Home Blog Page 26

It’s Always the Right Time to Call George W. Bush a War Criminal

0

BY CHIP GIBBONS 

May 23, 2022 

As someone who was politicized by Bush’s invasion of Iraq, and who spent time during the Bush years listening to the firsthand accounts of antiwar veterans about the brutality of the occupation, it is difficult to explain in words my deep, visceral reaction to this video. War is a crime. And Bush’s invasion of Iraq was entirely unnecessary and unprovoked. It was an act of unmitigated aggression with a staggering human toll. And all of this death and destruction was a choice by the Bush administration. 

To see Bush hypocritically condemning others for carrying out the same crimes is bad enough. But to see him in the process accidentally invoke his own war crimes, make a joke about it, and then have the audience laugh along with him is a loathsome spectacle. While Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is a crime, it seems like rigged elections, the suppression of dissent, and unjustified and brutal invasions are topics he would have the decency to avoid weighing in on. 

The US has never truly dealt with the death toll of the Iraq war. 

But rigged elections, suppression of dissent, and unjustified and brutal invasions are perhaps the only topics Bush is equipped to opine on, which may be why he briefly confused his war with Putin’s. Many in the Beltway press will find the comparison unseemly. But the facts speak for themselves, and they’re worth revisiting if for no other reason than because Bush’s illegal and disastrous war has largely been flushed down the memory hole, despite being launched less than two decades ago and shaping so much of the world we inhabit today. 

Pining for War 

The 2003 US invasion of Iraq was murderous. It was a massive assault on an already devastated nation. According to the United Nations, the 1991 bombing of Iraq under President George H. W. Bush was “near apocalyptic” and brought the country “to a pre-industrial age.” US sanctions, which President Bill Clinton kept in place, not only prevented Iraq from rebuilding but led to mass death of Iraqi children. And by the end of Clinton’s term, the US was bombing Iraq once every three days. One of Bush’s first acts in office (a full two years before the Iraq War) was to dramatically escalate this bombing. 

From the perspective of Iraqi citizens who had lived under consistent US bombing for over a decade, the US was already waging war on them. But Bush’s Iraq War officially began on March 20, 2003. The opening salvo, “Shock and Awe,” was the brutal aerial bombardment of a largely powerless nation by the world’s sole remaining superpower. The long-term occupation of Iraq, documented by US soldiers who turned against the war, required high levels of lethality. 

The US has never truly dealt with the death toll of this war. The total number of casualties has unsurprisingly been a contentious subject. As media watchdog FAIR repeatedly pointed out, the US media has worked to obscure the truth about how many Iraqis died. The Iraq Body Count project puts the total number of deaths at 288,000. Peer-reviewed studies in the New England Journal of Medicine, the Lancet, and PLOS Medicine put the total number of dead at 151,000, 650,000, and 461,000, respectively. British polling agency ORB put the death count at 1.2 million. Whichever death count you use, it’s monstrous. And what was all this killing done for? Bush’s two cited reasons for the invasion, that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and Saddam Hussein was connected to the attacks of September 11, 2001, were lies. Bush’s connection of 9/11 to Iraq was perhaps the deadliest conspiracy theory, fake news, or disinformation of the twenty-first century. The truth is, Bush and his crew wanted war. A series of leaked British memos prepared by UK prime minister Tony Blair’s staff gives insight into Bush’s drive for war. In minutes from a June 2002 meeting between Blair and senior government officials known as “The Downing Street Memo,” the MI6 chief Richard Dearlove states bluntly, “Military action was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.” 

he Iraq War may be Bush’s most monstrous crime, but it is far from his only one. Bush’s entire political career was built on death. 

As governor of Texas, Bush set records by presiding over 131 executions. His reputation for bloodthirstiness was parodied after his election in a Saturday Night Live sketch in which Bush told the defeated Al Gore, “Maybe I’ll start a war. Wars are like executions supersized.” 

After Nixon’s fall from grace, the nation underwent a reckoning with the larger abuses of the security state. (Obama, in the signature accomplishment of his administration, made sure no such reckoning proceeded for Bush). Almost immediately after these reforms were made, the Right began trying to undo them. They lobbied for removing restrictions on the FBI and the CIA and refounding the House Un-American Activities Committee, one of the principal instruments of McCarthyism. 

As the anti-communist mantra had been discredited, they turned to a new justification for ratcheting up counter-subversive repression at home and military aggression abroad: the threat of terrorism. While the revanchist defenders of an unchecked security state found their first messiah in Ronald Reagan, under Bush, they would realize their wildest dreams. 

On September 11, 2001, members of al-Qaeda murdered nearly three thousand people on US soil. The gruesome and horrific tragedy of that day left Americans shocked and in mourning. In addition to recommending Americans go shopping (not doing so would be letting the terrorists win), Bush and his administration exploited a nation’s collective grief to achieve their long-desired expansion of the US security state. 

Just days after the attack, Congress passed the Authorization for the Use of Military Force that was understood as authorizing a war in Afghanistan. In fact, it failed to mention a single country. It was a blank check for global war. To date, it has been cited to justify military actions in twenty-two countries. 

If Bush is not going to stand trial for war crimes, he should at the very least have the decency to avoid appearing in public as a moral authority on unjustified invasions. 

Bush also argued that the resolution, and the inherent wartime authorities of the president, gave him the authority to wiretap without warrants, kidnap, and even indefinitely detain US citizens. Neither the courts nor Congress could stand in his way. For those not in the United States, Bush set up a prison camp in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and approved a global program of forced disappearances (“rendition”) and torture. While Afghanistan was frequently juxtaposed against Iraq as “the good war,” it was clearly never more than an unnecessary assault on a poor country. 

On the home front, less than two months after 9/11 (and weeks after Bush had already set up a secret surveillance program at the NSA), the Bush White House rammed through the Patriot Act. This longtime wish list of previously politically unthinkable proposals expanded the scope of national security surveillance and obliterated many of the key post-Watergate reforms of the 1970s. The FBI and Department of Justice criminalized and hounded supporters of Palestinian rights in the name of the war on terror, while Bush helped to censor information about the Saudis’ role in the 9/11 attacks. The Saudis were, of course, longtime business partners of the Bush family. 

He launched two brutal invasions, decreed a global war without boundaries and limits, and shredded democracy at home. In spite of priding himself on his ability to keep Americans safe, this was exposed as a complete fallacy in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The public watched in real time as poor and working-class, mostly black, Americans were left to die on rooftops by a cruel and uncaring federal government run by a man who boasted his base was “the haves and the have mores.” 

