Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Finding St. Charles Borromeo in pandemic times

TODAY, Nov. 4 is the feast day of St. Charles Borromeo, cardinal-archbishop of Milan, who stayed put in place even as the secular authorities abandoned the principality upon the outbreak of the plague of 1576.

Charles organized the care of those stricken and ministered to the dying. It is said that he fed from 60,000 to 70,000 people daily using up his own funds, so much so that he went into debt.

We reflect on the response of the saint to the plague, in his own words:

To the faithful: A long time ago I resolved never to leave undone anything which might be for my people’s good. I beg you, above all, not to lose heart. Do not be affected by the example of those born and bred in the city who hurriedly abandoned it by flight at the very moment when it needed help…

The dreadful state of these wretched creatures, everything lacking both for soul and body. These unhappy children seem to look on me as the cause of all their ills. Their silence reproaches me for my idleness. I put off holding out a helping hand when by my example I should have moved others to pity. I will delay no longer. By the grace of God, I will do my duty to the utmost…

We have only one life and we should spend it for Jesus Christ and souls, not as we wish, but at the time and in the way God wishes. It would show presumption and neglect of our duty and God’s service to fail to do this.

To his priests: Do not be so forgetful of your priesthood as to prefer a late death to a holy one…

Take the plague of the soul in consideration more than the contagion of the body which, for many reasons, is less pernicious.

Do not neglect human means, such as preventatives, remedies, doctors, everything that you can use to keep off infection, for such means are in no way opposed to our doing our duty.

In God’s mercy: God can replace us…

From the beginning I resolved to place myself entirely in God’s hands, without however despising ordinary remedies…

Not by our prudence, which was caught asleep. Not by science of the doctors who could not discover the sources of the contagion, much less a cure. Not by the care of those in authority who abandoned the city. No, my dear children, but only by the mercy of God.

A testimonial

A Capuchin brother named James, who worked in the leper house where St. Charles went to almost daily to give the Sacraments to the suffering and the last rites to the dying, witnessed: “He often goes to the lazer [leper] house to console the sick… into huts and private houses to speak to the sick and comfort them, as well as providing for all their needs. He fears nothing. It is useless to try to frighten him. It is true that he exposes himself much to danger but so far he has been preserved by the special grace of God, he says he cannot do otherwise. Indeed, the city has no other help and consolation.”

(Culled from articles in the web)

 

Sunday, October 11, 2020

The Che mystique persists

IT HAS BEEN 53 years – well over half a century – after his death, but Ernesto Guevara de la Serna still lives. No incorruptible saint – in fact the so called “Butcher of La Cabana” for signing the death warrants of hundreds of “war criminals,” read: military officers of the ousted Batista regime as well as informants, and counter revolutionaries – Guevara has gained cult status around the world.

Notwithstanding too, the late – and still continuing – discoveries of his proven failures and alleged atrocities.

It was on the occasion of his 44th death anniversary in Oct. 2011 that I essayed to touch the Che mystique, thus:

“COMANDANTE STAR on a black beret capping a frowning, pensive handsome face; left eyebrow slightly raised; black, long hair waving in the breeze.”

Beyond the image of Che Guevara pop cultured in millions of T-shirts, posters and decals around the globe, what do the young and not-so-young know about the man already long dead – executed on October 9, 1967 – even before they were born?

Essentially, nothing.

So, what fascinates them to wear that icon, in virtual veneration of the man they don’t even know?

Irreligious blind faith?

The aura of enchantment around that image of Che known in the whole of Latin America as El guerrillero heroico is – to Paco Ignacio Tabio Jr., author of the definitive Guevara: tambien conocido como el Che (Guevara: also known as Che) – wrought by “the manifestation of a transparency and supernatural honesty.”

There, arguably, lies the Guevara mystique.

The photograph was taken by Albert Korda for the Cuban newspaper Revolucion at the public funeral of the 81 fatalities in the explosion of La Coubre, a French ship laden with Belgian arms at the Havana harbour on March 4, 1960. Unpublished, the photo remained in the newspaper morgue. In 1968, the Italian publisher Giacomo Feltinelli, researching on the life of Che, found the photo in Korda’s house, took it back to Italy and made a poster from it. The rest, as clichéd, is history. The irony not lost in the capitalist success rising out of a communist “artifact.”

The Che brief may well read: Argentine by birth, doctor of medicine by education; adventurer and motorcycle enthusiast, poet, photographer, writer; by revolution defined and deified.

