Today, I
will devote my column to a discussion of honesty in public discourse, and to
three specimens that are sobering and outstanding.
The first
comes from the head of the ruling military junta in neighboring Thailand, Gen.
Prayuth Chan-ocha, which I got from an Associated Press report last month.
The
second is a vivid quote from Mayor Rody Duterte of Davao City, which former
presidential adviser Jess Dureza shared with me by e-mail, via his MindaNow
network.
The third
is a quote from a bygone time in Philippine politics when political leaders had
a measure of gravitas.
1. General Prayuth : “Don’t
criticize, don’t protest, it’s no use.”
2. President
Benigno Aquino 3rd will fondly wish that he could also say those words to us
Filipinos, especially those of us who make a living by watching, policing and
analyzing all his actions, words and decisions as President of the Philippines.
Because
we feel we are always being lied to by people in government, including our
chief of state and head of government, it’s always bracing when we encounter
words from a public official that are frank, truthful, direct, honest and
sincere.
I got the
quote from an Associated press story that was filed on May 26, just hours after
the news conference called by the leader of the coup staged by the Thai army on
May 22.
Because
the AP story is vivid in detail, I reproduce almost in full below:
BANGKOK
(AP) May 26—Bolstered by an endorsement from Thailand’s king, the nation’s new
military ruler issued a stark warning Monday to anyone opposed to last week’s
coup: don’t cause trouble, don’t criticize, don’t protest—or else the nation
could revert to the “old days” of torture and street violence.
Bangkok
(AP) May 26—Speaking in his first public appearance since the coup, Gen.
Prayuth Chan-ocha defended the army’s takeover, saying he had to restore order
after seven months of increasingly violent confrontations between the
now-ousted government and demonstrators who had long urged the army to
intervene.
“I’m not
here to argue with anyone. I want to bring everything out in the open and fix
it,” said Prayuth, who spoke at the army headquarters in Bangkok dressed in a
crisp white military uniform.
“Everyone
must help me,” he said, adding: but “do not criticize, do not create new
problems. It’s no use.”
In a
gruff, 20-minute appearance, Prayuth warned the media and social media users to
avoid doing anything that could fan the conflict. He also called on anti-coup
protesters who have been staging small-scale demonstrations to stop.
“Right
now there are people coming out to protest. So do you want to go back to the
old days? I’m asking the people in the country, if you want it that way, then I
will have to enforce the law.”
Earlier
Monday, a royal command sent in the name of King Bhumibol Adulyadej officially
endorsed Prayuth to run the country and called for “reconciliation among the
people.”…
Thursday’s
coup, Thailand’s second in eight years, deposed an elected government that had
insisted for months that the nation’s fragile democracy was under attack from
protesters, the courts, and finally the army.
The
country is deeply split between an elite establishment based in Bangkok and the
south that cannot win elections on one side, and a poorer majority centered in
the north that has begun to realize political and economic power on the other .
. . .
Despite
Prayuth’s threat to crack down on anti-coup protesters, soldiers did not use
force against several hundred people who gathered again Monday at the city’s
Victory Monument and eventually dispersed on their own, vowing to return the
next day.
Through a
loudspeaker, a soldier taunted the protesters, saying they had been paid to
come out. “Can you still call yourselves patriots?” he said.
The
soldier also accused international journalists at the scene of inciting
conflict. “Do you think they are good for Thailand?” he said, before addressing
them directly in English: “Foreign media, you be careful.”
In his
speech, Prayuth defended the takeover, saying the army had to intervene because
of sporadic violence that began last November as anti-government protests
gathered steam. At least 28 people have been killed since then and more than
800 injured in grenade attacks, gun fights and drive-by shootings . . .
After
declaring martial law May 20, Prayuth invited political rivals and Cabinet
ministers for two days of peace talks to resolve the crisis. But those talks
lasted just four hours. At the end of the meeting, Prayuth ordered everyone
inside detained, and announced the coup on state television almost immediately
afterward.
The junta
has ordered more than 200 people—including most of the ousted government—to
report to the authorities. They include scholars, journalists and political
activists seen as critical of the regime . . .
Some have
been released, but others are being summoned daily—including several more late
Monday. Other activists have fled or are in hiding, and human rights groups
describe a chilling atmosphere with soldiers visiting the homes of perceived
critics and taking them away.
Prayuth
said the army was taking people into custody to give them time “to calm
themselves down” and none was being tortured or beaten . . .
“When
summoned, they will be asked about what they’ve done . . . If they are calm and
still, they will be released, in three days, five days, seven days,” Prayuth
said.