Days after the 9/11 attacks, Bush told the nation of his impending wars, “This crusade, this war on terrorism, is going to take a while.” Three administrations later, it’s still taking a while. The effects of this crusade have been disastrous for the people of the Middle East who live on the other side of US bombs. Our democracy, which Bush degraded, has never recovered from his crusade either. 

If Bush is not going to stand trial for war crimes, he should at the very least have the decency to avoid appearing in public as a moral authority on unjustified invasions. Instead, as Bush’s recent gaffe and his audience’s clear amusement at his misstatement demonstrate, neither Bush nor US society has ever really reckoned with the consequences of his imperialist crusade. 

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2022/05/george-bush-iraq-war-ukraine-gaffe?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=23ab37b4-f0e2-4c65-a41c-d0dabfe0542d

[The Slingshot] International observers speak cynically of our elections

0

May 23, 2022 5:30 PM PHT Antonio J. Montalvan II

‘The results of the election are a worst-case scenario for the Filipino people and for the international community,’ writes one observer

What right have they to interfere with our elections? Why insult me? – I could almost hear Rodrigo Duterte cuss with usual narcissistic disdain on international opinion about the 2022 elections. We are not their colony – the Senate President once shot back when the US passed the Magnitsky Act.

Western countries adhere to the sacrosanct premise that elections are the ultimate expression of the sovereign will of the people. Here’s the more concrete context – elections in their countries hardly end up with protests on the electoral count because what you see is what you get. Many of them, in fact, make it literal by using transparent ballot boxes. But more than the collaterals, there is no vote-buying in their elections, no rallies where attendees are paid and bussed in, no election officials holding conflicts of interest positions because of their ties to the appointing power.

An International Observers Mission (IOM) actually began monitoring the conduct of the campaign as early as February 2022. The IOM came about upon the recommendation of the Independent International Investigation into Human Rights Violations in the Philippines (INVESTIGATE PH). Beginning first week of April, international observers were on the ground in Central Luzon, National Capital Region, Southern Luzon, Central Visayas, Western Visayas and Mindanao. The full month was sufficient for empirical data.

The Interim Report of the IOM was released last Thursday, May 19, and was disseminated globally.

The text of the report reads like one scathing comment after another. The appropriate response from us Filipinos should be to regard it as an invitation to reflect on how we stand before the community of nations. To respond to the report with profanity or even populist demagoguery will only bolster international doubts about the state of our democracy.

Among the highlights:

IOM Commissioner and Belgian Parliamentarian Séverine De Laveleye said, “These elections are extremely important to both the international community and the Filipino people, but sadly the outcome suggests a continued drift towards repression, state impunity, and state terror.”

“These Philippine National Elections 2022 were not free and fair. They were marred by a higher level of failure of the electronic voting system than ever before, along with rampant vote-buying, disturbing levels of state and military orchestrated red-tagging of candidates and parties, including numerous incidents of deadly violence,” said De Laveleye.

If our national leaders respond from their echo chambers, it will be sheer reductionism downgrading us into a pariah state not unlike North Korea. Observers recorded particular observations such as the following:

“The main opposition candidate Leni Robredo was strenuously red-tagged.”

“Another Presidential Candidate Leody De Guzman was the victim of a strafing attack at a campaign rally in Mindanao.”

“Many campaign activists were arrested on false charges.”

“Large numbers of voters were unable to cast their ballots.”

“Vote-buying was widespread.”

“Many found their names were no longer on the voter roll, and many had to trust that election officials would later put their marked ballot paper through a Vote Counting Machine (VCM) because of the breakdown of the voting machines.”

Under our present regime of disinformation disfiguring our consciousness as a people, I can already see how hate speech will be released unconstrained against the IOM by our predictable trolls. The following statements, for example:

“The May 9 election did not meet the standard of ‘free and fair’ because voters were denied access to reliable information, access to the voting places without intimidation, and a credible vote counting system.”

“The elections took place in the most repressive atmosphere seen since the time of dictator Ferdinand Marcos. The Duterte government has orchestrated state terror, marshaling the entire machinery of the state, including the judiciary, the military and police, the departments of education, social welfare, and local government, in a war on dissent which continued through the entirety of the election campaign.”

“The results of the election are a worst-case scenario for the Filipino people and for the international community. The [presumptive president], Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr., says that his father’s legacy of dictatorship were ‘golden years.’  The Marcos family is estimated to have stolen more than $10 billion from the Philippines of which only a small portion was ever recovered. Bongbong and running mate, [presumptive vice president] Sara Duterte, represent a political marriage of the families of the worst human rights violators in Philippine history.”

“The electoral charade was based on a sea of disinformation.”

Apologists can freely take their turn debunking the statement. They can be reminded, however, that accountability of governments is not within their apologist turf. “This work is underway at the International Criminal Court, and in the United Nations Human Rights Council processes, and can be pursued in national jurisdictions with Magnitsky-style laws. There should be no hint of a blind-eye for continued human rights violations under Marcos Jr.,” concluded Rev. Chris Ferguson of the IOM. – Rappler.com

Antonio J. Montalván II is a social anthropologist who advocates that keeping quiet when things go wrong is the mentality of a slave, not a good citizen.

Ooops!!! Signs

0

by Pinoy Abrod Editors

April 21, 2022

News: Duterte: Vote buying cannot be controlled

Ooops: It’s easy to see which presidential candidate will buy the way to Malacanang

News: FB warns Esperon over post; DILG hits social media giant for ‘alarming’ move

Ooops: Red-tagging karma?!

News1: Comelec dismisses last petition vs Marcos run

Ooops: We have a winner?!

News2: Comelec dismisses last petition vs Marcos run

Ooops: Tax evasion is not a crime, according to the Comelec

News: Uniteam to continue Duterte projects – senatorial candidate Harry Roque

Ooops: Drug war, EJKs, red-tagging, cronyism, selling-out of West Philippine Sea?

News: FB warning on Esperon post claiming communist infiltration of Congress offends DILG

Ooops: Do we hear the red-tagging of Facebook by government trolls?

News: DILG takes offense at US State Department report on impunity of PH state forces

Ooops: Let’s hear it from the International Criminal Court

News: Duterte vows to take up cudgels for police even after retirement

Ooops: Would he be allowed to do that from the Hague in the Netherlands?

News: UK PM Johnson says Ukraine peace talks are doomed because of ‘crocodile’ Putin

Ooops: Before “crocodiles”, there were “vultures”, “united snakes”, “pitbulls”, etc, name it!

News: ‘Worse to be gay than corrupt’ in Venezuela’s military

Ooops: It’s easier to be corrupt than straight in the Philippine military

Quote of the Day: Guanzon: Why Would I Ask Gonzales to Withdraw If He Cannot Even Get It Up?!

