorts was not a good idea. In fact the people opted to go abroad rather than take up arms and try to shoot down his soldiers.

So when we conducted the People Power in 1986, it was because the snap elections were being fraudulently managed again. We were supposed to elect the next president of the country. And the dictator had the gall to put himself up as a candidate again, after 14 years of power. After the closing of the voting, the counting was being twisted to give more favorable votes to the dictator and his candidates as the people realized when the Comelec computerized counting staff walked out. That was already the highest form of anti-people act -- to dismiss, to distort the people's act for good democratic governance of elections. Moreover, that dictator's administration was thick in the plot to destroy, murder those opposing it as what had happened to the husband of Cory. Therefore, against the dictator's misuse of power, for being a dictator, and for his instituting anti-democratic processes, People Power was conducted.

When Cory assumed power, she dissolved, put up a revolutionary government and tasked a group of people to rewrite the constitution which was ratified afterwards by the people. That Constitution is now prevailing in the land.

Then in 1998, the first president of the country to win landslide in the elections was seated. But all throughout his terms he was being maligned. Who should unseat him then but the courts. Yet the impeachment court of Supreme Court Chief Justice Hilario Davide then did not remain independent, as it should have been and should be for all times. Instead, he did not dismiss the impeachment court nor did he ask those who walked out like Joker Arroyo et al to return and finish the proceedings. Instead he joined the fray in Edsa and swore into power, the worst distortion of the laws of the land.

That Edsa 2 so-called also had other questions raised: can the AFP chief of staff turn his back on the commander-in-chief who was elected by the people? Can senators who were part of the impeachment court skip their pledge to uphold the law? Is it possible for any group of people to dismiss all the provisions of any Constitution in order to institute new changes in governance -- people and process -- all the time?

The people asked: "where and when will this end?"

There were many personal failings on the part of Erap then, but we have laws to deal with them. People Power is a process that has been superceded by the court processes installed under the new constitution. Davide broke those rules and joined the "fray" shedding off the independence of the Judiciary as a third branch of government. All those who swore and witnessed the swearing in of gloria are now in positions of power -- namely Angelo Reyes, who has been roaming around various departments and now in the energy department uncontrolling the rising oil prices, Davide now in the United Nations as a representative and oiling his way into the officialdom of the organization, etcetera.

That is why Cory apologized to Erap. Under Edsa 2, she herself became part of the group that broke that adherence to the New Constitution which her administration promulgated and got ratified by the people. The old constitution was nullified by the dictator and instead martial laws were instituted. Hence it was just right to install the new Constitution, and that should have been followed and should be followed until now.

Would Cory have earned the sympathies of the public after her death had she chosen to keep mum about her mistaken participation in Edsa 2? I do not think so. During the last rallies that Cory was joining, very few were answering her calls. In fact, the crowd at the anti-Charter Change in the 90's produced a thin crowd, thinner than what M. Velarde could muster under his El Shaddai group. Why because the crowd expected the Ramos administration to uphold the law and to follow the constitutional provision of no reelection for the presidency. Unless that law was revised, then the people viewed everything as status quo. Only after her apology, and when the rallies against gloria restarted hinting at the displeasure of the people against her administration, the fraudulent way she and her family have been amassing wealth, the way Congress has become a rubber stamp for her "Marcos-like" administration of justice, the way she has controlled the decisions of so-called independent Constitutional agencies like the Sandiganbayan and the Civil Service Commission, did the people saw the need for rallies and demonstrations but not necessarily a People Power act.

So 2010 will be test of wills -- that of the people versus vested interest.

To be a leader is to listen to the pulse of the people. To be a leader is to learn how to apologize for mistakes and to correct one's actions. Cory did the right thing in apologizing to Erap -- why because she was instrumentally used by some other groups to lend credence, to give an imprimatur to what was tacitly an anti-Constitutional act during the EDSA 2.

That is why, EDSA 2 remains as EDSA 2, not People Power 2. There is a wide difference between the two. The former was run by those with vested interests who are now in positions of power and have not improved the administration of anti-poverty measures for the people.

VOX POPULI means Voice of the people of the Philippines not voice of vested interests. People Power means power of the People of the Philippines, not power of corrupt interests.





Painting by Diego Rivera
Mon, 14 Sep 2009 02:20:19 -0700

In response to call for suggestions on governance from Ms. Connie Gomez of the Global Filipino Nation, Mr. Mar Tecson presents general measures against one of the worst forms of POOR GOVERNANCE--rampant CORRUPTION in government. He said that the suggested anti-corruption measures cannot be undertaken by just one person; these have to be done as group effort by civil society organizations, such as your own.



THE ROLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS

IN AN ALL-OUT ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR





PART I

DOING WHAT CAN BE DONE

AGAINST RAMPANT CORRUPTION

UNDER A HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT





Here is an inductive process of presenting CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS’ vital role as the people’s representatives in undertaking a crucial aspect of fighting corruption. Their role will be performed under an existing major constraint, that is, without any change in incumbent government officials whose motives are suspect--because they have collectively failed to wage an all-out war against corruption despite repeated recommendations/reminders to them from media and the public.





POINTS TO CONSIDER IN THE FORMULATION OF ANTI-CORUPTION ROADMAP


1. CORRUPTION is the ROOT many of the country’s major ills, most of which are in the nature of MONEY PROBLEM, or the lack of enough government funds for poverty alleviation and other vital public services, fallaciously addressed through imposition of regressive indirect taxes, like VAT, that hits the rich and poor alike.



As quantified hereunder, for the partial periods cited alone, some $73 BILLION was lost to corruption. Imagine what such amount could do if we had it today and it could be used in corruption-free ways to promote economic growth and uplift the living conditions of Filipinos.

