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Philippines
Filipino president faces calls for resignation over gambling
payoffs
By Keith Morgan and Peter Symonds
23 October 2000
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Last Wednesday an impeachment motion was formally filed in
the Philippine congress against President Joseph Estrada over
alleged payoffs of more than $US8 million from an illegal gambling
racket known as jueteng. Heherson Alveraz, secretary-general of
the main opposition party Lakas-NUCD, who filed the motion along
with 40 other congressmen, accused Estrada of bribery, graft,
corruption and the betrayal of public trust.
The man at the centre of the scandal is Estrada's long-time
friend and drinking partner Luis Singson, Governor of Ilocos Sur
Province. Armed with a ledger, he appeared before a press conference
just over two weeks ago claiming that he had personally handed
over the money to the president in order to prevent a clampdown
on illegal gambling activities.
The falling out between the two men took place over plans to
establish a new legal lottery system known as Bingo2-Ball to replace
jueteng. When it came to handing out the lucrative franchises
for the lottery, Estrada overlooked Singson and gave it to one
of his rivalscousin Eric Singson. Luis Singson alleges that
he decided to go public with his allegations after an attempt
was made on his life.
Estrada's opponents seized upon Singson's allegations to demand
Estrada step down. On October 11, Cardinal Jaime Sin called on
Estrada to resign, saying he has lost the moral ascendancy
to govern. Sin has since been supported by former presidents
Cory Aquino and Fidel Ramos, who have been among Estrada's most
vocal critics during the past 12 months.
The crisis deepened further when Vice-President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo resigned her cabinet post as secretary of social welfare
and development. Arroyo, who held discussions with Sin before
tendering her resignation, is being touted as an alternative to
Estrada. She retains the vice-presidency and would take over the
presidency if Estrada were to resign or be forced out of office.
Following Arroyo's resignation, Senator Ramon Magsaysay Jr,
who chairs a number of senate committees, also quit the government.
He was joined by congressman Roilo Golez, who attacked Estrada,
saying: the allegations are very serious and affect the
moral foundations of the presidency.
So far Estrada has denied the allegations and refused to resign.
Last week he tried to distance himself from the allegations of
gambling pay-offs by announcing that he intended to privatise
the state-run Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation, a huge
source of tax revenue. Over the weekend he toured the slums of
Manila attempting to revive his populist election image as a man
of the poor.
Estrada has also reinforced the military presence in Metro
Manila by bringing back the Marines and placing the police and
military on alert. While the president claimed that these measures
were necessary to prevent bombings, his opponents have warned
of the possibility of a Marcos-style declaration of martial law.
At a military ceremony to inaugurate a new army chief, Estrada
attacked his critics and appealed to the military to preserve
the constitution against those who seek to violate
its sanctity for their own political ends.
The jueteng allegations are the latest in a string of scandals
that have engulfed Estrada. Earlier in the year the chief securities
regulator accused the president of tampering with an investigation
into the share market activities of one of Estrada's associates,
Dante Tan. Estrada is also alleged to have helped out other business
cronies including Lucio Tan. But the jueteng scandal is by far
the most serious political crisis since Estrada came to office
just over two years ago and is the first time he has faced an
impeachment motion.
In parliamentary terms, Estrada should easily be able to fend
of the challenge. The motion to start the impeachment process
is still far short of the 73 signatures required in the Congress,
where Estrada's Party of the Filipino Masses (LAMP) controls around
148 members of the 219-member House of Representatives. Even if
the motion passes in the Congress and a trial is carried out in
the Senate, impeachment requires a two-thirds majority in the
upper house where LAMP has 15 of the 22 senators.
But the jueteng scandal and the impeachment motion are starting
to become a focus for opposition to the president. Significant
sections of big business in the Philippines and internationally
are increasingly disenchanted with Estrada's failure to carry
out his promises to implement market reforms and economic deregulation
and are concerned at the deterioration of the country's economy.
At the same time, Estrada's policies have alienated layers of
the workers, farmers and unemployed who believed him in 1998 when
he demagogically claimed he would act for the poor.
The diverse character of the opposition was on display at a
protest rally held last Wednesday to coincide with the impeachment
motion. About 10,000 gathered in Manila's central business district
calling on the president to resign over the jueteng scandal. As
the Philippine Daily Inquirer noted, The clamour
for President Estrada's ouster closed the gap between the dirt
poor and the filthy rich but also between the left and right.
As well as opposition politicians and religious leaders, the rally
included representatives of the leftist KMU union organisation
and the rightwing military grouping RAM.
Some of the slogans supported the replacement of Estrada with
Arroyo, others were adamantly opposed to her. Arroyo is closely
connected to ruling circles. 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.
There are a number of signs that sections of the ruling class
want Estrada out and see Arroyo as a dependable substitute. The
Makati Business Club urged the legislature to expedite the
constitutional process but stopped short of calling on Estrada
to step down. A survey of Philippine executives by the newspaper
BusinessWorld found that 59 percent wanted to see the president
impeached.
In the first six months of the year, foreign direct investment
plunged by 62.7 percent and is likely to fall even further in
the second half year. The government's budget deficit has blown
out in the first nine months from $US1.28 to $US 1.72 billion
with one quarter to go. The growth rate has been revised downwards
from the 4.5-5 percent range to 4-4.5 percent and some analysts
predict it will be under 3 percent.
Estrada is under pressure from the IMF and World Bank to press
ahead with economic reforms. In August the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) rejected requests from his administration for loans
to cover the budget deficit. Last week the government withdrew
plans to tap the remaining $US310 million dollars from the IMF's
loan facility after the IMF again refused to allow any increase
in the deficit target.
Now the political crisis has compounded the economic difficulties.
After the impeachment notice was filed, the peso continued its
slide reaching an all-time low of 48.77 against the US dollar
and the stock exchange hit 1,264 points, the lowest level in two
years. Last week the credit rating agency Standard and Poor's
downgraded its outlook for the Philippines, stating that its action
reflected concerns about the government's ability to undertake
effective economic management during a period of political uncertainty.
An editorial in the Australian Financial Review on Monday
openly called on Estrada to resign and warned that a long-drawn
out impeachment process could have a negative flow-on impact
on the rest of the region, where economic recovery is failing.
The latest issue of AsiaWeek echoed these sentiments in
a cover story entitled: Bracing for the Fallout: As Manila's
crisis deepens, a nightmare scenario looms: a new Asian Crisis.
It also carried an interview with Arroyo in which she pledged
to tackle the peso crisis by restoring the confidence of
businesses.
Whether Estrada survives the latest scandal remains to be seen.
One sign that his support may be crumbling was the call for an
early presidential election made last week by one of his political
alliesthe powerful Philippine senator Juan Ponce Enrile.
Enrile filed a resolution in parliament for a law to allow for
snap presidential elections, saying it was necessary to enable
an expeditious political solution in the face of the leadership
crisis that threatens the stability of the republic.
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