(Former Comelec Commissioner Rowena Guanzon reacting to claims she asked presidential contender Norberto Gonzales to withdraw from the presidential race)

Ooops: Erection problems, according to the Japanese!

***********************

NEWS: Bongbong insists Jessica Soho is ‘biased’

Challenge: Name one person on earth who isn’t BIAS or has no biases – you will 1 ton of GOLD!

NEWS: If elected, Marcos to allow ICC team in PH—but only as tourists, not probers

Since when have Duterte, Bato dela Rosa, and others indicted by the ICC for mass murders and crimes against humanity been TOURIST ATTRACTIONS?!

NEWS: Duterte to name ‘most corrupt’ presidential bet before May 9 polls 

The POT is readying to call the KETTLE black!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY PRESIDENT DUTERTE!

“By the way, may lumabas nga palang research – nakakaliit daw ng ari ng lalaki ang pollution.”

Dear Mr. President,

Uy! Birthday mo pala today, March 28. Pero sa Twitter at Facebook, March 27 pa lang, trending na ang hashtag na #DutertePalpak. Ang sama. ’Di ka man lang pinagbigyan. Pwede namang on the day itself ‘di ba? Bakit ang aga ng posts?

Kaninang umaga, trending din ang #DuterteAngHulingKaarawan sa Twitter. That hashtag was way out of line! It’s so mean. Hindi dapat nagwi-wish ng masama sa kapwa kahit gaano pa ito kawalanghiya, kabalahura, kawalang-silbi o katraydor sa bayan. 

Seventy-six years old ka na pala. Bata pa. I’m sure, magtatagal ka pa sa mundo. Alam mo naman siguro ang kasabihan tungkol sa masamang damo ‘di ba? I’m not saying na masamang damo ka. Sinasabi ko lang na may gano’ng paniniwala ang mga Pinoy.

Mahigit isang taon na ang lockdown sa Pilipinas. ‘Yung ibang bansa, bakuna na ang usapan, pero dito, parang back to square one na naman. Pero hindi ako mag-a-attempt na magmarunong o payuhan ka. Hindi ako retired general.

ECQ pala ulit. Syet. Marami na naman ang mai-stress. So, pa’no ‘yan? Magtatambak na naman ba ng dolomite ang DENR sa Manila Bay para gumaan ang pakiramdam ng mga Filipino?

One week lang naman pala ang ECQ. By April 5, pwede na ulit maglamyerda si Harry Roque. He deserves a break. Ang hirap kaya ng trabaho niya. Ipahiya mo ba naman ang sarili mo araw-araw, paanong ‘di ka mapapagod? No wonder, he got infected. He tested positive for toxicity.

Sana hindi na ma-extend ang lockdown. Inaalala ko kasi ang mga walang pagkukunan ng ayuda. Saan sila tatakbo? ‘Buti pa nga ‘yong anak mo, alam na ang tatakbuhan.

Halos sampung libo na naman ang COVID19 cases sa iba’t ibang lugar sa Pilipinas. To be fair, mas kokonti ‘yan kumpara sa dami ng nagkalat na Run Sara Run tarpaulins! #justsaying

Sorry, lumalayo na ako. Balik tayo sa birthday mo. Nakita ko ang press release ng iyong alalay. Sa picture, lumang shirt at shorts lang ang suot mo. Nagbu-blow ka ng candle na nakatusok sa isang cup of rice. Grabe! Kung napaaga lang sana, baka nagka-Oscars nomination ka.  Ang galing! Muntik na naming malimutang marami kang accounts sa BPI.  

By the way, may lumabas nga palang research: nakakaliit daw ng ari ng lalaki ang pollution. I’m sure, hindi ka worried sa news na ito kasi the biggest dicks are in your government.

Happy birthday, Mr. President!

(from The Professional Heckler, March 28, 2021)

THE STORY OF CHRISTMAS (As told by political figures)

Harry Roque: So ‘yun na nga ang nangyari, kahit alam ni Jose na kabuwanan na ni Maria, bumiyahe pa rin sila papuntang Betlehem. Mga pasaway!

HERE is the Nativity story as narrated by political personalities.

Tito Sotto: Mahigit 2000 years na ang nakararaan, sa bayan ng Nazareth, may isang babaeng na-ano lang.

Cynthia Villar: Ang pangalan niya ay Maria at siya ay may asawa – si Jose na isa lang karpintero.

Manny Pacquiao: Nang malamang buntis si Maria at hindi siya ang ama, gusto sana siyang i-divorce ni Jose. Pero bawal ‘yun sa Bible. Kasalanan kay Lord ang divorce. Matthew 19:6: Therefore, what God has joined together, let no one separate.

Alan Peter Cayetano: Noong time na ‘yun, ipinag-utos ng emperor ang census sa Roman Empire. Taga-Betlehem si Jose kaya dapat doon siya magpalista. Sa First District si Maria  ‘tapos sa Second District si Jose. Pwede ‘yon.

Harry Roque: So ‘yun na nga ang nangyari, kahit alam ni Jose na kabuwanan na ni Maria, bumiyahe pa rin sila papuntang Betlehem. Mga pasaway! Matitigas ang ulo! ‘Tapos ‘pag may nangyari, sisisihin n’yo ang gobyerno.

MMDA’s Celine Pialago: Mahaba-haba rin ang nilakbay ng dalawa. Pagod na pagod ang mag-asawa lalo na si Maria. Pagdating sa Betlehem, she passed away.

Risa Hontiveros: She actually passed out* – dahil nag-labor na nga siya. Walang matuluyan ang mag-asawa kaya inabot ng panganganak si Maria sa isang kuwadra. Kung may RH Law lang sana nang time na ‘yon, baka naisugod pa sa mas maayos na ospital si Maria.

Bato de la Rosa: Samantala, kahit gabing-gabi na, nasa labas pa rin ang mga pastol. Mga adik! 

PNP Chief Debold Sinas: Maya-maya, biglang nagpakita ang mga anghel at sinabi sa kanila ang magandang balita. Isinilang na si Hesus, our Savior. Natuwa ang mga pastol. Sila ay nag-inuman, nagsayawan at nag-videoke. In short, nag-party! 

Imelda Marcos: Samantala, sa tulong ng liwanag ng tala ay naglakbay mula Silangan ang tatlong pantas. Nag-alay sila kay Hesus ng damit, kamanyang, at mira.

Vice President Leni Robredo: Correction lang po, ‘ginto’ po at hindi ‘damit’ ang isa sa mga alay ng tatlong pantas. Saan po kaya napunta ang ginto? Ninakaw na naman po ba?

