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Philippines
Philippine president declares "state of rebellion"
and cracks down on opposition
By Keith Morgan and Peter Symonds
7 May 2001
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Large protests by supporters of ousted Philippine president
Joseph Estrada culminating in running street battles with police
and the military on May 1, have rocked the newly installed administration
of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. At least four people were killed,
113 injured and more than 100 arrested in what commentators describe
as the worst riots since the overthrow of the dictator Ferdinand
Marcos 15 years ago.
Just two weeks from national elections, Arroyo seized the opportunity
to impose an unprecedented state of rebellion in the
capital of Manilaan action which, unlike a declaration of
martial law, did not require congressional authorisation. She
ordered the detention without charge of 11 leading opposition
figures, including Senate candidatesJuan Ponce Enrile, Miriam
Defensor Santiago, Gregorio Honasan and former national police
chief Panfilo Lacsonclaiming that they were attempting a
coup. Police and the military set up roadblocks throughout the
capital and banned opposition rallies.
While the state of rebellion was lifted on Sunday,
the charges against the opposition figures remain. In the wake
of the protests, Arroyo has made clear that she will not hesitate
to use the most anti-democratic methods to deal with protests.
Speaking after ordering the round-up of her political opponents,
Arroyo said: Last night there was going to be a power grab,
but it fizzled out. I was hoping they would act so I could crush
them.
Arroyo herself came to power on January 20 in the most undemocratic
fashion. Having whipped up People Power protests over
Estrada's alleged corruption, powerful sections of the political
establishment led by former presidents Cory Aquino and Fidel Ramos,
big business, the military and the Roman Catholic church ousted
Estrada and inserted Arroyo. The whole process was rubberstamped
by the Supreme Court and supported by the media and the major
powers.
Unlike the People Power demonstrations, which were
noticeably dominated by sections of the middle class, the pro-Estrada
protesters were overwhelmingly drawn from the most poverty-stricken
layers of Manila. During the 1998 elections, Estrada campaigned
on the populist slogan Erap [his nickname meaning Buddy]
for the poor, appealing to discontent with the previous
Ramos administration and its pro-IMF economic restructuring policies.
Estrada is just another venal big business politician who,
while in office, also sought to accommodate to the demands of
the IMF and World Bank and compounded the country's poverty and
unemployment. Nevertheless wide layers of the urban and rural
poor are deeply suspicious of Arroyoa US-trained economist,
daughter of a former president and wife of a wealthy businessmanand
are hostile to the methods used to remove Estrada.
When Estrada and his son Jinggoy were arrested in a huge police
operation on April 25 on charges of corruption, including the
capital offence of economic plunder, crowds of his supporters
began to gather at the Edsa shrinethe site of the People
Power protests that led to Marcos's downfall in 1986. Over
the following days the protests continued, culminating in a huge
rally on April 29 estimated by police at between 100,000 and 300,000.
The size of the demonstration, which demanded Estrada's release
and his return to office, provoked distinct nervousness in the
presidential camp. Cardinal Sin took the unusual step of making
a special midnight radio and TV appeal to his supporters to go
to the Malacanang presidential palace to show support for democracy
and Arroyo. A man who only months ago was scheming behind the
scenes to oust Estrada, Sin condemned the protests, saying: It
is immoral to grab power. It is immoral to support those plotting
against duly constituted authorities.
In the early hours of April 30, Chief of Staff General Diomedio
Villanueva issued a statement assuring the public that the armed
forces stands 100 percent, steadfast behind commander in
chief [Arroyo] and claims to the contrary are plain
and simply falsehood and designed to create disorder and sow confusion.
The military was put on high alert, the presidential palace ringed
with troops and reinforcements were brought in from the provinces.
Police prepared to transfer Estrada from a hospital, where he
had been undergoing tests, to a maximum security detention centre
south of Manila.
March on Malacanang
No march took place on April 30 but the pro-Estrada protests
continued at Edsa. After midnight on May 1, a sizeable number
of protesters began the 15km march from Edsa to Malacanang. Estimates
of number vary widely but reports put the figure at between 50,000
and 70,000. At one point, some of those involved commandeered
a dump truck, armed themselves with sticks and rocks, and broke
through lines of riot police. Clashes between police and protestors
continued for hours outside the palace.