As reported by World Bank sometime back, the Philippine government has lost some $48 billion to corruption in a span of 20 years as early as some years ago, bigger than its borrowings of $40.6 billion over the same period. (Elena Torrijos, “$48B lost to graft in 20 years—WB,” Philippine Daily Inquirer, December 2, 1999, p. 4). Despite the efforts of our anti-corruption government offices to curb corruption, it has worsened in succeeding years and goes on unabated to this day. “Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez said that at least P1.3-trillion (about $25 billion) in public revenue were lost due to fraudulent practices of some government officials and agencies from 2001 to 2005. Speaking at the start of a seminar-workshop on Integrity Development and Public Accountability at the Quezon City Hall , Gutierrez said the money lost could have been used in improving health, education and social welfare services and to reduce the national debt. ‘Bigger amounts have been lost to corruption. We could have wiped out totally our foreign debt if we used the amount for that purpose, and would still have a surplus,’ Gutierrez said.” (Julie Javellana-Santos, “Philippine Govt Lost $25 Billion the Last 5 Years to Corruption: Ombudsman,” Arab News Online, May 24, 2006)







2. Most of past big-time cases of CORRUPTION were in the nature of fraud in the DISBURSEMENT of the government’s more than TRILLION-PESO annual budget, usually involving anomalous contracts for major procurement and infrastructure projects that requires public bidding.



Following are examples of apparently anomalous major government projects:

a. The classic P728-million fertilizer scam that was PREVENTABLE because blatantly and crudely executed—it did not use any hard-to-detect sophisticated and ingenious modes of corruption, just gross overpricing, ghost deliveries, etc. that are easy to discover in COA pre-audit—yet was not prevented by the behemoth COA because it totally abdicated its pre-audit or last-line-of-defense function in the government’s more than TRILLION-PESO budgeted annual expenditures, thereby leaving a void in the government’s internal control system that makes possible the commission of large-scale corruption.
b. The irregular P1.3-billion COMELEC automated counting machine contract with Mega-Pacific nullified by the Supreme Court.



c. The controversial $470-million IMPSA hydroelectric power deal that allegedly entailed some $14-million kickback.



d. The ultra expensive P1.1-billion Diosdado Macapagal Boulevard, the gross overpricing of which was blamed on the alleged soft or loose reclamation materials underneath, which claim could have been readily checked and proved or disproved through core samplings or outright excavations of strategic points of the boulevard and adjacent areas, including the much cheaper extension of the boulevard constructed by a different contractor. Before opening of bids, if there were independent per kilometer cost standards shown to the Bidding Committee by COA, or by PUBLIC OBSERVERS, the overpricing could have been readily detected and prevented. Unfortunately, COA was not competently doing its job and there were no public observers then yet, hence the overpricing.



e. The scandal-tainted $465-million PIATCo contract for the construction of NAIA 3, voided by the Supreme Court owing to corruption and violations of the anti-dummy law.



f. The multi-billion-peso Clark centennial mess during the time of President Fidel Ramos.



g. The missing or improperly used P20-billion recovered Marcos Swiss deposits (“Drilon hits ‘deception’ in use of P20B FM funds,” Malaya , March 21, 2006), part of which might have been absconded through the P728-million fertilizer anomaly.



h. The P365.8-million grossly overpriced lamp posts in Cebu in 2007.



i. The P300-million textbook procurement scam during the time of President Joseph Estrada.



j. The media reported P2.5-billion anomalous QUEDANCOR swine dispersal program,

officially implemented since March 2004. .



k. The $329-million broadband contract with ZTE, supposedly exempt from public bidding pursuant to a still non-existing executive agreement, is allegedly attended to by $130-million overprice, betrayed by P200-million and $10-million bribe offers as claimed by a witness and whistle blowers.



l. The $503-million NORTHRAIL project which, as part of an executive agreement with China, was exempted from, and did not go through, competitive public bidding; in the absence of such bidding, COA cannot prove conclusively in post audit that the agreement covering this project is in compliance with the constitutional and lawful mandate against irregular, extravagant, excessive, unconscionable, and disadvantageous government contracts.



m. The $932-million SOUTH RAIL Project, consisting of $627.811 million for Phase 1 and $304.226 million for Phase 2, according to the Philippine National Railways (Aurea Calica, “Review of South Rail project sought,” Philippine Star Online, August 8, 2009). This project is irregular in the sense that, like the NORTHRAIL project, it was exempted from public bidding under an executive agreement, but the exemption does not cure the major defect that, in the absence of such bidding, COA cannot prove conclusively in post audit that the agreement covering this project is in compliance with the constitutional and lawful mandate against irregular, extravagant, excessive, unconscionable, and disadvantageous government contracts.






3. The fact that publicized big-time cases of CORRUPTION are frauds in government DISBURSEMENTS is quite SIGNIFICANT because it means that there is a way of CURBING them.



Unlike corruption in taxation in the form of non-payment or underpayment of taxes and customs duties perpetrated through bribing of government authorities, which corruption has no AUDIT TRAIL or documentary evidence to go by for its detection and prevention, corruption in government expenditures is much easier to detect and prevent because the corresponding disbursements are subject to government accounting and auditing regulations, non-compliance to which will expose the anomalies in irregular government contracts. Thus, once government taxes, borrowings, privatization proceeds, etc. are received in the form of CASH and RECORDED in the books of the government, these funds will now fall under the protective mantle of the government’s internal control system. The public funds cannot be properly disbursed unless the government transactions are found in conformity with government regulations designed to prevent CORRUPTION.



For example, under existing laws and regulations, payment should not be made for procurement contracts that did not go through public bidding. To prevent corruption in this type of transactions, what needs to be done is simply to enforce this rule strictly and consistently, something that is not being done but can be done if desired, it is a matter of wanting to do it.





4. Under fraud-prevention elements of INTERNAL CONTROL, no one person should be in complete control of transactions, otherwise it will be so easy to commit frauds because there will be no need for the help and connivance of other persons in the successful execution of corruption. In the government, this internal control rule can be expanded or refined further, to the effect that complete control of transactions should not be entrusted either to group of officers/employees reporting to one common high official—because they can form an evil syndicate acting just like ONE person in control of transactions.