Ka-DDS: ‘Buti pa ang mga pantas, may regalo. ‘Yung mga pastol na dumalaw, ano bang ambag n’yo?

Netizens: Habang ang buong mundo ay nagsasaya sa pagsilang ni Hesus, wala pa ring reaksyon si Herodes. Tulog pa pala ito. #NasaanSiHerodes 

Rodrigo Duterte: Nang magising, nakarating kay Herodes ang balita tungkol sa kapanganakan ni Hesus. Hindi niya ito ikinatuwa. Pakiramdam niya, makikipag-kompetensya sa kanya si Hesus. Gusto lang nitong magpasikat. Kaya’t inutusan niya ang kanyang mga tauhan na patayin lahat nang batang lalaki dalawang taon pababa. Sabi ni Herodes, “’Pag nanlaban, shoot them dead. ‘Wag n’yong intindihin ‘yang human rights. Ako ang bahala sa inyo.”

Trillanes: Pero nabigyan pala ng babala ng isang anghel si Jose. Itinakas nito ang kanyang mag-ina papuntang Ehipto kung saan sila nag-file ng reklamo sa International Criminal Court laban sa brutal na hari.

Postscript: ‘Di nagtagal, namatay si Herodes. Binalak ni Jose na bumalik sa Betlehem kasama ang pamilya. Pero ‘di rin ito natuloy dahil nabalitaan niyang anak pala ni Herodes ang pumalit sa kanya. Sa gitna ng patuloy na banta at panganib, nagpasya na lang silang manirahan sa Galilee.

Where they lived happily and peacefully until… ma-EJK ang aktibistang si Hesus sa edad na 33.

The End. (from the ProfessionalHeckler.com)

-o0o-

“It’s hilarious how the same people who are responsible for putting Duterte in power in 2016 are now pushing for a ‘revolutionary government’ under Duterte again.

Hoy, kapag sinabing ‘rebolusyon’ may radikal na binago! Hindi same rotten leadership na sinusumpa ng taong-bayan! It is obvious that this is just a scheme to prolong the hegemony of Duterte and his allies, not to bring change in favor of the people.”

The Political Animal (a FB pseudonym) reacting to the putting up of a so-called “revolutionary government” headed by Duterte

“Pro-Marcos and pro-Duterte counterrevolutionaries are using the word revolution in vain. They wish to put up a counterrevolutionary government headed by the vilest counterrevolutionary of today, Duterte.

Jose Ma. Sison on Twitter reacting to a news report that pro-Duterte elements have convened a meeting to plan for putting up a “revolutionary government.” (August 22, 2020)

*A British doctor says: “In Britain, medicine is so advanced, that we cut off a man’s liver and put it in another man, and in 6 weeks, he is looking for a job.”

The German doctor says: “That’s nothing, in Germany, we took a part of the brain, put it in another man, and in 4 weeks, he is looking for a job.”

The Russian doctor says: “Gentlemen, we took half a heart from a man, put it in another’s chest, and in 2 weeks he is looking for a job.”

The Filipino doctor laughs: “Everybody thinks we are behind in the Philippines. Listen, a few years ago, we took a man with no brain, no heart and no liver and made him President. Now, the whole country is looking for a job!”

“Term limits created political dynasties” – House Speaker Cayetano

“Insatiable greed for power created political dynasties” – Ooops!!!

“Hindi nga siguro natutulog sa pansitan ang Kongreso. Ang tama: karamihan sa kanila ay sunud-sunuran lang sa kapritso ng Pangulong batugan at tinutulugan lang ang sandamakmak na problema ng bayan,” De Lima noted.

(Maybe Congress really did not sleep on its job.  The correct term: a lot of them blindly follow a lazy presidents who sleeps on the numerous problems of the country.)

-Sen. Leila De Lima, on Congress’ laxity on pressing issues

Duterte’s closure of ABS-CBN does not mean the end of oligarchy but the end of a broadcast network that allows criticism of the crimes of his regime. It is mainly and essentially an attack on the freedom of the press and advancement of his fascist agenda and his own cabal of oligarchs who are the worst oppressors and exploiters of the people.

– Joma Sison, NDFP Chief Political Consultant ,14 July 2020

“We cannot allow our country, a cradle of democracy, to fully become a pathocracy ruled by a psychopathic leader…Let the reckoning begin now,”

-Senator Leila De Lima, in a statement read for her during an online protest dubbed #SONAgkaisa on July 17

“Sa mga kasamahan kong artistang di nagsasalita, ano? May network pa ba kayo? Wala na! Wala na kayong network, kahit magpa-cute kayo diyan sa IG, mag-send kayo ng mga sad face, hindi niyo nadadamayan ang mga katrabaho niyo na dahilan kung bakit kyo sumikat. Kapag hindi tayo nagsalita ibig sabihin kinampihan natin ang mali”

– actor Angel Locsin, 18 July 2020 at the simultaneous nationwide noise barrage for ABS-CBN

“Hindi papel ng kongreso ang pagtatakda kung ano at paano ang gagawing pag-uulat at pagbabalita ng mga mamamahayag o myembro ng media. Ang dapat maging papel ng kongreso ay tiyakin na ang mga journalist at malayang nagagawa ang kanilang mga trabaho, ang kanilang pag-uulat, ang kanilang pagbusisi sa nangyayari sa ating lipunan nang walang pagkitil sa kanilang karapatan at hindi sinisiil ang kaniyang karapatan at kalayaan na mag-ulat.”

-Carlos Zarate, Bayan Muna Representative on the role of Congress and Media, July 6, 2020, ABS-CBN News

“Trolls say congressmen supporting renewal of the ABS-CBN franchise don’t know much about media either. True, but they know enough to know the issue is free expression; and the ignorance of both sides means the franchise power should be removed from gov’t.”

-Luis V. Teodoro, former UP Dean of Mass Communications and Business World columnist tweeting July 7, 2020

“The enactment of the Terror Bill is like giving a gun to a schoolyard bully”.

-Detained Sen. Leila de Lima, dispatched from Crame No. 838

—————

“Duterte seals his political doom by signing law of state terrorism!”

-Prof. Jose Ma. Sison, July 4, 2020

————–

“Please support the climate activists in the Philippines. #JunkTerrorLaw@YACAP Philippines.”

-Greta Thunberg, internationally renowned environment activist, July 5, 2020

————-

When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes a duty. Junk Terror Law.”

-slogan from a protester denouncing the Terror Law

————

“It is the right of the people to be informed, and much to be assured, that the President they elected is the one leading the country at all times and is physically and mentally competent to do so.”

