By Alfredo C. Garvida, Jr.
The much
anticipated indictment of Senators Enrile, Estrada and Revilla along with pork
barrel scam queen, Janet Napoles, has finally come last Friday, June 6, 2014,
when the Office of the Ombudsman filed the criminal information of plunder, a
non-bailable offense, against these big-time personalities with the
Sandiganbayan.
Varied reactions, as expected, surfaced, mostly in
support of the indictments reflective of how the citizens of this country feel
about corruption. The accused are not guilty—as yet, because this what the law
mandates--until the court finds them guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
The three senators are accused of having
perpetrated the crime for a period of 10 years, allegedly robbing the people
billions of pesos for ghost or unworthy projects just so they could allegedly earn
illicit commissions for their selfish ends. People are awed at the speed of the
indictments' formalization, and in silence, revering the measure of political
will the administration has in going head to head against popular and powerful
politicians in this country.
The accused cry of political persecution is
understandable, as is always the conventional defense of a politician when
cornered of wrongdoing, even in flagrante delicto, yet the rule
of law must not be pushed to the back burner no matter who the accused
are, no matter what political or social affiliations they belong to, most
especially when the public trust is breached by people sworn to uphold the law
as Senators Enrile, Estrada and Revilla were when they assumed their lofty
offices at the Philippine Senate.
The government did what was right but the public
should militate against selective justice too in the face of accusations that
some administration boys are involved in the scam as well. President Aquino
does not earn respect with his mere absolution rhetoric in his men's behalf. He
must conduct an unbiased and beyond-suspicion inquiry into this issue if only
to give justice to his men now suffering suspicion before the bar of public
opinion and to demonstrate as well his faith to the rule that no man is above
the law.
Last Monday, June 9th, the government
filed additional criminal information of graft against these distinguished
senators, which is defining for the public's introspection as it imparts the
notion that the offenses imputed on them are grave, multiple and transcendent
of political persecution. It is worth noting that Sen. Revilla, in his senate
privileged speech on the same day of his graft indictment, has accused the
President of failing to address poverty and unemployment in this country, a
function Mr. Aquino, in Revilla's mind, was supposed to prioritize over his
zeal to jail his ‘oppositors”—or corrupt men in government, whichever way the
public may read it.
Sen. Revilla must have conveniently forgotten that
the Philippines is now considered one of the top emerging economies of the
world given the global investors' confidence in the present government's
social, economic and political policies, topmost of which is the hard drive of
the government, of which Senator Revilla is a crucial and essential part of,
against corruption. He must have conveniently forgotten as well that the root
cause of the nation's poverty and unemployment is corruption in government. He
must have conveniently forgotten as well that economic policies of the nation,
such as those against poverty and unemployment, are not the sole burden of the
President to formulate but that of the Congress, too, of which he is a member.
In short, as a member of Congress, has he done
something to mitigate them? Or, if the accusations against him are true, didn't
he make unemployment and poverty worse?
Some legal and political experts have opined that
the cases of plunder and graft against these distinguished senators will not
terminate within Mr. Aquino's presidency, which means that there will be a new
Philippine President by then. The big question is whether the new president
will pick up Mr. Aquino's resolve to fight for the Filipino's right to justice
for the plunder on their money as well as for the breach of public trust
committed by people they have elected to represent their interest in congress.
The burden on this issue is so heavy on one presidential candidate who
presently leads the presidential surveys but who is also known by all and
sundry to be a political ally of the accused.
The citizens are too wary of the double standard of
justice accorded to inmates. They have seen how Rolito Go and former Batangas
Governor Leviste have defied the terms of their incarceration at the National
Penitentiary. They have seen how luxurious Mr. Druglord Camata was
surviving his jail term, complete with a privilege to entertain women in his
private hospital suite. And people have not forgotten too how former President
Joseph Estrada was held at an exclusive government compound, eventually
pardoned by President Gloria Arroyo, who herself is being held in a government
hospital for the crime of plunder too.
Privileged people are always privileged no matter
the circumstance. The Philippine National Police is busy refurbishing the “suites”
of the three senators at the PNP Headquarters, where Avelino Razon, the former
commanding general of the Philippine National Police is incarcerated too for
the crime of—what else—corruption. And people are wondering what separates
presidents, senators, millionaires, governors, drug lords and generals from
ordinary citizens before the eyes of the law? Where does social bias end that
equality before the law may begin?
Finally, the Constitution reposes solely in the
President the absolute power to grant reprieve and pardon to convicted
criminals. To make it easier for government officials to think twice before
thieving people's money, wasn't it time that this presidential power be
qualified to exclude pardon on plunder and public corruption that the bar to
the state's chance of alleviating poverty and decreasing unemployment may be
lowered?
Senator Alan Peter Cayetano's fear that a Binay
presidency could lead to a whitewash of the cases against the Vice President's
political allies may be legitimate, but this fear be better left to the
citizens to decide at the right time. For now, let the rule of law prevail for
it exists, purportedly, in the name of justice. And justice means due process,
equality to all, vindication of rights and having errant people suffer the consequence
of their act.
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