In the aftermath, the Arroyo administration has attempted to
portray itself as the model of restraint and the protestors as
a violent mobpaid to attend and, in the more lurid accounts,
fired up on drugs. But whatever the machinations of pro-Estrada
politicians behind the scenes, the sentiments of the marchers
reveal a deep-seated anger at their deteriorating social position
and a hostility to the political establishment that Arroyo represents.
A young protestor Hadje Tomolin told the New York Times
that he had not even voted for Estrada but felt that the president's
ouster and jailing violated the constitution. We will fight
until the fight ends. We want Arroyo to step down. She was not
elected by the people, he said.
Time correspondent Tim McGirk commented: What
we're seeing here for the first time is that the poorest, most
marginalised and disenfranchised people are out on the streets,
and not because people are paying them. They're there because
they thought Estrada was their messiah, and that he had been wronged
by the power elite that traditionally rules the Philippines.
What have not been widely reported are the methods used by
the security forces to break up the protest. Heavily-armed troops
fired volleys of shots into the air and attack helicopters circled
overhead. TV footage showed police firing handguns directly at
the crowd. One of the dead was a protester who was shot in the
face. On several occasions the police and troops baton-charged
the protest and then used tear gas and water cannon to disperse
those who came forward again.
The scene resembled a war zone. The streets were littered with
burning debris, the personal belongings of the protestors and
burnt-out vehicles. Armored personnel carriers and hundreds of
elite troops armed with semi-automatic weapons occupied the palace
grounds. Clashes between the armed forces and protesters in other
parts of the city continued for several hours.
Nevertheless, by the time that Arroyo's spokesman Rigoberto
Tiglao announced the state of rebellion in Manila,
just after noon on May 1, the security forces had the demonstrations
under control. The decision was clearly a political one aimed
at using the street battles to justify measures against opposition
leaders in the lead-up to an election that Arroyo and her allies
are by no means certain they can win convincingly.
Just an hour before, National Security Adviser Roilo Golez
had announced that there was no compelling reason for the declaration
of a state of emergency or moves towards martial law. A factor
in Arroyo's abrupt reversal appears to have been a hurried statement
of support from the US embassy in Manila recognising the legitimacy
of the Arroyo government, issued just prior to Tiglao's
announcement.
At any rate, neither the administration nor the security forces
have so far provided any evidence, other than vague references
to military intelligence reports, for the claims that the protest
was meant to be cover for a military coup.
Class hostility
The reaction in ruling circles to last week's events has been
a mixture of outright class hostility and unease over what the
protests portend for the future in the Philippines and elsewhere
in South East Asia.
In the face of criticisms, Arroyo has sought to justify her
actions by denouncing the demonstrators and repeating the claims
of a coup threat. We could have been massacred inside Malacanang
by the demonstrators. What would have followed was the collapse
of the government, she said over the weekend.
Arroyo's response to the protest highlights the shaky position
of her administrationnot just in next week's election but
in the longer term as she seeks to impose the IMF's economic restructuring
agenda, which will only further alienate workers and the poor.
She does not have a social base of her own and is increasingly
beholden to sections of big business, the church, and the military,
who played a key role in inserting her in office and have now
put down the pro-Estrada demonstrations.
Her autocratic stand won the fulsome praise of a number of
commentators. Greg Sheridan, foreign editor for Rupert Murdoch's
Australian unreservedly supported Arroyo against Estrada
and the sleazy group of senators supporting him... So far she
has handled the crisis well. Tiny as she is, Arroyo is about the
toughest pocket battleship in South East Asian politics.
The sentiment was echoed in the Sydney Morning Herald,
which hailed her ability to weather the baptism of fire.
It stated: If one firm conclusion can be drawn as the dust
settles on the latest crisis to jolt Philippine democracy; it
is that Asia has a formidable new leader.
Another fervent supporter of Arroyo's repression was the so-called
left in the Philippinesin particular, the Stalinist Communist
Party of the Philippines (CPP) and its front organisation Bayan.
In a press statement on May 1, Bayan denounced the raging,
bloodthirsty pro-Estrada mob now at the foot of Mendiola and the
vicinity of Malacanang Palace and demanded the immediate
arrest of all of its instigators, agitators and financiers.