-SC Associate Justice Marvic Leonen reminding Duterte what a president should be July 8, 2020

“Some will say kinakailangan nating sayawan ang Covid19. Kasi sa Pilipino, when you have to live with something, sayawan mo na lang. Yan po ang gagawin natin. Sasayawan natin.We have to deal with Covid19, we have to resume our economy, and at the same time protect our people.”

-Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque making light of Covid-19 crisis in the Philippines, July 7, 2020, ABS-CBN News

————

“It’s painful to watch the government be the cause of so much suffering and hardship for thousands of ordinary, working Filipinos.”

-Sen. Sonny Angara tweeting on June 30, 2020

————

“Sa mga groceries in Riyadh, ‘yung mga dinedeliver na pagkain, kapag nireject ng grocery stores, ‘yun ang pinag-aagawan ng mga kasamahan natin,” he said.

-DOLE Secretary Silvestre Bello III misses the point in dismissing reports that some overseas Filipino workers in Saudi Arabia waiting for repatriation have turned to scavenging for food abroad and are instead eating rejected food. June 26, 2020, PDI

————

Marcos: ‘Smartmatic sold a system of cheating’

0

(Reposting this Inquirer.Net news article on Marcos and Smartmatic in 2018 – Editors)

By: Gabriel Pabico Lalu – Reporter / @GabrielLaluINQINQUIRER.net / 01:36 PM August 24, 2018

Former Senator Bongbong Marcos has asked the government to adopt a “hybrid” system for the upcoming elections, after he alleged that Smartmatic, which automated Philippine elections, had allowed cheating to happen.

“They (Smartmatic) are not here to sell an election system, they are here to give a system of cheating,” Marcos said in a forum in Quezon City on Friday.

Marcos claimed that even the Commission on Elections (Comelec) is looking into the possibility of electoral fraud as it is exploring a hybrid automated-manual counting system for the next elections.

“Maliwanag na maliwanag na in 2010, 2013, and 2016, marami nang instances na na-prove na talagang meron silang (Smartmatic) ginagawa na hindi sumusunod para baguhin ang resulta,” he alleged.

“Even Comelec has admitted that, because in the subsequent hearing on the exposes of Atty. Glenn Chong, sabi nila we will study the possibility of a hybrid system,” he added.

In the 2016 presidential elections, Marcos, the son of former President Ferdinand Marcos, ran as vice president. He lost to now Vice President Leni Robredo.

Hunt for tyrant’s millions leads to former model’s home

0

(So you may remember, this was published 17 years ago, July 4, 2004, The Sydney Morning Herald))

A former Sydney swimwear model is at the centre of renewed attempts to locate millions of dollars sent out of the Philippines by former dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

Evelin Hegyesi, who modelled mink bikinis in the 1970s and once graced the pages of Playboy magazine, is now a 57-year-old eastern suburbs multimillionaire with a waterfront Point Piper mansion and several investment companies.

She also has a Eurasian daughter, Analisa, now living with Dean Fleming, son of the wealthy racing and fruit markets family worth $270 million.

She called the baby Analisa Josefa. Josefa is the name of Marcos’s mother.

An international investigation over several weeks by The Sun-Herald has uncovered documents that show that some of Ms Hegyesi’s Australian companies have financial links with secret Marcos accounts kept in Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

They have come to light after Swiss authorities lifted the country’s notoriously strict bank secrecy laws, allowing investigators access to secret bank records of the dictator, who died in 1989.

The Sun-Herald last night revealed the contents of a dossier on the Australian link to the Marcos money to the Philippines authority charged with chasing the $10 billion the late dictator stole from his country.

A spokesman for the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) said they would examine the material: “Our mandate is to pursue the money Marcos stole, wherever it may lead us.”

The Sun-Herald has obtained a series of Swiss court judgements which detail the 18-year search for billions of dollars Marcos salted away before he was deposed in 1986.

Buried deep in a maze of documents is a reference to a mysterious Sydney link. The documents show that, in 1971, soon after Ms Hegyesi had a baby daughter, then president Marcos signed papers that made Ms Hegyesi’s company, Austraphil Pty Ltd, the “sole and only beneficiary” of one of his secret accounts.

It was called Azio Foundation.

Australian company searches revealed Ms Hegyesi had set up Austraphil just one year earlier on October 14, 1970. She was 23 years old and three months pregnant at the time.

In February 1971 Austraphil bought a five-bedroom mansion in Sydney’s most expensive area, Wyuna Road, Point Piper, for $210,000 (about $1.8 million in today’s money).

Land title papers and annual reports show Austraphil had a loan of $250,000 (about $2 million in today’s money) from a Swiss firm called Finanz AG of Zurich. Finanz AG was a subsidiary of the Swiss SKA Bank, now called Credit Suisse. This was the main bank used by Marcos as the front for his Swiss secret accounts.

Marcos had many of his secret accounts at SKA, including “foundations” dubbed Azio, Charis, Avertina, Vibur and Valamo.

The court investigation, which was heard at Die Bezirksanwaltschaft, Zurich, found millions of dollars came from illegal sources. It revealed Finanz AG Zurich was frequently used by Marcos to distribute money from his personal accounts so it could not be traced.

Marcos set up Azio on June 21, 1971, with 100,000 Swiss francs – about $1.8 million in today’s money. Swiss court documents show that, on November 12, 1971, Marcos signed documents making Austraphil the sole beneficiary of his Azio Foundation.

That lasted a year until December 4, 1972, when Marcos changed the Azio beneficiary to another of his foundations called Charis. Bank records disappeared after this point.

Court papers show that Marcos siphoned $US23 million ($169 million in today’s money) from Japan’s war reparations into Charis. There is no suggestion Ms Hegyesi would have been aware of these transactions.

She paid off the loan to buy the Point Piper mansion in 1976, transferring ownership to her own name. She sold the mansion in 1999 for $6.2 million, moving to a waterfront apartment she bought for $1.48 million.

Australian listings show Ms Hegyesi set up several companies over the following years.

In April 1972 she set up Australasia Trading and Investment Corporation. In August 1973 she set up Lima Investments, which had Austraphil as a major shareholder. Annual reports show Finanz AG lent Lima $100,000 ($800,000 in today’s money) as an unsecured loan. Lima invested in a West Australian cattle property called Drysdale River Station.

Court documents show that, between 1982 and 1985, Marcos’s Vibur Foundation sent several transfers totalling $US200,000 ($700,000 in today’s money) to Credit Suisse Hong Kong marked “Vienna/Sydney”.

The court documents maintain: “This money was obviously destined for Evelin Hegyesi in Sydney and Anita Langheinz in Vienna.”

The court documents also said that in 1982 there were several payments from Marcos’s Vibur Foundation to an account at the Bank of NSW (now known as Westpac).