On
Monday, the army released ex-lawmaker Suthep Thaugsuban, who led half a year of
demonstrations against the deposed government.
There has
been no armed resistance to the coup, but a soldier was fatally shot Monday in
the eastern province of Trat, where three people were killed in February in a
drive-by shooting and grenade attack on a protest rally against the former
government . . .
The junta
has yet to map a way out of the crisis, but Prayuth said there would be
political and administrative reforms. On Monday, he gave the green light for
the Finance Ministry to seek billions of dollars in loans to pay debts owed
farmers under a disastrous rice scheme instituted by the ousted government.
After the
speech, the general took only two questions from reporters.
Asked if
he would appoint a new prime minister, Prayuth replied gruffly: “Don’t ask
about something that hasn’t happened. It’s already in the plans. Take it easy.
There will be one.”
Asked
when elections would be held, Prayuth said that could happen when the crisis
ends. It “depends on the circumstances,” he said. “I don’t have a schedule . .
. as quickly as possible.”
Then he
ended the news conference abruptly, saying “that’s enough.”
(End of AP report).
* * *
Interestingly,
General Prayuth believes in Gandhi’s principle of enoughness, which was the
subject of my earlier column (“Members of Congress need an idea of enough,”
Times, May 20).
Let’s
hope Prayuth will also know when the Thai military has ruled and governed long
enough the affairs of our important neighbor and Asean partner Thailand, and
graciously yield the reins of power. People with absolute power notoriously
have a hard time grasping and obeying the principle.
3. Mayor Rodrigo Duterte: “I
don’t want to go to jail.”
4.
Jess
Dureza, former presidential adviser on Mindanao under the Arroyo administration
and current chair of the council for print media, sent me this quote from Mayor
Rodrigo Duterte of Davao City, which captures in seven words the malaise that
haunts the presidency of this country and the dilemma that anyone who seeks the
office will inevitably confront.
The
colorful mayor of Davao, widely known for his many years of public service and
his tough and successful stand against insurgency and criminality in his city,
is being urged by various groups to run for president in 2016, because he may
just have the chops to capture the popular imagination and to answer
effectively the burdens and the powers of the Philippine Presidency
I reprint
Jess Dureza’s e-mail on Mayor Duterte’s conundrum below, along with his
insightful observations on the breakdown of controls over public funds:
“While
several sectors are encouraging Mayor Rody Duterte of Davao City to run for
Philippine president, he has a way of saying: “THANKS, BUT NO THANKS!”
His
reason: “Filipinos somehow send to prison presidents starting from Erap, now
Gloria and who knows, later maybe PNoy too! No, I don’t want to go to jail
myself!”
How can
you argue against that? End of discussion.
For the
first time ever, our country is facing a corruption issue of a magnitude never
before experienced with the wholesale involvement of high public officials.
While foreign officials resign from their high positions if faced with a
controversy, not a single No Pinoy official up to now has resigned—not even a
single “leave of absence” while every single day, the list grows longer and
longer! Are we now a callous people?
There is
something grievously wrong with the system. If Benhur Luy and Janet Napoles did
not have a “ falling out,” this scam would not have been publicly known. And
many officials may still be merrily helping themselves with the taxpayers’
money. Our control systems just didn’t work. So, how do we fix this?”
Jess concluded
his note with some significant data and information:
Countdown
to the May, 2016 elections—There are 721 remaining days left to the May 9,2016
national elections. In the meantime, the NAPOLIST issue is still raging with
new twists and additional names. Entertaining for all voters! Let’s see if our
voters are more circumspect next time.
Filipinos
in Facebook— There are now 34 million Filipinos in FACEBOOK. Out of every 10
Pinoys, 3.5 are connected with the Internet. This is a potent force to do
national transformation and reform. Information technology can be potent,
devastating and deadly. It can destroy as well as build!
3. Juan
Ponce Enrile—“The Aquino Administration must stop playing God.”
To the
quotes from General Prayuth and Mayor Duterte, I will add a third, and these
are the words of Senator Juan Ponce Enrile on the Senate floor on August 6,
1991, when he declared: “The Aquino (Cory Aquino) administration must stop
playing God.”
They were
said in another time, when another Aquino was president of our country.
Public
discourse was more direct and honest then. Politicians said what was in their
hearts. Rivalries were out in the open.
Today,
once bitter rivals work together in coalition. President Aquino can plausibly
say that he has the support of many leading political parties in the country.
The
opposition cannot be found anywhere. It is too busy hiding in the shadows,
deathly afraid of being seen as opponents of a vindictive and power-drunk
president.
Yen
Makabenta The Manila Post
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