When the Commission on Audit (COA) totally abolished pre-audit of government disbursements in 1995, in effect it blatantly violated the foregoing element of internal control because in essence it entrusted to the graft-ridden government bureaucracy the complete control of government transactions. Under 100% COA post-audit system, government agencies and entities can fully consummate and pay even anomalous transactions—no matter how large in amount--without the need to seek COA’s imprimatur prior to payment. The result has been the successful consummation of staggering cases of detectable and preventable corruption—like the P728-MILLION fertilizer scam--which were not detected and prevented by the 12,000-strong Commission on Audit simply because it abdicated its role as the last line of defense against frauds in government disbursements.







5. To remedy the major violation of internal control rule under 100% COA post audit that abdicated complete control of transactions to the graft-ridden government bureaucracy, the clear-cut solution is restoration of selective/partial COA pre-audit, totally abolished in 1995 in favor of 100% COA post audit. Fortunately, under the amended COA Circular No. 2009-002 dated May 18, 2009, selective COA pre-audit has been restored effective August 1, 2009. It constitutes a major reform in the uphill battle against rampant corruption in government.



Since February 2005, I have written to COA Commissioners and others about the need for prompt restoration of partial COA pre-audit of government transactions, with focus on corruption-prone staggering government procurement and infrastructure contracts. My justifications for partial COA pre-audit evolved into a simple comparison between 100% COA post audit and partial pre-audit. For ready reference, following are the arguments for partial COA pre-audit:



Partial COA pre-audit involves doing the same kind of work under the present 100% COA post audit, including looking at exactly the same disbursement vouchers and supporting documents being used in post audit, except that pre-audit is done earlier--or BEFORE payment and consummation of government transactions--on selected key government transactions, therefore:


(a) It does not entail increase in volume of COA audit work; it just advances the audit work to dates before payment of transactions and, in the process, compels COA to do its work promptly and without delay--because the audited government agencies/corporations are waiting for COA's pre-audit verdict on the disbursement vouchers before effecting payments.



(b) It can detect and prevent corruption because it is done BEFORE payments are made, or when acts of corruption are not yet consummated and it is not yet too late to stop them, thus it is useful in the PREVENTION of corruption.



(c) Consequently, it has the great ADVANTAGE of avoiding or minimizing the disgraceful and debilitating LOSSES of BILLIONS upon BILLIONS of PESOS in government funds from rampant corruption.



What the WHOLE ANTI-CORRUPTION GOVERNMENT MACHINERY will normally unsuccessfully attempt to do for years AFTER consummation of a particular big-time corruption—recover the loot from big-time grafters--ONE or TWO resident COA AUDITORS in the government agency/corporation can do much better within days or weeks BEFORE government disbursements are made—through selective pre-audit of substantial government transactions. Partial COA pre-audit can DETECT staggering corruption on a timely basis and PREVENT its consummation, thereby avoiding large-scale losses in precious government funds.



(d) Under selective COA pre-audit, there is simply NO great DISADVANTAGE that can override the foregoing great ADVANTAGE under it.



(e) Therefore, under the past prolonged total LACK of COA pre-audit that made possible grand scale corruption in government, COA Commissioners may be held liable for monumental WRONGDOING--including betraying the people’s trust--by way of their continuing FAILURE to RESTORE selective COA PRE-AUDIT even with their full knowledge of its ABILITY to nip in the bud anomalous transactions, as impliedly admitted in COA’s misguided rationalization of 100% COA post audit in February 2004 (COA News, Vol. 5, No. 1, January-March 2004, posted to COA website), coupled with their stubborn pursuit of 100% COA post audit even with their actual experience and full knowledge of its INABILITY to stop corruption.







6. COA’s newly reinstituted selective pre-audit should focus on the most common form of big-time corruption in government—overpriced contracts for procurement of goods, services, and infrastructures.



One factor that induces rampant corruption in major government procurement and infrastructure contracts is that these are the most fertile and practical means of recovering from public funds the huge election overspending incurred by elected government officials. Therefore, the anti-corruption program should include the prompt plugging of these main source of cost recovery by overspending elected officials. COA has to take the lead in thwarting staggering corruption in government procurement contracts.











THE EVOLVING ANTI-CORRUPTION MEASURES AGAINST THE MOST COMMON MODE OF BIG-TIME CORRUPTION—OVERPRICING IN PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS FOR GOODS, SERVICES, AND INFRASTRUCTURES


1. Counteract corruption regularly committed in the course of recovering from public funds the election overspending of elected government officials, by plugging the main source of cost recovery—overpriced contracts for procurement of goods/services and construction of infrastructure projects—through COA’s verification of purchase prices of goods/services and setting of cost standards for infrastructure construction.



Democracy in the Philippines is made a sham by vicious elements in society—traditional politicians—who serve their selfish interests and perpetuate themselves in power at the expense of more worthy and patriotic candidates. They do so through the foul means of vote-buying and election overspending, which they have no qualms in doing—-because they ultimately recover many times over from public funds their multi-million-peso election “investments” through corruption.



Almost always, the mode of overspending recovery is corruption in government through bribes or kickbacks in overpriced procurement contracts and infrastructure projects. Classic example of proven procurement scam was the P200-million cash advance to Governor Luis “Chavit” Singson for the purchase of tobacco equipment, a major part of which was, as admitted by him, absconded—-yet the whole cash advance was liquidated or accounted for through overpriced equipment.



On infrastructure projects, we have the outrageous construction cost of a length of the P1.1-BILLION Diosdado Macapagal Boulevard in Pasay City, which was way above the cost of the next segment of the same boulevard built by a different contractor. Just like the dramatic difference in bid rates between the Ayala and Lopez groups that COA ignored in the 1997 MWSS privatization—leading to Maynilad’s undoing---COA similarly disregarded the major variation in cost-per-kilometer winning bids on the different segments of the Diosdado Macapagal Boulevard, resulting in utterly wasted taxes. What COA takes for granted or does haphazardly---review of agency cost estimate before opening of bids in public bidding and review of purchase prices--are actually far-reaching solutions that can ultimately address the problem of election overspending being recovered through overpriced government contracts.