“As shown in the ongoing instructions, there were regular transfers of money which obviously went to Evelin Hegyesi,” the court concluded.

“The same Vibur Foundation account paid some administrative costs and payments in Australian dollars to the SKA bank subsidiary Finanz AG,” the court found.

The former model lived for more than 30 years on the ritziest peninsula in Sydney. She made millions from property deals but managed to keep a low profile among the eastern suburbs social set.

She made many trips back to southern Germany, where she was born. She had come to Australia in the late 1940s when she was just two years old with her Hungarian-born parents, Theresa and Anton.

It is not clear how she came to be connected with Marcos in 1970. But something happened that prompted the president to assign one of his secret Swiss bank accounts to her new company, Austraphil.

While her mother eschewed parties, daughter Analisa is described by social writers as “exotic”, “vivacious” and “flamboyant”, with a super-curvy body.

She and her partner bought a $4.5 million four-bedroom waterfront mansion on the end of Darling Point and last year they had a baby girl, Tahni.

Ms Hegyesi was not at her apartment last week and did not return messages and letters forwarded by friends and colleagues.

US now champion for hiding wealth, says group

0

ABS-CBN News

Posted at May 18 2022

The United States now tops the global ranking of countries complicit in helping people hide their wealth, a pressure group said Tuesday and accused the world’s leading nations of blocking progress on reducing financial secrecy.

Ahead of a meeting of G7 finance ministers in Germany Wednesday, the Tax Justice Network called for the creation of a global asset register to end the ability of wealthy individuals to hide trillions in dollars.

“Globally, we’re starting to curb the financial secrecy used by Russian oligarchs, and also by tax evaders, corrupt politicians and organized crime around the world to hide and launder ill-gotten wealth,” said Alex Cobham, chief executive at the Tax Justice Network.

“But the US, UK, Germany, Italy and Japan cut back that global progress by more than half, fueling financial secrecy instead of fighting it.”

Tax Justice Network cited an EU estimate of $10 trillion being held offshore beyond the rule of law by wealthy individuals through secretive arrangements.

This is 2.5 times the value of all US dollar and euro bills and coins in circulation around the world today, the group noted.

The United States surged to the top of the organization’s financial secrecy index, which scores each county’s financial and legal system on allowing individuals to hide money brought in from elsewhere. 

It then multiplies this with the volume of financial services the country provides to non-residents.

By this measure the United States increased the amount of financial secrecy it provided by nearly a third, both registering a record score and providing double the amount of second-ranked Switzerland.

Certain US states have gained reputation for allowing the creation of companies and trusts with little oversight of the beneficial owners and low taxation.

The ranking also belies commitments by President Joe Biden to tackle global financial secrecy.

While many efforts by many smaller countries to require the disclosure of real owners led to a marginal decrease in the overall financial secrecy provided in 2021, the report found that excluding the United States, Britain, Germany, Japan and Italy, progress would have more than doubled.

“The G7 must make clear where they stand in the fight against financial secrecy by committing to a global asset register,” Cobham said.

Star power no more? The impact of celebrity endorsements amid disinformation in 2022 polls

Kathleen A. Llemit – Philstar.com, May 17, 2022 |

MANILA, Philippines — Actor Robin Padilla’s apparent win at his very first Senate bid was not an overnight success. It took years in the making by working “quietly” with civil groups, earning nods “from Forbes Park in Makati to Forbes in Sampaloc.” 

Co-founder and chief reputation architect of marketing and business development consulting firm GeiserMaclang Amor Maclang said that Padilla’s groundwork over the years and choosing not to engage or attack his competitors and critics alike contributed to his win. It also helped that he is “genuinely allied” with the outgoing administration of President Rodrigo Duterte. 

Big names such as Padilla used to draw the crowds to sorties. They still do as mammoth crowds gathered at the campaign sorties of both the UniTeam, which Padilla belongs to, and the Leni-Kiko tandem. The two team’s miting de avances held on the last day of campaign on May 7 reportedly reached nearly a million. 

Maclang, however, noted that star power does not look like it used to in the days. 

Popularity vs influence

Vice Ganda, Angel Locsin, Anne Curtis, Catriona Gray and Gary Valenciano are just a few of the names who were vocal about their support for Vice President Leni Robredo and Sen. Francis “Kiko” Pangilinan who were running for the president and vice president posts, respectively. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. and former Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte had their fair share of star power with Toni Gonzaga, Andrew E and AiAi delas Alas lending their support for them. 

These big names, however, have found a little competition with the influencers or personalities who found their following on social media. 

“The public loves celebrities, they have fan armies, buy merchandise, follow their shows religiously. But there is a big, big difference between popularity and influence, particularly when it comes to politics. But even the most humble Filipino voter already knows that the celebrity world has little connection to life’s realities,” she said. 

Filipino historian Prof. Michael Charleston “Xiao” Chua, meanwhile, said that star power did help but there are other factors that he thinks affected the elections. 

“It helped a lot especially with the ordinary folk to be able for candidates to be more relatable but on the end many other factors decided this election like years of frustration on government institutions and the massive disinformation infrastructure,” Chua said. 

Disinformation and narratives

He added that in many ways this elections went back to “traditional electioneering” where the local government is tapped to deliver the votes. This time, it is complemented by a massive social media campaign. 

Maclang said social media is a series of narratives which she said are “explanations” that people accept as true. 

She cited how the camp of presumptive president Marcos Jr. told their narrative over the years, even before this year’s elections. 

“This campaign was predicated on the golden age narrative versus the EDSA narrative. BBM (Marcos Jr.) and his family have been very methodically advancing the ‘Golden Age’ narrative for years. Yes, they did it in schools, but they also did it on YouTube, on social media and they did what any good influencer does; they slowly built up their audience, their fan base and turned it into an army which turned into 30+ million votes,” Maclang noted.   

The Golden Age narrative claims that the years that Ferdinand Marcos Sr. served as president for 21 years, from 1965 to 1986, was an era of prosperity and economic progress for the Philippines. Proponents said it was the time that many infrastructures, some of which still stand today, were built. These were possible with loans incurred over time. 

World Bank and International Monetary Fund record show that by the time Marcos Sr. stepped down in 1986, the foreign deficit amounted to $28.3 billion from $360 million in 1962. 

RELATEDFact or fiction? Marcos built power structures that benefit Filipinos

Maclang said that the Marcos’ camp tapped into the feeling of disenfranchisement many Filipinos felt for the Manila-based elite. In addition, social media specifically video-sharing platforms like YouTube played a larger role in setting the groundwork. 

