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Arroyo’s pleas political, not human rights issue

By:

Former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo

It would be the supreme irony to allow GMA (Gloria Macapagal-Aroyo) to invoke our most sacred human rights protections to escape justice. That would be her supreme, final perversion of our democratic institutions. While countless voices have correctly quoted human rights law, our democracy must recognize GMA’s pleas as a political, not human rights, issue.

Our Bill of Rights is our democracy’s greatest triumph. It is “counter-majoritarian”; it empowers the weakest member of our society to stand against the most powerful members. Wind and sunshine may enter the humblest hovel, but the king must first knock at the door.

The Bill of Rights is applied by the courts with very strict scrutiny in favor of the disadvantaged for whom “those political processes ordinarily to be relied upon to protect minorities” historically do not work: From the Maguindanao massacre victims to millions of starving children who might be fed and clothed with the money from the fertilizer and ZTE scams.

That is why we must pierce legal rhetoric to see what is really at stake.

Portrayed as victim

One, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has been portrayed as the victim boxed into a corner and fighting for her survival. Lest we forget, the supposed underdog here is a former President and now a member of the Philippine Congress, with loyal allies and appointees in high places, with a formidable war chest at her disposal, much of it our own money, the criminal complaints say. She is not a political nobody by any stretch of the imagination.

Two, if there was any legal sleight of hand, it lies in the TRO, which consolidated the separate cases of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Jose Miguel Arroyo. In a discussion of this case with some law school classmates, it was asked: How did Mike get to benefit from Gloria’s medical emergency?

Consolidated petitions

Gloria and Mike filed two separate SC petitions to challenge their respective watch-list orders. Consolidating the two petitions looks procedurally innocuous. After all, since both cases deal with the same issues (the invalidity of the watch-list order) and ask for the same remedies (the issuance of an allow-departure order), why not indeed hear them together?

Going by newspaper accounts, only Gloria, but not Mike, has invoked a medical emergency to be allowed to travel. And yet when the ban on Gloria’s travel was lifted, Mike likewise became free to leave by virtue of the consolidation.

Three, the Arroyo camp makes it appear that all that is at stake now is a mere temporary restraining order, emphasis on temporary. They are correct, but only if we look merely at the surface.

After all, the issue is the validity of the watch list powers of the Department of Justice (DOJ), and the TRO does not purport to settle that question on the merits and with finality. The TRO is an interim measure taken while the merits are still pending. It is merely preliminary and provisional in character.

But lest we forget, if she doesn’t return, all the pending cases are effectively frustrated.

Exhibit A

Her own versions of her health condition raise many questions. Her list of destinations are mostly (not all, it turns out) nonextradition states. And finally, even if she finds herself in an extradition state, she can still claim asylum as a refugee, or at the very least, invoke the state’s duty of “non-refoulement,” to not return a person to the country of origin where she faces the risk of persecution.

When she applies for asylum, videotapes of the airport drama of Tuesday night will be Exhibit A.

Secretary Leila de Lima’s insistence that the TRO is held in abeyance pending reconsideration can be seen as reflecting its true nature as potentially the permanent disposition of the Arroyo charges, or an attempt to buy time while the DOJ actually files at least one case against Arroyo and secures a judicially ordered hold-departure order or, lastly, an outright defiance of the Supreme Court.

In case of the last, various voices have warned us that to defy the Supreme Court is to imperil the rule of law that we regained at Edsa I. By defying the court, De Lima calls the bluff, as if to say: The court is damaged goods. It is they who jeopardize our rule of law by lending their imprimatur to impunity.

Political solution

I would be the first to call for the rule of law, but the image of GMA the human rights victim gives pause. As the Inquirer’s editorial called for, this issue needs a political, not a strictly legal, solution. We must stop looking at the neckbrace and wheelchair in a vacuum and allow our democracy’s checks and balances to play out at the very highest level.

It has been said that the Supreme Court can withstand defiance, but it cannot withstand ridicule, and the Arroyo court has clearly dissipated its reservoir of public trust. The ultimate guardian of our Constitution is “We the People.”

What De Lima is really doing is, beyond the Constitution’s explicit text, asking people to recognize that this is really a political issue. President Aquino seems willing to be judged by history alongside Arroyo and the Arroyo court. Perhaps we should let him.

Legit President checks SC

The textbooks say that to condone a secretary of justice ignoring a Supreme Court order is to go down a slippery slope. However, history has shown that when the referee is punching alongside a boxer, the Filipino people have been ready to throw away the rulebook and reclaim their ultimate authority at Edsa.

Faced with GMA as human rights victim, this is not the best time to demonstrate our commitment to rule of law, to grant a reviled former President her fundamental right to travel, but the worst time, to allow her to escape with impunity in a final, irreparable mockery of the rule of law.