2. In line with the internal control rule that no one person (or group of persons under one command) should have complete control of transactions, we have to go one step further by removing complete CONTROL of major government transactions from key GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS and then sharing such CONTROL to the PEOPLE themselves, through their select representatives acting as PUBLIC OBSERVERS in all stages of the procurement process pursuant to Section 13 of the Procurement Law, or RA 9184 approved on January 10, 2003. This law applies to procurement of infrastructure projects, goods, and consulting services.



Under 100% COA post audit, internal control is weak because complete control of government transactions is entrusted to the graft-ridden government bureaucracy itself.



Under selective COA pre-audit, internal control is still weak because while complete control of transactions is entrusted not only to the graft-ridden government bureaucracy but also to the anti-corruption COA, some COA auditors may still succumb to temptation and become corrupt themselves.



Therefore, pursuant to the Procurement Law, to substantially strengthen control over public bidding of major government procurement and infrastructure projects, the PEOPLE themselves (through their PUBLIC OBSERVERS in public bidding), have to take matter into their hands and protect the integrity of the procurement process.



If we, the PEOPLE, will still fail to do our share in the anti-corruption war because we are waiting for a new and really honest President to take the lead in fighting corruption—which really honest President may or may not come--then failure to lick corruption lies not only in our responsible government officials but also in ourselves.









PART II

THE ROLE OF COA

IN AN ALL-OUT WAR AGAINST CORRUPTION



COA’s role in the scheme of things against corruption is presented in a separate paper. It includes its proper role in the PROCUREMENT PROCESS as well as its need to conduct intensified and sustained MANAGEMENT AUDIT of government agencies/entities, to be partly undertaken by a special audit group based in the COA head office.









PART III

THE ROLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS





1. THE ROLE OF PUBLIC OBSERVERS IN THE GOVERNMENT’S PROCUREMENT PROCESS



Government agency officials and COA auditors have respective roles to play in the government’s procurement process. The basic role of PUBLIC OBSERVERS is to ensure that both government agency and COA personnel properly perform their role in the said process, and to report any derogatory findings to their mother civil society groups and appropriate authorities.

If COA will refuse to perform its crucial role in the proper evaluation of agency cost estimate prior to opening of bids, civil society groups have to find ways and means of constraining COA to do it, such as through having the weight of public opinion brought to bear upon it, or through seeking moral and financial support from local and foreign pressure groups towards the preparation of independent project cost estimate.







2. OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS TO CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS



Civil society organizations have to serve as watchdog of anti-corruption government officials and do whatever they can to constrain them to faithfully discharge their responsibilities.



a. Petition COA and other government offices to implement known anti-corruption measures, as well as conduct annual anti-corruption symposium



As a first step, concerned civil society groups have to come up with, then communicate to the highest government officials concerned—the President, Senate President, Speaker of the House, Ombudsman, PAGC Chair, and COA Commissioners—the broad, logical, and doable solutions to corruption, the most basic of which are presented in this paper and other writings. They have to impress upon all government officials concerned the existence of doable solutions. Thereafter, if the government officials—especially COA Commissioners—will refuse to implement the known solutions, they would be committing intentional wrongdoing.



I wish civil society groups would likewise conduct annual forum where anti-corruption government officials will be invited, as well as requested to brief the public on the status of the government’s anti-corruption campaign. Certainly, the government officials will be ashamed to report the same work status year after year, so they will be constrained to attain progress in their anti-corruption program, for reporting in the next annual forum.





b. Commission the writing of books on corruption cases that will make grafters go down in disgrace in history as the corrupt people that they are.



So that future generations will know that not all of their forebears in our time were sleeping on the crucial issues of corruption and poor governance, civil society organizations with means have to finance and commission journalists to write books on what is happening today on corruption and governance. Through the books, let government officials who committed or abetted corruption, despite the supplication to the contrary by civil society groups and concerned citizens, go down in history as the corrupt government officials that they are. Complimentary copies of the book should be donated to libraries of the national government, local government units, and public and private educational institutions.









PART IV

PROVIDING WHEREWITHALS

FOR THE ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR





1. Why past government anti-corruption measures, including foreign-assisted programs, were simply deficient, inefficacious, and a huge waste of foreign assistance.



In the past, I wrote World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz and propounded that the bank might have been wasting its anti-corruption financial assistance to developing countries like the Philippines, because the grants-in-aid were given for not-so beneficial purposes, like strengthening of INTERNAL AUDITS that can take care of PETTY corruption but not of hard-to-stop big-time MANAGEMENT FRAUD, committed by high agency officials themselves, against whom agency INTERNAL AUDITORS are helpless and powerless. In its reply, World Bank spelled out the progress that has been achieved, including the passage of the local Procurement Law that provides for PUBLIC OBSERVERS in the public bidding process. World Bank’s reply was not totally convincing, and my take against it still stands. However, a very important point dawned on me then: that the private sector's PUBLIC OBSERVERS in all stages of the government’s procurement process are allowed not as a CONCESSION of the government to complaining civil society groups, but as a MATTER of RIGHT under the law. (Having such law enacted suggests that our lawmakers are not a totally hopeless case.) We can then formulate anti-corruption measures on this basis.



This topic is further expounded on in ANNEX A.





2. Staggering corruption in major government procurement and infrastructure contracts—the focus of herein recommended anti-corruption measures—constitutes MANAGEMENT FRAUD, the hardest-to-stop form of corruption because it is generally done with the direct or indirect participation of very high government agency officials, otherwise it cannot be successfully perpetrated. Under the situation, subservient and powerless Internal Audit units in graft-ridden government agencies cannot stop the problematical MANAGEMENT FRAUD, only the no-nonsense PRE-AUDIT by the constitutionally independent and powerful Commission on Audit can prevent it.