Throughout the political crisis of the past year, the CPP uncritically
supported Arroyo, claiming that she represented a progressive
wing of the ruling class as compared to the corrupt Estrada and
those business layers who supported him. Having helped her to
office, the CPP now hails her state crackdown on sections of the
urban poor, who, albeit in a confused and unclear way, understand
that the anti-democratic methods used to oust Estrada will be
used to impose tougher economic austerity measures on them.
The class divide
The emergence of the urban poor onto the streets of the Philippines
has already raised fears within ruling circles in Manila and internationally.
A number of commentators have pointed to the deep social chasm
exposed by the protests and questioned the wisdom of Arroyo's
decision to impose a state of rebellion and round
up opposition leaders. One third of the Philippine population
of 75 million live on less than one US dollar a day and surveys
have found that almost 60 percent view themselves as poor.
The London-based Economist commented: The arrests
were hardly necessary to restore calm to Manila, and there are
allegations that they are politically motivated. Edgardo Angara,
an opposition senator, who is not among those accused, declared
that Mrs Arroyo's decision had everything to do with party
[politics], rather than the merits'.
Mrs Arroyo's decision looks even more troubling in light
of two recent tendencies. One is the president's persistently
tough languageher favourite new word is crush'. The
other, closely related, is the frequency with which she refers
to the united military that stands behind her. Whether or not
she is right, this adds to the impression that in a pinch Mrs
Arroyo works harder to appear strong than to appear fair. That
could prove a sure recipe for a nation divided, whatever happens
on May 14.
Time correspondent Tim McGirk warned: [I]t's such
a class-based thing, with the middle and upper classes backing
Arroyo while the underclass supports Estrada, there is a real
fear that if the poor come out on the streets againand it
really won't take much to get them there, particularly since they
clearly sensed their power this weekthat there could be
widespread looting and chaos.
In an editorial entitled Democracy on the High Wire,
the Washington Post expressed wider concerns about instability
throughout the region. Referring to the Philippines and Indonesia,
it wrote: Two South East Asian nations with a combined population
of nearly 300 million people are engaged in political balancing
acts that may determine whether democracy survives in their region...
In both countries the question is whether weak democratic leaders
can cope with daunting challenges without violating democratic
norms themselves.
Within the Philippines, sections of the ruling elite have expressed
alarm at any further demonstrations of People Power,
particularly if sections of the working class and the poor are
involved. A prominent Arroyo supporter, Senator Aquilino Pimentel,
is quoted in the New York Times as saying: There
is a real danger now that if you mass 100,000 or 1 million people
on the streets, it can topple a government... We cannot afford
to have a peoples power III or IV in this in this country, it
can topple a government.
Behind the rhetoric slung at each other by the Arroyo and Estrada
camps, it appears that both sides were deeply shocked that the
situation spiralled so rapidly out of control. In fact, there
are a number of signs that the protest got out of the control
of Estrada camp. His wife, speaking on behalf of the ousted president,
opposed the march and his son Jose Ejercito broadcast a radio
appeal in the early hours of May 1 for the protestors to go home.
Whatever their bitter differences neither Arroyo nor Estrada
are capable of meeting the social needs and aspirations of the
working class and poor, and are therefore fearful of precipitating
a more conscious movement directed against the profit system and
the ruling class as a whole.
In a bid to defuse the tensions, and possibly stitch together
a deal, Arroyo visited Estrada in jail on May 3 and chatted amiably
with her ousted rival, who in turn addressed her as Madam
President. Until last week, Estrada insisted that he was
still the president. The next day Arroyo visited some of the detained
protestors. She told them she was on their side, saying
that her father had come from a family of poor farm workers
and my grandmother had to wash clothes.
These theatrical gestures are unlikely to defuse the mounting
social tensions and the highly volatile political situation in
the Philippines.
See Also:
Arroyo bans film at insistence
of Philippines Catholic hierarchy
[23 April 2001]
Arroyo attempts to shore up
her grip on the Philippine presidency
[2 March, 2001]
An exchange on the anti-Estrada
movement in the Philippines
[13 February 2001]
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