Replaying Aesop | Inquirer Opinion
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Replaying Aesop

/ 09:18 PM November 07, 2011

“Will Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo do a Ramona Bautista?” our 15-year-old grandson Adrian asked over lunch.

“Mara” is one of Ramon Revilla Sr.’s 45 children, the senator’s sister Rowena says. No, disagrees a spokesperson for the 84-year-old former senator. Revilla Sr. sired 84 children with 16 mothers. The man said 80—after his son Ramgen was murdered.

Mara, her brother Ramon Joseph (RJ) and three companions were linked by Parañaque police to the rubout. Mara was to testify, on Nov. 8, on flip-flopping statements. Instead, she skipped to Hong Kong Friday, leaving RJ in the slammer.

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Her departure card and one-way ticket indicated she would fly on to Istanbul, a BID spokesperson confirmed. She is married to a citizen of Turkey.

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Return and sing, Sen. Ramon Revilla Jr. urged his half-sister. Turkey has no extradition treaty with the Philippines. So, he asked Mara’s mother Genelyn Magsaysay to weigh in.

“Stay out of my family’s affairs,” snapped Mara’s mom.

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The Department of Justice might request the International Police to add Ramona’s name to its “Red Notice List.” Few bet that Bautista would buy a return ticket to Manila soon.

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In contrast, former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and the former first gentleman will book round-trip tickets, says GMA’s chief of staff Elena Bautista-Horn. That’d reinforce GMA’s request that the government let her seek “metabolic bone biopsy” abroad. This procedure can’t be done here. Physicians however zippered their lips.

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Supposedly ailing, GMA wants to make side trips. These include the Clinton Global Initiative and International Commission Against the Death Penalty. Will GMA and Mike Arroyo use their return tickets from venues sans extradition treaties?

“Should we take the word of someone who said she would not run again but did?” asks Sun Star columnist Melanie Lim. “Gloria’s word is not worth much today.”

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We’re seeing a replay of Aesop’s fable, “The boy who cried wolf.” A shepherd boy cons villagers with false cries of wolf attacks, the Greek storyteller (c. 620-564 BC) wrote. Then, a wolf actually tears into his flock, but villagers shrug off his screams.

Across the centuries, the English idiom “to cry wolf” evolved to mean triggering a false alarm.

“The punishment of liars is when they speak the truth they are not believed,” Aristotle wrote. Wait. GMA can give you the Pampango version: “Ing malaram maniabiya mang catutuan, E no mapaniwalan capilan man.”

The word of a Don Sergio Osmeña was gilt-edged. But GMA’s? Just over half a century separates the first president of postwar Philippines and the 14th president of the republic. Yet, palabra de honor has been severely devalued. Why? This merits discussion.

For now, it is enough to note that GMA accepts that “the boy-who-cried-wolf” syndrome crimps her wish to scram. The former president submitted a notarized statement that she will return, her spokesperson says. Isn’t that enough?

Well, no, says Sen. Panfilo Lacson. GMA should first submit counter-affidavits on the plunder and electoral sabotage cases she is being accused of. These are non-bailable offenses. “That way, GMA does not delay or frustrate the preliminary investigations being conducted by the Department of Justice.”

Will anything be required of her husband? The Senate blue ribbon committee necklaced Mike Arroyo with dumping overpriced second-hand helicopters after GMA’s campaign on the Philippine National Police.

Lacson should know. He kept a step ahead of a court posse for 14 months in connection with the murder of PR man Salvador Dacer and his driver by Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Task Force men when he was top honcho of the PNP. That case remains unsolved.

Justice Secretary Leila de Lima has the unenviable task of balancing the constitutional right to travel, which the Marcos dictatorship shredded, with the likelihood of flight, which is high.

She crafts recommendations for President Aquino’s decision even as Dinagat Rep. Ruben Ecleo continues to elude arrest. After four reviews, the Supreme Court confirmed, the Sandiganbayan’s October 2006 decision sentencing Ecleo to 30 years for graft. A Cebu court reconfirmed the validity of a warrant for Ecleo’s arrest for the murder of his wife.

Gloria, Mara Bautista and Ecleo are not just more of the same. These cases underscore that “premium must be put on building a judiciary and police force that are seen as honest, fair and acting with integrity,” says the new Asian Development Bank study “Asia 2050: Realizing the Asian Century.”

To reinforce an “Asia on the cusp of historic transformation,” ensure that the rule of law applies to everyone. “Build strong transparent institutions. They define success. If graft is unchecked, it will eventually suffocate the rule of law. Devise participatory and accountability mechanisms. Build a civil service on merit. Implementation is what matters.”

The costs of missing the “Asian Century” would be staggering, says this new ADB analysis. GDP per capita would only be $20,600, not $40,800. Zones of modernity would coexist with zones of misery. “Billions will have to wait for another generation, or more” to have better lives.

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TAGS: Genelyn Magsaysay, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Ramona Bautista

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