Without COA pre-audit, INTERNAL CHECK in government disbursements CEASES TO FUNCTION once the protectors become the attackers, or when high government officials entrusted with anti-corruption responsibility are the ones corrupt, for they have undue influence and moral ascendancy over lowly government employees in charge of verifying and processing payments. Consequently, COA has created a monumental loophole and WEAKNESS in INTERNAL CONTROL under its previous 100% post audit, resulting in unabated corruption that plagues the nation.



If even independent and powerful COA Commissioners appear hesitant to cross swords with high national government officials on astounding cases of inefficiencies and corruption, if they do not suspend the salaries and check signing authorities of high government officials who collectively accumulated multi-billion-peso unliquidated cash advances, if they do not impose sanctions against high government officials whose multi-million-peso equipment and other asset accountabilities cannot be accounted for, if they have not taken the bold stance of stopping blatant corruption and irregular government contracts through restoration of partial COA pre-audit, who else will—and can—render these crucial services to the nation? Certainly, not government Chief Accountants and Internal Auditors, who are not independent of, and are powerless against, their corrupt superior government officials. Therefore, the COA Commissioners' past misguided abolition of pre-audit, exacerbated by their prolonged unjustified refusal to restore it, have created a risky and harmful void in the government's overall internal control system.



Belatedly mindful of the foregoing vulnerability to corruption repeatedly communicated to it since 2005, the COA Commission Proper has restored the conduct of selective COA pre-audit of corruption-prone government transactions effective August 1, 2009.







3. If so, if past anti-corruption foreign grants are merely wasted in the Executive Branch of the government because the purposes of the grants do not address the hardest-to-stop and most rampant form of big-time corruption—MANAGEMENT FRAUD in huge government procurement and infrastructure contracts—and if only the supreme audit institution COA is in the best position to stop it, then COA should be asked to stop MANAGEMENT FRAUD and it should be the one given the wherewithal—especially foreign grants-in-aid—in doing it.



Only the constitutionally independent and powerful Commission on Audit can neutralize problematical MANAGEMENT FRAUD, therefore it should be asked to do so, through the sustained implementation of selective COA pre-audit of government transactions most susceptible to corruption.



COA should be given the necessary additional annual budget for the pursuit of its expanded mission. It should likewise be recommended as the DONEE or beneficiary of anti-corruption grants-in-aid from foreign governments and institutions, to be used principally in the conduct of its selective PRE-AUDIT, as well as timely and intensified MANAGEMENT AUDIT, including comprehensive review of the government’s vulnerabilities to corruption and formulation of remedial anti-corruption measures.



If COA will receive grants-in-aid from foreign governments and institutions, it would be under pressure to properly perform the pre-audit and management audit programs financed by the foreign grants, as spelled out in the agreement with the foreign donors--and the Filipino people will benefit from the situation, a case of having our colonial mentality work to our advantage in this rare instance.





MARCELO L. TECSON





martecson@yahoo.com,

martecson@gmail.com,

September 14, 2009





==========================





ANNEX A





COMPONENTS OF THE DEFICIENT

NATIONAL ANTI-CORRUPTION PROGRAM

THAT DOES NOT PUT TO MOST BENEFICIAL USE

FOREIGN GRANTS-IN-AID





Following are the components of the Philippine government’s anti-corruption program over the years. While the good-governance and anti-corruption measures forming part of it are generally laudable, the overall program itself is deficient because it does not include a most basic anti-corruption system that could have contained recurring corruption in the government bureaucracy: partial COA pre-audit complemented by all-out COA management audit.





A. Anti-Corruption Measures as Recommended by World Bank Sometime in 2002



According to former Senator Ernesto Herrera (“Policy Peek: Trying to succeed where Estrada failed,” The Manila Times, January 27, 2003), the Estrada administration commissioned the World Bank (WB) to do a study of corruption in the Philippines . The WB study, entitled “Combating Corruption in the Philippines ” recommended nine key measures in the government’s fight against corruption, as follows:



1) reducing the opportunities for corruption by policy reforms and deregulation;

2) reforming campaign finance;

3) increasing public oversight;

4) reforming the budget processes;

5) improving meritocracy in the civil service;

6) targeting selected departments and agencies;

7) enhancing sanctions against corruption;

8) developing partnerships with the private sector; and

9) supporting judicial reforms.



B. World Bank’s June 2005 Anti-Corruption Grant to the Philippines, aimed

at Curbing Corruption in Government Procurement Through Internal Audits



As shown in its website, the WB grant would fund the following activities:



1) Quality assessment of the internal audit function in selected agencies and

development of a quality assurance program for internal audit units;

2) Development of an internal audit manual with appropriate focus on procurement

review and monitoring;

3) Development of national training programs for internal auditors;

4) Development of an effective and efficient procurement records management and

monitoring system for national agencies; and

5) Strengthening the role of the Presidential Anti-Graft Commission as the oversight

agency in monitoring the performance of Internal Audit Service units.





C. Thrust of US Millennium Challenge Corporation’s $21-Million Threshold

Program for Fighting Corruption in the Philippines



As disclosed in the US Embassy’s website in July 2006, the $21-million grant to the Philippines under the US government’s Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) program is aimed at tackling corruption in the nation’s tax and customs administration. The two-year program seeks to improve revenue administration and anti-corruption efforts.



D. ADB Project: Promotion of Good Governance



“A key element of ADB’s efforts to improve public services is its anti-corruption initiative. In the Philippines , ADB assistance in the field of good governance mainly aims at improving the functioning of the COA in order to enhance the productivity and accountability of public expenditures and to prevent corruption. Particular attention is paid to transparency in public procurement.” (ADB/OECD Anti-Corruption Initiative website)



E. From the President’s State of the Nation Addresses, the Philippine Government’s

Anti-Corruption Thrusts and Targets:



As of November 2001 (from www.inq7.net):

1) Fight corruption in the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

2) Fight corruption in the Bureau of Customs.