Whereas in 2006 a respected Supreme Court deployed its powers to check a dubious President in Professor Randolf David v. Arroyo, today should we not allow a legitimate President to deploy an extraordinary power to check a dubious Supreme Court?

The President’s greatest and perhaps most desperate check on the judiciary is to ignore it. In a famous fictional account, President Andrew Jackson ordered: “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it!” It is said that the judiciary wields neither purse nor sword, and its sole means of enforcing decisions lies in its moral authority. Perhaps we should allow the President to confront a court that has lost it.


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Tags: Arroyo Health , Arroyo Travel , Benigno Aquino III , DOJ , Gloria Macapagal Arroyo , Government , Immigration , politics , Supreme Court

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  • Anonymous

    Got it – political solution to neutralize if not overrule the SC. However we need to be really careful with this concept otherwise it would convey political harassment which Gloria can use in her favor. Let’s not forget that we’re not politically prosecuting the Arroyos. We are criminally prosecuting them for stealing taxpayers’ money.

  • Anonymous

    Do really you not realize that you do exactly what theadmn wants, a “public persecution and sentencing before even a real trial has started, aimed for to influence the judges? Even a killer is deemed innocent until proven guilty beyond reasonqable doubt. Why not in this case too, where up to now only accusations exist and hardly a fair trial can be expected?
    Anyone of those who are now prejudging Arroyo would cry foul if it happens to him or her. Anyway most of the people do not even know anything of what is discussed and about law and constitution but cry for impeaching SC justuces, using martial law against GMA, to make RP a monarchy with King Noynoy and other nonsense, included throwing names like “piece of sh.t to other comments and news writers. THAT is much more like s h i t.

    • Anonymous

      Magtagalog ka na lang po Mr. frankpar kasi parang nagkanosebleed ka yata nang isulat mo yang comment mo! Obvious naman na GMA loyalist ka na mahina ang command of English.

  • Anonymous

    I salute you Mr. Raul Pangalangan for your article. This is a masterpiece and I thoroughly agree and support your opinion. 

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ZQKHM4SZWMQEGPCOQB4CI26X5Q JCC

    political or human right issue – what’s the difference?…. she has a warrant and it was served — they issued a TRO before the warrant because DC 41 was unconstitutional but DeLima believes otherwise and wanted to be heard…

    DeLima looked at the SCORP right on its face and the jurists blinked by coyly saying that the TRO is inoperative due to the failure of the Arroyos to comply with the two conditions of the TRO.. heheheee. :)

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ZQKHM4SZWMQEGPCOQB4CI26X5Q JCC

    The SCORP was simply playing true to form….  the way it acted during martial law days where every presidential decree and amendment no. 6 by DA APO received favorable nod from the SCORP..  hehehee…

  • Anonymous

    Bro, sabi ng mga law students ni Dean, the charge of electoral sabotage can only cover the 2007 elections kasi RA No. 9369 took effect on January 2007.

  • Anonymous

    @Arjane Samaniego,

    I do. But if the Supreme Court (judiciary) has the last word, over and above any or both of the other two branches, where is the CO-EQUALITY?

  • Anonymous

    The Court lost its moral authority, not because they are GMA appointees, but because, through their decisions, they have shown that they will do whatever is necessary to repay their “utang na loob” to GMA. The issue here is GMA and, therefore, we should look at how the Court has decided in relation to her. The case on the ARMM elections is obviously irrelevant unlike the Court’s decision on the constitutionality of the truth commission, which was tasked precisely to investigate graft and corruption, including those allegedly committed by GMA.

  • Anonymous

    We should disband the SC and replace it with Guevarra…No need of hearing…He know’s anyway who is guilty or not…

    ________________________________
    From: Disqus
    To: gnapuli@yahoo.com
    Sent: Friday, November 18, 2011 12:45 PM
    Subject: [inquireropinion] Re: Arroyo’s pleas political, not human rights issue

    Disqus generic email template

    Guevarra wrote, in response to gnapuli:
    So you can take this poisoned medicine?  Mag-isa ka.
    Link to comment

  • Anonymous

    i made some corrections.

  • Arjane Samaniego

    Well let’s just go with the cliche “empty vessels make the most noise”. Know at least your political law, get back to me when you have substance enough para hindi masayang oras ko sayo.

  • Anonymous

    Reading the blogs and putting in some commentaries has become a part of my daily activities. Many blogs have I enjoyed reading, brilliant and mind enriching commentaries, but of course there are some that are product of muddled mind. Sometimes I get the urge to reply, not to critisize but to help the commenters be more objective so that their commentaries will be liked by other bloggers. In some cases, I write an antithesis to rebut and set things in the right perspectives.

    Mind you, your blog amused me.