A cursory search on the site will easily yield personal vlogs by different personalities that produce content featuring the Marcos family, whether they are based on facts or explore myths surrounding the family such as the Tallano Gold and prediction of Nostradamus. 

Marcos Jr., in an interview, had denied any knowledge about Tallano Gold, which supposedly comes from the Tallano family who once ruled the Philippines before the Spanish came in 1565 and that it came into possession of the late Marcos Sr. in exchange for legal services. 

In other platforms, Marcos Jr.’s son and new Ilocos Norte Representative Ferdinand Alexander “Sandro” Marcos is a favorite fanfiction character. Fan fiction is written by fans and mostly are inspired by a popular literature where he is often fantasized as the love interest of the other lead character or the reader herself. 

“It’s all about building a narrative, and then building an audience that is moved by it,” Maclang said.   

Some sectors have blamed massive disinformation as a tool used during this year’s election. Maclang shared that the country has a “foundational problem” because Filipinos find that they have “no shared set of things” they accept as true. This “disjointed perception” only makes many Filipinos “incomprehensible” to each other. 

Let the trolls do the work

Elections in the future will still utilize social media and any other platforms. Maclang, however, noticed that there will be one format that will dominate in the elections to come. 

“I think what will be an interesting online trend will be the rise of video platforms being used to shape reality and the need for candidates to work much harder to build online audiences years in advance of an election,” she said. 

This has been in place this election with both presidential candidates, Robredo and Marcos Jr. owning YouTube channels where they post their vlogs. 

Maclang, however, worries about using social media to manage reality online. She stressed how many of these platforms are owned by foreign entities who do not necessarily have the nation’s best interest at heart. 

“What we need is a more decentralized communications environment where we aren’t at the mercy of algorithms designed to addict us, incite us, divide us,” she stressed.  

Maclang also shared her thoughts on what makes a social media campaign successful. 

“Let your trolls do the attacking/defending for you. Don’t sully yourself making or answering criticism. Also, the purpose of social media is for creating a sharable voter identity around your candidacy,” she noted.  

For Prof. Chua, the work continues. As a historian that safeguards the events of a nation no matter how painful or unfavorable those are, he has a duty to abide by his profession/vocation. 

“If the past is prologue, they will be consistent. They have brought much damage not just to our historical narrative but to our culture as well of discourse. They will just make it official by using the cultural agencies and the DepEd (Department of Education). That said, I wish I am wrong. Historians will just be consistent in doing their job even if faced by the machinery of disinformation,” Chua ended.

UP Visayas’ first summa cum laude: Not just a beautiful mind

0

Raoul Manuel will sit in the next Congress as representative of Kabataan Partylist

By Bea Zaragosa, ABS-CBN News

Posted at Jun 18 2015| Updated as of Jun 19 2015

ILOILO CITY – Raoul Danniel A. Manuel, University of the Philippines (UP) Visayas’ first summa cum laude graduate, is not a guy who spends all his time reading books.

Manuel is a son of an entrepreneur and an overseas Filipino worker (OFW). He lives in Arevalo District of Iloilo City.

The 20-year-old BS Applied Mathematics graduate takes pride in his advocacy and ideals.

Manuel recently made history when he got a nearly perfect general weighted average (GWA) of 1.099.

However, there’s more to Manuel than his 1.0999 GWA.

He is an active leader in the College of Arts and Sciences Student Council and the Youth for Accountability and Truth Now – Panay Alliance.

He also served in the following positions:

  • vice-chairperson of the UP Visayas (UPV) OIKOS Ecological Movement (2013 – 2014);
  • secretary of the Legal Network for Truthful Elections (LENTE) – UPV Chapter (2013 – 2015);
  • treasurer of the UPV Mathematics Circle (2011 – 2013);
  • member of the Internal Affairs Committee for Elektrons (2012-2013); and,
  • a member of the UPV Delegates of Untainted Commitment to Effectuate Service (2011 to 2015).

A day after UP Visayas posted an article on Manuel’s achievement, he was in a rally in front of the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) Region 6 office fighting for the rights of Filipinos for affordable education and opposing the budget cut of the UP System.

“Militants are people nga wala naga silent sa mga bagay-bagay. (Militants are people who do not keep silent on things),” Manuel said in a phone interview.

The student said he understands that some people do not understand their principles and how he and his peers express it.

Manuel said he is not against the government but noted that some things should not be happening and needs to be changed.

So what inspired him to get an almost perfect GWA?

His answer is simple. “Ang kwarta nga ginagamit sa amun education is fund halin sa Filipino people. Ga tuon ako mayo para sa ulihi ma share ko man ni sa iban.”

(The money being used for our education is the fund from the Filipino people. I study well so that in the end, I would be able to share what I know to others.)

Manuel has not yet made up his mind where he would like to work after college but he is looking forward to taking a master’s degree.

UP Visayas summa cum laude slams critics of activists

by Regi Adosto, ABS-CBN News Iloilo

Posted at Jun 27 2015 | Updated as of Jun 29 2015

MIAG-AO, ILOILO – Twenty-one year-old Raoul Danniel Manuel, University of the Philippines-Visayas (UPV)’ first summa cum laude, brought up the sentiments of his fellow activist in front of thousands during the UPV graduation ceremony.

Manuel, a student activist, has taken part on many mobilizations to call for action on various social issues. In his speech, he addressed criticisms that militants usually don’t care about their studies.

Manuel has proven those critics wrong as he graduates with a general weighted average of 1.099.

In his speech, Manuel said, “Madalas daw na nasasayang ang pera ng gobyerno dahil sa pagliban ng mga estudyante sa eskwela… Tanong ko naman, para saan ang perfect attendance sa isang klase na kulang naman sa lab equipment dahil sa kakulangan ng budget sa edukasyon?”

“Para saan ang pefect attendance kung karamihan sa mga kabataang Pinoy ang di makapasok dahil sa taas ng matrikula? Para saan ang perfect attendance sa loob ng classroom kung ang mga tao sa labas ng unibersidad ang nangangailangan ng tulong ng mga Iskolar ng Bayan? At kung pariwara ang mga aktibista, bakit may mga nagtapos ngayon na aktibista at may leadership award pa at honors?”

Manuel said student activists know how to manage their time.

“Ang isang aktibista ay marunong umako ng kanyang kahinaan at pagkakamali. Ang mga akatibista ay tao rin na may kapintasan. Tila matibay ang motibasyon na makilaban, makibaka.”

Raoul Manuel and his choice to continue serving the Filipino youth

Raoul Manuel, 27, is the first nominee of Kabataan Partylist, the youth representation in Congress. The youth partylist is among the progressive groups which are being accused of being fronts of the underground revolutionary groups.