As of June 2004 (from www.gov.ph):

1) Implement the e-procurement program.

2) Make the Bureau of Internal Revenue a showcase against corruption.

3) Make the Bureau of Customs a showcase against corruption.

4) Put in jail persons committing corruption, tax evasion and smuggling.

5) Investigate and prosecute motu propio cases of corruption.

6) File cases against judges involved in corruption.

7) Grant additional pay for government prosecutors and state counsels.



As of July 2006 (“Scorecard: GMA’s first SONA promises,” Philippine Daily Inquirer, July 30, 2006, page A12):



1) Reduce corruption in the Executive Branch.

2) Prosecute motu propio corruption in high places.

3) Make the Bureau of Internal Revenue and Bureau of Customs showcases in the fight against graft and corruption.

4) Reduce red tape by cutting in half the number of signatories needed for transactions ith government.

5) Implement e-procurement.

6) Encourage LGU’s to streamline operations and slash red tape.







WHY HALF OF THE WAR

AGAINST CORRUPTION IS NOT WAGED AT ALL



From the punitive-fixated way the Philippine government combats corruption and the deficient national anti-corruption program, we can observe that, at this late date, the government has yet to launch an all-out war against corruption.





One of Two Types of Corruption is Overlooked:

Focus is on Graft in Revenue Collections, No Conscious

and Meaningful Effort Against Fraud in Fund Disbursements



Based on the natural classification of the sources of corruption, there are two main types of corruption in government, as follows:



1) Fraud in collections of revenues--taxes, duties, and fees--by the BIR, Customs,

and other revenue generating government agencies and offices, and



2) Fraud in disbursements of the national and local government units’ annual budget, more than a TRILLION PESOS, the fertile source of easily half or more of graft in the government.



In the government, parts of revenues are lost from corruption while in the process of collection, then from whatever amount is collected—perhaps, together with foreign loans and grants--parts are again lost from corruption upon disbursement. However, a look at the various measures under the preceding components of the Philippine government’s anti-corruption program will show that it is fixated on anti-graft measures in COLLECTIONS, as well as on many other concerns, but not on fraud prevention in DISBURSEMENTS--the main source of the usual staggering cases of corruption reported but not prevented by COA, the 12,000-strong government behemoth that seems to have been reduced from fraud-prevention auditor to mere chronicler of corruption.



The glaring omission probably stemmed from the fact that those overseeing the government’s anti-corruption program are not control-oriented professionals. They could not discern that the reported government fund hemorrhages from corruption flowed mainly from the government’s TRILLION-PESO annual disbursements and should be frontally attacked there.







One of Two Modes of Fighting Corruption

Is Not Employed in the Anti-Corruption Drive :

Thrust is on Punitive System, No Real Effort on Preventive Aspect



Based on their functional nature, the control measures or methods of waging war against corruption maybe classified into:



(1) Reactionary PUNITIVE system--an indirect way of fighting corruption. It refers to the gathering of evidences, investigation, and prosecution by lawyers of the Presidential Anti-Graft Commission (PAGC) and the Office of the Ombudsman of suspected grafters in government, as well as punishment by Sandiganbayan of proven criminals—which can indirectly discourage future grafters who may fear being similarly caught and punished. Punitive system deals with graft perpetrated in the last 20 years or earlier. As indirect control, it may or may not discourage future grafters, who may or may not commit further frauds—and usually they still do, they just become more discreet in the commission and concealment of their crimes.



(2) Proactive or Visionary PREVENTIVE system---a direct mode of controlling corruption. It consists of the installation of new and strengthening of existing internal control systems in all government agencies and corporations, aimed at stopping graft before execution. It has to be handled not by lawyers or other professionals but by internal-control-practitioner CPA’s (and, lately, Certified Internal Auditors as well), to be assisted by systems experts. Preventive system addresses fraud that will be committed in the next hundred years and beyond, unless everything ends sooner. As direct control, it removes from grafters the choice or ability to perpetrate corruption—through detection of anomalies prior to consummation and consequent stopping of illegal payments. The responsibility for operating the system is currently lodged principally on agency and corporate accountants, assisted by internal auditors if any. However, as part of the government agency or corporation that they serve, they are not independent of it and can be unduly influenced or coerced by their high officials, as concretely shown by recurring corruption that government accountants and internal auditors might have detected but not prevented.



As can be observed, the government’s past effort against corruption was handled mainly by PAGC and the Ombudsman, and their thrust was to prosecute suspected grafters, hence their work was mainly punitive in nature. In effect, at this late date, the government has not waged in earnest half of the all-out war against corruption—its preventive aspect--to be pursued through fraud prevention, in the form of partial COA pre-audit and strengthened internal control systems in one of two major areas of corruption: disbursements of the government’s more than trillion-peso annual budget.







One of Two Anti-Corruption Weapons

Is Intentionally Held Back in the Anti-Corruption War:

COA Does 100% Post Audit, it Totally Cast Aside Pre-Audit



After commission of corruption by grafters who hide and squander their loot, the existing punitive-oriented anti-corruption war is waged through lifestyle checks, investigations of suspected cases of corruption by PAGC and the Office of the Ombudsman, and prosecution by the latter of suspected grafters before the Sandiganbayan—a long winding process that takes years to produce results, if results are produced at all, and therefore does not really teach an intimidating lesson to would-be grafters. On the contrary, for the very apparent failure to expeditiously and forcefully act against big-time suspects like Ex Secretary Nani Perez, former Undersecretary Joc-joc Bolante, and other high government officials, the message conveyed is something else: crime does pay.