    Like what you said {” I hope people will stop making hate campaign here….because all I can see are people full of hatred without knowing the issues at hand”} What I see here is  that you are being  presumptive. And then in a part of your earlier statement {” prove to us that you are worthy of presidency….because all I can see right now is you are using this issue for personal vendetta because we all know that arroyo approved the decision regarding the Luisita in favor of the farmers.” } You are being inconsistent about hatred, you want people to stop hatred campagn, but yourself is exposing your hatred of Pnoy by making innuendoes. Another innuendo  against Pnoy ,of yours  {” Can you imagine he is funding some    of the country’s budget to MNLF and ABB …. crazy….tell me do you support this move of the president to fund the terrorist” } This is a blatant lie, you know.

    What is laughable as well as the worst part of your blog is {“People of the Philippines, please T H I N K!!! Think before we speak and even before we past judgement on other people….Because its hard to take all the things we have said”}. BUT LOOK, YOU ARE NOT APPLYING THIS TO YOUSELF. HOW CAN WE BELIEVE YOU!

  • Anonymous

    REDAN THINK AND THINK HARD AND REMOVED YOUR BIASES!

  • jarderj

    Please, T-H-I-N-K also or have some research before giving your personal opinion!! What fund’s did you meant that the present President is giving out to the RPA-ABB? For your info, the negotiation of peace process with the RPA-ABB and the (our) government started way back December 1999 and one year later the agreement of that peace process was signed by both parties. It is on that agreement that the government agreed to give fundings for the projects identifed by the RPA-ABB that for them was long neglected by the government and also included are funds for them to start their own livelihood. Now, can you call this treason, if the present administration now wants to implement the said agreement started by their predecessor so that this one violent faction in our society will finally end their armed struggle or this is a small price the government had to spend just to achieve a long lasting peace?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_44X3AHEVMI35MYLOWVLHKWKINY Jet

    PNoy giving funds to the terrorists is a lie? Have you been really reading as part of your daily activities?

  • Anonymous

    leubas, ikaw wala kang bias? esep esep

  • Anonymous

    “only Gloria, but not Mike, has invoked a medical emergency to be allowed to travel. And yet when the ban on Gloria’s travel was lifted, Mike likewise became free to leave by virtue of the consolidation.” 

    I’M ASTOUNDED THAT THIS CAME FROM A LAWYER, ONE WHO HAS APPLIED SEVERAL TIMES FOR SC JUSTICE (AND FAILED MISERABLY). ONE’S RIGHT TO TRAVEL IS ENSHRINED IN THE CONSTITUTION, IF NON OF THE EXCEPTIONS TO THIS RIGHT (SUCH AS A CASE FILED AGAINST THE INDIVIDUAL) THEN EVERYTHING ELSE IS A NON ISSUE. 

    THE DOJ CIRCULAR IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL WHETHER THERE IS A MEDICAL REASON OR NOT, SO IT IS IMMATERIAL.

    THE SC HAS BEEN THE SCAPEGOAT OF THIS GOVERNMENT’S INADEQUACIES AND BLUNDERINGS.

    Ikulong si GMA
    Pero Sundin ang Batas.
    Magisip!

  • Anonymous

    Who says the circular is unconstitutional?  I thought the court issued a TRO against the implementation of the circular.  Correct me if I am wrong, but my understanding is TRO is not a constitutional ruling.  I always thought a TRO is a temporarily relief, and in no way related to the opinion of the court regarding the legal question at hand.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2HJBL6UKCWWSZ6XRLLBEFKU7ZQ Dex

    The Constitution effectively says so. That Circular I would contest to the very end regardless of who implemented it, Marcos, C. Aquino, Ramos, Estrada, Arroyo or N. Aquino. Unless there is a HDO from an ongoing case or there is risk to national security, public safety or public health, Filipinos are free to travel.

  • http://twitter.com/ManuelPSev Manuel Sevilla

    Yes we’re talking about the SC. But both courts pertain to GMA. In the past, courts usually take days before they issue an arrest warrant. This is so because the accused’s case would be given a thorough review to protect his/her rights. What happened yesterday was railroaded. How can a judge make a thorough review and find probable cause in just 1 hour and issue an arrest warrant? Something is not right here…

  • Anonymous

    That’s why the circular is going to be argued in the high court.  I recall former DOJ gonzalez issued the same circular several times, but no civil rights advocate lawyer took gonzalez to the court to question the legality of circular 41.   I thought arroyo is doing a favor to the filipinos by having the circular under the final scrutiny of the court.  The court can finally affirm the circular as constitutional or declare it illegal. Now if the court says it is unconstitutional then by all means people not under the jurisdication of the court can leave the country.

    looks like you are one principled lawyer, but how come you never questioned the legality of the circular when it was first implemented during the GMA administration?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2HJBL6UKCWWSZ6XRLLBEFKU7ZQ Dex

    Am not a lawyer and this is the first time I have heard of this circular. I have always thought that one needs a Hold Departure Order issued by a court to prevent one from travelling. I was wrong in that assumption just as that watchlist order is wrong.



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