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Philippines
Philippines Congress rushes through impeachment of President
Estrada
By Peter Symonds
16 November 2000
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Under pressure from big business to rapidly end the country's
political impasse, the Philippines House of Representatives on
Monday impeached President Joseph Estrada on four charges of corruption,
bribery, betrayal of public trust and culpable violation of the
constitution. The impeachmentthe first in the country's
historywas rushed through the House without debate, or a
vote, in eight minutes flat.
The House Speaker Manual Villar, until two weeks ago a loyal
supporter of Estrada, asserted that no vote was necessary as the
impeachment petition already had the necessary signatures of more
than one third of the House. He opened the session with a prayer,
proceeded immediately to read the impeachment articles, and then,
ignoring points of order and protests from Estrada supporters,
declared: It's now official that the impeachment rap is
with the Senate. We have indicted the president. Amid uproar
in the chamber, he banged his gavel and ended the session.
The impeachment articles, which were only filed in mid-October
and processed by the House Committee on November 6, are now in
the hands of the Senate where Estrada will be tried. Two-thirds
or 15 out of the 22 senators are needed to remove the president
from office. The House has already selected a prosecution team
of 11 congressmen to present the case against Estrada. Senate
President Aquilino Pimentel said he expected the trial to begin
by December 1 and could finish as early as the end of the year.
The charges against Estrada relate to allegations made by his
former political ally, provincial governor Luis Singson, that
he paid the president over $US8.6 million from an illegal gambling
racket known as jueteng as well as a cut of $2.8 million
from provincial tobacco taxes. Singson, who is known as a jueteng
lord, claims the payoffs were in return for political protection.
Estrada has vigorously denied the charges but until last week
refused to make any statement. On November 10, he mounted a threadbare
defence, admitting that he had received $4 million from Singson
but denying that he had touched the money, which had been deposited
by one of his aides in the bank account of a charitable foundation.
But the charity known as the Erap Muslim Youth Scholarship Foundation
(Erap or Buddy is Estrada's nickname)
is little more than a front run by the president's brother-in-law.
Former presidential adviser Edward Serapio testified in the Senate
this week that there is no written record of the money and the
foundation has never distributed any scholarships.
Last week Estrada faced fresh allegations that he received
kickbacks of one billion pesos ($20 million) from the sale of
a stake in the domestic telephone firm Philippine Long Distance
Telephone Co to Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Former Securities
and Exchange Commission chairman Perfecto Yasay claimed on local
TV on November 9 that the president had used inside knowledge
to cash in on a substantial rise in the share price of gaming
firm BW Resourcesan accusation described by Estrada as complete
lies.
The rush to remove Estrada is bound up with broader issues
than the accusations of corruption or with the moral condemnations
of his own self-confessed drinking, gambling and womanising. Big
business and the markets have become increasingly impatient with
the president for not implementing vigorously enough the economic
deregulation required by the IMF and World Bank. Estrada and his
team of big business advisers have begun to restructure the banking
sector and the stock exchange but failed to push through changes
opening up land, the media and other sections of the economy to
foreign investors. Now the political deadlock has compounded the
country's economic problems, sending the peso and the share index
plummetting.
Fearing the economic impact of a prolonged impeachment process,
all of the major business groups have called on Estrada to resign
immediately. Early last week rumours of secret negotiations between
Estrada and opposition leaders to allow the president to make
a graceful exit sent the stock market soaring by 16.5
percentone of its largest one day gainsand strengthened
the peso. But the swing quickly began to reverse when Estrada
made clear that he intended to tough out the situation.
An editorial in the British Economist magazine this
week called for Estrada to go stating that he had become
a liability to this country and the region. In the
two-and-a-half years since he was elected, by a landslide, Mr
Estrada had proved to be a big disappointment. Economic reform
has stalled, contracts and favours go to his cronies, and he seems
powerless to stamp out a fundamentalist insurgency in the south...
If he is removed, it will be impossible to avoid the conclusion
that he earned his dismissal.
Behind the scenes, the US, the former colonial power in the
Philippines, has been engaged in discussions with Vice President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who will take over the reins of power
if Estrada resigns or is impeached. She resigned her cabinet post
last month and now heads the coalition of opposition parties demanding
the president's resignation.
Acting US ambassador Michael Malinowski admitted that discussions
have taken place but denounced as irresponsible and completely
false any suggestion that the US was interfering in Filipino
political affairs. However, according to the Philippine Daily
Inquirer, US officials held discussions with Arroyo last month
and urged her to form a united front against Estrada as one of
the requisites laid down by Washington before it will support
the opposition.
Powerful sections of the ruling elite have lined up behind
Arroyo's bid to oust Estrada, including former presidents Cory
Aquino and Fidel Ramos, and Roman Catholic Archbishop Jaime Sin.
The opposition has played on Estrada's close connections with
the business cronies of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos such
as billionaire tycoon Eduardo Cojuango, and has sought to capitalise
on the impact of the country's economic decline on the living
standards of working people.