By ANNE MARXZE D. UMIL
Bulatlat.com

MANILA – Those who regularly follow current events would never miss Raoul Manuel, the student leader who made Senator Roland “Bato” Dela Rosa flare up during a Senate hearing on mandatory Reserve Officers’ Training Corps in 2019.

He was among the resource speakers then as the president of the National Union of Students in the Philippines (NUSP).

Dela Rosa had an outburst when Manuel pointed out the senator’s position on the supposed release of convicted rapist and murderer Antonio Sanchez. The senators in the hearing dismissed it as something that is not connected to the issue at hand.

“It was expected (that he would react that way) because we know how he is as a public official. Ganun naman sya, wala na s’yang maidepensa kundi mag amok,” (He is like that, he could not defend himself so he resorted to throwing tantrums) Manuel said in a telephone interview with Bulatlat.

Admittedly, he said that was not a part of his speech but even then, he said it only highlighted how hypocritical public officials are.

“They said they will teach human rights in ROTC but they themselves don’t embody human rights. That is the context,” he said.

Manuel, 27, is the first nominee of Kabataan Partylist, the youth representation in Congress. The youth partylist is among the progressive groups which are being accused of being fronts of the underground revolutionary groups.

Exceptional student

Since elementary, Manuel had been an exceptional student. He was a math champion from Grade 4 to fourth year high school except Grade 6 when he placed second.

On the right side sitting is Raoul during his stint as UP Student Regent together with the student staff of the Office of the Student Regent. (Photo courtesy of Gino Estella sitting on the chair at the middle.)

Manuel was also a class valedictorian of UP High School in Iloilo in 2011 and also the class valedictorian of the Integrated School for Exceptional Children (SPED) in Iloilo City in 2007.

Although he is proficient in math, he said he still had a hard time choosing a course in college because he also had other interests. But since math is his forte, he decided to pursue BS Applied Math at the University of the Philippines-Visayas.

Manuel did not only focus in math competitions. He was also a member of the science club during high school. He got involved in many activities such as outreach programs, tree planting, leadership training and all other opportunities where he thought he could learn outside the four walls of the school.

He later learned about Jalaur Dam, and the situation of the indigenous people living in the area. This is why the defense of the environment became one of his advocacies.

Manuel also had an extensive experience in being a student leader as he became president of the student council in high school.

“As part of the student council, there are many issues that are being discussed with us,” Manuel said, adding that even before he became an activist in college, he already had a grasp of what was happening on the ground.

As a student leader

In college, Manuel said he became a member of an environmental group before he was elected to the student council. Manuel served as a chairperson of Katipunan ng Sangguniang Mag-aaral sa UP (KASAMA sa UP), a system-wide student council alliance in the university. He also served as a student council chair of the College of Arts and Sciences in his senior year.

Raoul Manuel and members of the Kabataan Partylist distributing goods. (Photo from Kabataan Partylist official Facebook page)

Manuel was also a constant in protests during his college days. But even with the demands of his duties as student council, as a student and an activist, Manuel managed to excel in his studies and became the first UP Visayas Summa Cum Laude with a weighted average of 1.099.

After graduating from college, Manuel entered graduate school taking up a Master’s degree in Applied Math in UP Diliman.

This is where he got elected as UP student regent for the academic year 2016-2017. A student regent is the sole representative of students in the Board of Regents, the highest decision-making body in the university.

Manuel continued the campaign for free education during his term as student regent as education in UP then was costly. UP students called the junking of the socialized tuition system. During that time, a student who will fall under bracket A of the STS will have to pay a huge amount of fee as per unit in UP then is worth P1,500 ($30).

Read: Socialized tuition | The UP experience

Gino Estella, then a mass communication student in UP, worked with Manuel during his term at the Office of the Student Regent. He said during that time, Manuel made sure that the campaign for the junking of STS would be sustained. He also joined the campaign against the general education reform among others.

The OSR also stood for the resumption of peace talks when President Duterte’s administration was still open to negotiate with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines. He also joined the call for the release of political prisoners and supported the campaign for the Comprehensive Agreement on Social and Economic Reforms.

Alongside the campaign on students and national issues, Manuel was able to manage the OSR. Estella described Manuel as very productive, writing the memoranda and crafting statements on various students’ issues.

As a student regent, Manuel was also able to visit all UP campuses in the Philippines. With this, Estella said Manuel was able to break the impression on student regents as being a Diliman-centric. In campaigns, Estella said Manuel made sure that the chairperson of the student council of other campuses will also be involved.

Manuel was also able to institute campus-level summits. He also made sure that all UP campuses will be able to join the general assembly of student councils, even the School of Health Sciences of UP in Koronadal in Mindanao and Palo, Leyte.

Did Manuel ever take a break with his work and studies?

Estella said he also doesn’t know. “I never saw him taking a break. I guess he really just enjoyed what he is doing and never saw it as a work really,” he said, adding Manuel is really engrossed in his work.

“It was clear to him that oppressors do not take breaks, it was like parang sinasabayan nya yun,” he said, adding that Manuel is a true propagandist.

Raoul Manuel at the Comelec. (Contributed photo)

“He is a very strong person with regards to the campaign aspect. He has clear campaign lines and statements. He writes very comprehensively and eloquently even. He can pinpoint the message and know where to drive the point of the campaign,” Estella said.

How does he balance his studies and at the same be actively involved in activism?

Manuel said time management is key.

“It was really a wonder how he can juggle both (academics and activism) to the point that he became the first summa cum laude of UP-Visayas,” he said.

On serving the Filipino youth and students

Being the eldest in the brood of five, Manuel said his parents also expected that he would work for the family.

However, Manuel stayed in the youth movement and now he is the first nominee of the Kabataan Partylist for next year’s election.

He said his parents fully support him in the path that he chooses.

Read: What it’s like to have an activist child

“My father said he would campaign for me,” he said.

His mother is working as an editor in Iloilo City while his father is an overseas Filipino worker.

He said his parents too are worried with the intensifying attacks against the progressive groups. But he said he explained to them the context of these attacks. “We just rely on prayers,” he said, adding that accusations against Kabataan Partylist were refuted as cases filed against its leaders as well as other progressive youth groups who were included in the trumped up charges filed by the members NTF-ELCAC were dismissed in courts.

Read: DOJ junks kidnapping, other charges vs. rights lawyer, youth leaders 

“They are targeting the youth because they know fully well our potential when we are united in our causes,” Manuel said, referring to the red-taggers.

In spite of many tasks, Manuel said he ensures that he gets enough sleep to take care of his physical and mental health.

“If I have extra time I also watch series and play board games to avoid burnout,” he said. (RVO)