In effect, the efficacy as preventive measure of the punitive scheme depends on the grafters themselves, that is, whether or not they will be intimidated and prevented from committing their crimes. In that sense, it is an utter failure as deterrent to corruption, as eloquently shown by corruption after corruption reported by media in increasing intensity and frequency. In which case, a more effective preventive system is badly needed.



The people have to act if they want to lick corruption. They should no longer allow grafters to commit corruption with impunity. Whether grafters want to cooperate or not by voluntarily stopping or not stopping the commission of their crimes based on efficacy or inefficacy of lessons sought to be taught by the punitive action of PAGC and the Office of the Ombudsman, the decision to stop them from committing corruption should rest on the people’s representatives in COA, who should neutralize grafters through the only available weapon—or direct preventive measure—in the government arsenal that can stop grafters in their tracks: selective COA pre-audit, which can detect and prevent anomalous transactions prior to payment or before consummation of corruption.





NOTE: While COA has reinstituted selective PRE-AUDIT effective August 1, 2009, we have yet to see if it will implement it on a no-nonsense basis.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

FROM GFN

Important Notice:

The Yellow Torch Forum on Sept. 16 is postponed due to the following reasons:

The Fires of Change are raging wildly and have gutted expected campaign blueprints and infrastructures.



The Liberal Party has changed its Starting Team.



The Lakas-Kampi-CMD Party will soon hold its convention to choose its 2010 Primary Antagonist.



The Nationalista Party is reviewing its strategic plan.



Elements of the Opposition are redrawing their pathways.



Reform Advocates are consolidating behind a common 2010 aspirant.



A Public Forum on the Changing Political Landscape could be more insightful and productive after the flames of change have settled into simmering embers.



Global Filipino Nation (GFN) will make a future announcement on the refined thematic focus of the Public Forum.


Thank you


CONNIE GOMEZ VALDES

Deputy Executive Director

GLOBAL FILIPINO NATION

GFN 0632 9866343

Off. Add 2240 Chino Roces Bgy Bangkal

Makati City Metro Manila

Philippines





In a gentle way, you can shake the world.
Mohandas Gandhi

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

9 SEPTEMBER 2010 NOYNOY SPEAKS

AT CLUB FILIPINO, WHERE HIS MOTHER, CORY AQUINO SWORE TO BECOME PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES IN 1986, AND WHERE HE DECLARED HIS CANDIDACY, NOYNOY SAID:

THE FIRST STEP TO KNOWLEDGE IS TO SEEK TO KNOW.

THE NEED FOR MORE DIALOGUE, BASELINE FOR COMMUNICATE, GET BETTER INTERMEDIARIES, DON'T STOP TALKING BECAUSE THAT MEANS WAR, WAR, WAR.

IN MY POLITICAL CAREER : I WANT TO MAKE DEMOCRACY WORK FOR EVERYBODY. JUSTICE -- HIDDEN MARCOS WEALTH. 23 YEARS NO CLOSURE. JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED.
POLITICAL WILL -- WILL IS NECESSARY TO UPHOLD JUSTICE.

WHEN I STEP DOWN: I WANT TO BE ABLE TO SAY, THIS IS THE LIST -- OF MY ACCOMPLIHSMENT, I HOPE I WOULD BE TRUE TO MY WORD TO SERVE THE PEOPLE.

HOW WILL HE UNITE THE OPPOSITION?

HOW TO FINANCE THE CAMPAIGN: IF WE WILL DO TRADITIONAL POLITICS -- PULL RESOURCES, GET ALLIES, TO HAVE A CAMPAIGN. HULI NA ANG PARADA. MGA KALABAN NAUNA NA. PALAGAY KO, ANG MGA TAO ANG SUSUPORTA, MAGPAPATAKBO NG KAMPANYA.

ON CORRUPTION: MGA BATAS NA GINAGAMIT HUWARAN SA IBANG BANSA. SA KAASALUKUYAN, MGA BATAS, HONORED IN THE BREACH; MAY BATAS PARA SA MALAPIT SA KAPANGYARIHAN...PAG MAY POLITICAL WILL, KUNG GUSTO NG CHIEF EXECUTIVE, HINDI PUWEDENG HINDI MAPABILIS. WHY NOT USE CARROT, NOT ALWAYS STICK, PARA MAPATINO ANG KARAMIHAN.

PISO-PISO PARA KAY NOYNOY, TO FINANCY HIS CAMPAIGN, LAUNCHED.

WHY HE IS FOR NOYNOY

MY MAIN POINT IS THIS: Time for opposition candidates to unite behind Noynoy Aquino because they cannot risk dividing the votes for GMA's candidate to win. Other presidential aspirants should step aside and fight it out for the vice presidency because whoever wins has a clear shot to the Big Prize and an improved nation to govern....

Francisco Wenceslao
President
Philippine Anticorruption Movement USA, Inc.
http://www.pamusacorp.org
Phones: 562-864-7737 & Cell 562-547-4357

LIBERAL PARTY CANDIDATE: NOYNOY AQUINO FOR PRESIDENT 2010

TODAY, THE 9TH OF SEPTEMBER 2009, AT 8:08 AM, NOYNOY AQUINO DECLARED HE IS ACCEPTING THE CHALLENGE TO BE THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE OF THE LIBERAL PARTY FOR 2010.

NICKY PERLAS ON NOYNOY AQUINO PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDACY

05 September 2009


Noynoy – Enabler or suppressor

of the New Philippine Politics

By Nicanor Perlas

Noynoy can stifle the growth of new politics. Or he can enable the new politics that is emerging all throughout the country. Allow me to elaborate.

Introductory Remarks

...2010 is not an ordinary election. It will be the venue for an epochal battle between traditional politics and the new politics.

1) Reinforce short-lived, non-strategic unification

We successfully united against and toppled the Marcos dictatorship in 1986. But in a few years, the luster and the euphoria of People Power 1 dissipated. In 2001, we again united against and ousted the corrupt administration of Joseph Estrada. But this time, the unity of People Power II disappeared in only a few months and inaugurated the worst political regime in the past 50 years .