Estrada came to power in May 1998 under the slogan Erap
for the poor, promising to help those who had been hard
hit under the previous Ramos administration and its policies of
economic restructuring. Since then the economy has been affected
by the Asian financial crisis and more recently by rising oil
prices that, combined with the government's restructuring policies,
have led to job losses and falling wages. According to official
figures, 86,281 workers lost their jobs between January and August
as a result of factory closures and retrenchments56 percent
lost their jobs permanently and the rest were temporarily laid
off or had their work hours reduced.
Arroyo has enlisted trade union groups in her anti-Estrada
front, including the leftist Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) and the Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) connected to the Communist Party of
the Philippines (CPP). On Tuesday, an estimated 100,000 people
took part in rallies and strikes in cities across the country
calling for Estrada to step down. A report in the Philippine
Daily Inquirer described the unusual alliance of leftist
and conservative groups taking part in the protests in Manila:
Labour leaders locked arm-in-arm with congressmen, professionals
in designer clothes, urban poor, bosses and their workers, students
with cell phones, hard-core activists and local politicians.
In a statement in late October, CPP leader Jose Maria Sison
justified his uncritical support for Arroyo with the hoary old
opportunist line that the movement can best fight only one
enemy at every given time and denounced critics of the vice
president as agents provocateur and paid agents
of Estrada. Arroyo, he explained, will become the
enemy if and when she actually turns out as bad as Estrada or
even worse and becomes accountable as the chief political representative
of the local ruling classes.
In 1986, Sison, the CPP and its allied organisations uncritically
backed Cory Aquino, who comes from the one of the country's wealthy
elite families, during the so-called Peoples Power movement to
oust Marcos. Now they are drumming up support for Arroyo who is
as much a political representative of the local ruling classes
as Estrada, and who, if she does eventually come to power, will
be just as ruthless in imposing the requirements of big business
on working people.
It is not as if Arroyo's connections to the ruling elites are
unknown. She is the daughter of a former president Diosdado Macapagal
and the wife of Miguel Arroyo, an influential businessman and
lawyer. She studied economics at Georgetown University, where
one of her classmates was Bill Clinton. In recent interviews in
the Far Eastern Economic Review and Time magazines,
she has emphasised her fidelity to the agenda of market reform
pushed by IMF and World Bank, calling for a level playing
field so that Filipino businessmen have the ability
to compete in the global economy. She has already selected
key establishment figures for her cabinet such as Alberto Romulo,
budget secretary under Aquino.
The heterogeneous character of the anti-Estrada protests signifies
that powerful sections of big business have lined up behind Arroyo.
On Tuesday, a number of employers gave their workers the day off
to take part in the demonstrations. When the protest passed through
Manila's central business district of Makati, 300 to 400 stockbrokers
and analysts staged a 15-minute walkout, clapping their hands
and shouting Erap resign. Since Estrada's impeachment,
four of Manila's largest and most prestigious law firms have offered
the House prosecution team the services of about 100 lawyers and
researchers to build the best and strongest case against
the president.
All of this provides ammunition for Estrada who is attempting
to portray himself as the victim of a conspiracy by the political
establishment against a champion of the poor. His claim to be
a representative of the downtrodden masses is, of course, completely
bogus. Estrada has close connections to sections of big business
and during his two years in office has offered nothing more than
token handouts to the poor. He has, however, retained significant
supportthe latest polling from the Social Weather Station
found that 44 percent of Filipinos did not agree with calls for
Estrada's resignation, as compared to only 29 percent who agreed.
Estrada has been pulling out all stops to try to maintain his
standing with frequent visits to the poor neighbourhoods in Manila
where he casts slurs on his middle and upper class critics as
insulare and peninsulares. He has brought
forward the payment of Christmas bonuses for civil servants and
suspended a planned 3 percent tariff on oil imports in a bid to
keep fuel prices down.
Last Sunday, with the assistance of his political allies and
the Catholic evangelical El Shaddai movement, Estrada mobilised
nearly one million people for a prayer meeting at
the Luneta stadium in Manilaa figure far outstripping even
the largest opposition rally. It is undoubtedly true, as the anti-Estrada
Philippine Daily Inquirer claimed, that many of those present
had come as a result of various inducements and bribes. But whatever
the exact reasons for the size of the rally, it is a further indication
that there is no deeply felt sentiment among working people and
the poor for the replacement of Estrada by Arroyo.
There are already concerns in ruling circles that Estrada's
decision to cling onto office and appeal to the poor may unleash
social forces that neither the president nor his opponents can
control. The Philippine Daily Inquirer warned that Estrada
was engaged in a dangerous rich-against-poor campaign that
incites the poor against the metropolitan dynamos of trade and
industry. It is another reason, along with the weak peso,
falling share prices and a faltering economy, why big business
is insisting that Congress proceed with the impeachment against
Estrada as rapidly as possible.
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