Betcha By Golly Wow
Lawmakers & Lawbreakers
or
Betcha By Golly Wow
JAKARTA, Indonesia -- I always make out in talks, whenever a question about
corruption is raised, that there’s a fundamental difference between our
corruption and that of other Asian countries. It’s not that ours is
bigger. Other Asian countries, or closer to home, Southeast Asian ones,
have more astronomical levels of corruption.
Transparency International
lists Ferdinand Marcos only second among the all-time crooks of Asia.
The dubious honor of being first belongs to Indonesia’s Suharto. Marcos
stole “only” $15 billion, Suharto stole $35 billion.
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But you look at Indonesia and the Philippines today, and you are going to weep only for the Philippines. Indonesia hasn’t quite reached such levels of desperation that it has to export its people wholesale to survive. That’s not simply explained by the fact that Indonesia is bigger and richer and can tolerate higher levels of pillage.
Quite simply, though Suharto stole more, he never took the money out of Indonesia. He plunked his loot in all sorts of businesses there, big and small, multimillion and penny-ante. Marcos stashed his loot abroad, in Swiss and other banks. At the end of the day, Suharto remained in Indonesia, ready to face, or buy off, his detractors. At the end of the day, Marcos fled to Hawaii to enjoy the bitter fruit of his murderous labor, such as he could with lupus and Imelda, whichever made living more unbearable.
That is the difference between corruption here and other Asian countries, which explains the abject state we’re in. Other Asian countries at least have patriotic crooks; we have treacherous ones. The blood money of other Asian tyrants go on to employ the citizens of their country; the blood money of local ones go on to employ only a few Filipino maids and chauffeurs in America.
That was the first thing I thought of when I read about this
business of Mike Arroyo signing a waiver allowing the HypoVereinsbank
in Munich to divulge his accounts, if any, to the ethics committee of
the House of Representatives. He did this to counter Alan Peter
Cayetano’s allegations that he held accounts there and apparently to
comply with the lawmaker’s demand for him to sign a waiver to ascertain
it. Cayetano is unimpressed by the gesture and says that is not
exactly, or entirely, what he is asking for. What he is asking for is a
waiver that will free not just this particular bank in Munich but all
foreign banks to reveal the First Gentleman’s deposits upon request by
Philippine authorities. What he was trying to determine, Cayetano said,
was whether there existed “a pattern of corruption and money-laundering
by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and members of the First Family.”
I leave others to debate the question of who has scored the more points in this latest round of the ongoing bout between Arroyo and Cayetano. My point is simply this: Why should signing a waiver allowing foreign banks to disclose the deposits of Filipino public officials—and their families—upon request of Philippine authorities be voluntary or optional? Why should it be done out of the goodness of one’s heart? Why shouldn’t it be compulsory or a requisite of public office? Why shouldn’t that be something candidates explicitly or implicitly agree to when they run for any position in this country, from barangay councilor to president?
Frankly, I don’t know why no representative or senator has yet filed
that as an urgent bill. Henceforth, every Filipino official, elected or
appointed, agrees to have his assets abroad scrutinized without legal
impediment from him. Or more to the point, henceforth every Filipino
official, elected or appointed, agrees to waive his right to secrecy in
bank deposits abroad. That should be written in the oath of office
public officials must swear to before they occupy their positions.
Which, of course, should apply to the members of their immediate
families as well. For obvious reasons: A public official’s loot may not
be laundered by his or her spouse or children.
The logic is simple: At the very least, even if those deposits are well-gotten (although the notion that Filipino officials could possibly harbor legitimate wealth in Swiss and other banks is about as believable as the notion of military intelligence or Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s capacity for honesty), what is a Filipino public official doing not using that money to improve the lot of those he professes to serve? At the very most, if those deposits are ill-gotten -- which they almost axiomatically are, notably where they carry the name “Jose Pidal” or variations thereof -- then their depositors should be shot by firing squad in, well, not in Bagumbayan, that would be sacrilege. Those deposits do not just represent corruption, they represent treason. Those deposits do not just represent a betrayal of public trust, they represent a betrayal of the nation.
We have a proposed anti-terror bill that proposes to terrorize the
citizens by freezing the bank deposits of suspected terrorists. Why
can’t we have a saner anti-corruption and anti-treason bill that simply
obliges public officials to disclose their deposits in foreign banks by
waiving their right to secrecy there? What can be more a matter of
national security than preventing the remaining wealth of this already
much ransacked country from being smuggled outside and frittered away
by crooked traitors or treacherous crooks? What can be higher treason
than plucking food from the mouth of the hungry to bet on Manny
Pacquiao’s fights? What can be a worse act of terrorism than planting a
bomb at the heart of this country’s survival?
Will Mike Arroyo sign a waiver allowing all foreign banks to
disclose any deposits he might have made with them?
That shouldn’t be a matter of choice, that should be a matter of course. By God, by law and by golly.


Hear us out...................................!
Among the third world countries, the Philippines lag behind. Before, in he 70's, we are so much better than the rest but due to our present severe political and economic problem, we goes down beyond anyones imagination. Its beyond repair, so much corruption in and out of the system. I don't know where to start.
If I look into the people, I think the Filipinos as content the way they live their lives. Its hard, we are poor, but look around the way they survive, they still have time to drink&smoke, sit around, talk, watch TV all day and night, gamble, shopping, and text as well on line 24 hours a day (just a component in our society).
I don't get it.
I barely survive working my butt out, having three girls to send to school, and a family to support, HOW MUCH MORE FOR THE REST OF THE population?
Posted by: AJ MaO'Brn | February 6, 2007 08:01 AM
Corruption is rampant in our country. Anywhere we go they recognize Imelda.
As I've noticed, there is no solution to these social problems. Even to the lowest set up of the government it is existing, and even to the smallest unit of our society THE FAMILY its rooting up.
Whoever will become the President, our economy will continue to go down.
Posted by: Evelyn Joy | February 6, 2007 12:47 PM