Why? We united against something (an “enemy”) instead of for something. With the “enemy” gone, our unity shattered. And we went our separate ways. Yes, we restored democracy. That is important. But we had no common vision of what we wanted to do with that democracy after Marcos or after Estrada. We just wanted to get Marcos and Estrada out of the way. That was the point of unity. And, by its very nature, unity against something cannot last after the common objective of rejecting something is achieved.

From this perspective, asking all non-traditional and even opposition forces from traditional politics to unite behind Noynoy is repeating the same historical mistake. We are again being asked to unite against the abuses of the Arroyo administration and remove it in 2010. But it is not clear what we will be installing after the Arroyo regime is gone.

We are driven by our hunger to “win” in 2010. But we must have a different notion of winnability. (See below.) For we may “win” the battle but lose the war, as has already happened twice.

3) Strengthen personality- based politics

The old traditional politics is a politics of personality. And the politics of personality is a part of the larger traditional politics of “winnability”. The old politics believes that one of the key ingredients of winnability, is to have a personality with name recall and national exposure...That is why, until recently, traditional politics was littered with show biz and media personalities.
...

Asking people to rush behind Noynoy is asking Filipinos to enshrine the old politics of personality at the expense of the new politics of participation, vision and strategic agenda and a qualified proven leadership willing to advance that common vision. With Noynoy, are we asking the personality cult of traditional politics to rear its ugly head again?

4. Send mixed signals regarding political dynasties

We rail against political dynasties. We celebrate victories of candidates who triumph against political dynasties. What are we doing now with our clamor for Noynoy Aquino? Are we not advancing traditional politics of dynasties?

True, Noynoy does not come from a corrupt political dynasty. Nor is there any technical, legal violation of the anti-dynasty provisions of the Constitution. But are we not close to violating the spirit of that constitutional provision when we get excited about Noynoy simply because he carries the name of ma rtial law hero, Ninoy Aquino, and the late former president of the Philippines, Corazon Aquino? Does Noynoy have the necessary track record, leadership qualities, vision, strategic agenda to renew this nation?

5. Break the Link Between Inner and Societal Change

The new politics requires inner change as the foundation for political and societal change...

Traditional politics does not expect inner change.... The appearance of a political leader who can win enough votes is all that is necessary for success as far as traditional politics is concerned.

The unthinking acceptance of a Noynoy “bandwagon” destroys the important link between inner change and political/societal change. We can all remain who we are. There is no need for us to change to create a new country. Noynoy will do it all for us. We will be spared from all the hard inner and outer work necessary to renew the country. This is an illusion, one destined to break into pieces in the hard rock of political reality.


A Noynoy bandwagon marginalizes the importance of an educated citizenry and a cultural revolution in the mainstreaming of the new politics. A Noynoy bandwagon, in effect, sends the message that Noynoy is good enough because he is the son of two well-known and well-respected parent s. There is no need to examine his background and his qualifications for the Office of the President.
...
The unquestioning wholesale acceptance of Noynoy on the basis on nothing else except his biological relationship with Ninoy and Cory Aquino is tantamount to strengthening traditional politics. It cheapens the notion that new politics can only arise because a new and very different generation of citizens are prepared for it and demand it....

7. Favor winnability over character, track record, and vision

8. Misinterpret the Meaning of the Ninoy/Cory Heritage

Connected with all the above dangers is the deeper question of how we should understand the national events following the death of former President Corazon Aquino.

We are dealing with a spiritual legacy. We are dealing with a longing for a form of governance that is honest and clean. We are dealing with a search for a new politics where politicians are statesmen and women who, when they time for service is finished, are ready to let go of political power. At this point, we will not discuss whether honesty and integrity are sufficient to transform the institutions of government, not to speak of the institutions of society.

A spiritual legacy is not the same as a hereditary legacy. History is full of examples of how successor generations squandered the gains of the previous generations. The outpouring in Cory’s funeral meant the expression of longing for honesty, decency, and democracy. It does not mean that this automatically transfers to a son or a daughter by means of heredity.
...
What it does mean is that the nation is longing for a leader that had the traits of Cory PLUS the capacity to transform institutions and systems...these spiritual/moral and societal capacities cannot be transferred by simply having the same bloodline. These capacities are gained instead by means of hard work and a life-long experience of transforming challenges into initiatives that benefit the country as a whole.

Noynoy Can Enable the New Politics

Noynoy can do one thing that will dramatically reduce the dangers enumerated above. Noynoy can refuse the temptation of accepting his “destiny” of being the presidential candidate of the Liberal Party and, by wishful thinking, the candidate of all opposition to the current administration in an epochal battle of good and evil in 2010.

For one thing, the Liberal Party of Noynoy is NOT the only opposition party. Second, the Liberal Party, with its mixed track record, cannot re-brand itself, even with Noynoy’s blessing, as a non-traditional party. Thus the Liberal Party is a part of the spectrum of traditional parties even if there are individuals within the party who are non-traditional. The party as a whole is not the bearer of new politics. Will Noynoy survive the intramurals within the Liberal Party and present a vision and strategic agenda that transcends the Liberal Party?

And third, will Noynoy be able to unify the dozens of non-traditional movements and parties when, by a wrong decision, Noynoy will destroy the very foundation upon which these movements and parties of new politics are built?

There is one thing, though, that Noynoy can do to help enhance the longing and hunger of the majority of Filipinos for a new kind of politics. He can announce that he will resign from the Liberal Party and participate in a unification process with non-traditional political and social movements for new politics. He can lend his newly minted national stature to advance the cause of the new politics, both in terms of substance and process.

Concretely, this would mean that Noynoy will announce that he is willing to be part of an open process of determining who would be the best new politics candidate for president in the national 2010 elections...

This is the real challenge facing Noynoy Aquino. Will he be an enhancer of the new politics? Or will he be the instrument for marginalizing the new politics?