WORST STILL TO COME FOR GMA -- PIMENTEL
Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr. (PDP-Laban) today said the
pressure for President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to resign continues to build
up contrary to Malacañang’s claim that it is tapering off.
Pimentel said National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales is merely trying
to soothe the President’s frayed nerves by saying that the “worst is over”
after about 70,000 people held an inter-faith rally in Makati City early
this month to press for her resignation.
“The worst is far from over for Gloria. The worst is still to come,” he
said.
He said the President has every reason to worry over the resignation calls
in view of the fact that students and teachers in both private and public
schools; bishops, priests, minister and nuns from the Catholic and
Protestant churches and born-again Christian and evangelical groups;
businessmen, workers, peasants and fishermen are now at the forefront of the
anti-Arroyo street protests while politicians have been relegated to the
sidelines.
Pimentel said Mrs. Arroyo is obviously in a state of panic by summoning
local government officials to Malacañang or calling them up to plead with
them for their support in the face of the aggravating political crisis.
He said local government executives are easily cajoled by Malacañang into
toeing its line on political issues because of fear of reprisal by
withholding or rejecting financial aid from the national government.
But not all mayors or governors whom the President counts as her allies can
be cowed to express their support, the senator from Mindanao said.
According to Pimentel, a mayor of a big city in Mindanao told the President
about two weeks ago that what she needed now was not LGU statements of
support but for her to tell the truth about the National Broadband scandal.
He said this only showed how the President is desperately trying to make the
people believe that she is still enjoying popular support despite public
opinion surveys showing that more than 70 percent of the Filipinos favors
her resignation from office.
“What I am trying to say is that there is a continuing buildup of pressure
for Gloria to speak the truth and step down. And this is true for
practically the entire nation and not only here in Metro Manila,” Pimentel
said.
Reacting to Mrs. Arroyo’s insistence that she will not step down until her
term is over in 2010, Pimentel said the circumstances are coming to a point
which will give her no choice but to resign.
He said the series of full-page political advertisements in national
newspapers in which local officials from various provinces, cities and
municipalities supposedly reaffirm their support for the President could not
have been paid by the local governments concerned since they are always
complaining of poor finances.
He said it is simply incredulous and outrageous that resolutions of support
for the President from small and poor municipalities in Negros Occidental
and Aurora provinces will find their way in full-page newspaper ads which
cost from P150,000 to P200,000 each which they simply could not afford.
Pimentel said the money spent on these newspaper ads could have come from
the intelligence, discretionary and other confidential funds of the
President.
“I think the next best thing is to have these funds audited by the
Commission on Audit to lay the basis for whatever actions that we will take
on that issue,” he said.
Date: March 13, 2008
Ref: Omeng / (02) 5526731 |
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