The essence of Che may well be in his word: “The only passion that guides me is for the truth…I look at everything from this point of view.”

By his truth he lived. By his truth he was executed. Life and death make a universality that finds relevance to and resonance in the world to this day.

An unshakeable belief in the people that makes the core value of the true revolutionary: “There is no effort made towards the people that is not repaid with the people’s trust.”

Vanity

A damnation of the vacuous vanity of self-ordained champions of the masses: “The people’s heroes cannot be separated from the people, cannot be elevated onto a pedestal, into something alien to the lives of that people.”

The masses eke an existence out of hovels, even as they look up to their heroes luxuriating in their high-walled mansions. So un-Che, so unheroic, so undemocratic, so prevalent. And so very Filipino.

Che holds the purity of the democratic ideal before its corruption by the politics of patronage: “How easy it is to govern when one follows a system of consulting the will of the people and one holds as the only norm all the actions which contribute to the well-being of the people.”

Compare with the Filipino norm of governance: Off with the people, buy the people, fool the people. Thus, the first call of the revolution: “People – forward with the Revolution! Workers – to the struggle! Peasants – organize!”

Romanticism – damned by Mao as a bourgeois diversion to be expunged from the Chinese Revolution, and for that matter, from all revolutions – finds a refining, humanist aspect in Che’s own: “If it were said of us that we’re almost romantics, that we are incorrigible idealists, that we think the impossible: then, a thousand and one times, we have to answer that yes, we are.”

The Latino attributes of intense passion, sentimentalism, and romanticism do not diminish any, but in fact even enhance, nay, inflame revolutionary zeal. Che makes the perfect argument: “At the risk of seeming ridiculous, let me say that the true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. It is impossible to think of a genuine revolutionary lacking this quality.”

(In college, barely versed in Che’s life and works, I wrote an essay on Che titled The Romantic Revolutionary. Modesty be damned, I got a flat 1 on that. More importantly, bragging rights for having already grasped Che’s essence even then. Though my enchantment with Che started in high school, in – of all places – the Mater Boni Consilii Seminary.)

Humanism

Che takes the humanist facet of the revolution further: “Revolutions, accelerated radical social changes, are made of circumstances; not always, almost never, or perhaps never can science predict their mature form in all its detail. They are made of passions, of man’s fight for social vindication, and never perfect.”

Yet another taboo in the revolutionary movement – adventurism – was taken to the positive plane by Che: “Many will call me an adventurer, and I am, but of a different type: of those who put their lives on the line to demonstrate their truths.”

So, Che demonstrated his truth with his death, something the romantic adventurer in him put thus: “Wherever death may surprise us, it is most welcome. Our funeral dirge will be the staccato sound of machineguns and the cries of battle and victory.”

Some object lessons there for the RAM, the Magdalo, the YOU and what-have-you in the Philippine military wanting a coup. Moreso, for the current cadres of the longest-running insurgency in all of Asia.  

Che’s thesis on revolutionary praxis makes one of the most succinct on the subject: “And it must be said quite sincerely that in a true revolution, to which everything is given, from which no material returns are expected, the task of revolutionary vanguard is both magnificent and anxious…In these conditions, a great dose of humanity is needed, a sense of justice and truth, if we are not to fall in the trap of extreme dogmatism, of cold scholasticism, of isolation from the masses. Every day we have to fight so that love for humanity can be transformed into concrete deeds, into acts that set an example, that mobilize.”

There lie lessons in revolutions Che had fought, had seen, and in those he did not see: the Stalinist dogmatism that pervaded the Soviet Union and its satellites, the excesses of China’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, Mao’s cult of personality, the Khmer Rouge’s killing fields. And, in the current of events, Xi Jinping taking China to the imperialist road to perdition.   

Failure

Before his fatal failure in Bolivia, Che bombed out in the Congo in the 1965 attempt to start the conflagration of the African continent that, to him, represented “one of, if not the most, important battlefields against every form of exploitation that exists in the world.”

“We cannot liberate by ourselves a country that does not wish to fight,” Che conceded defeat six months after. A pointed lesson that it is as hard to start as to stop revolution from without. Lessons for Che himself in Bolivia, for the USA in Vietnam, and the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Lessons still unheeded today in Iraq, in Chechnya, and again, in Afghanistan. Hasta la victoria siempre – ever onward to victory – usually captions the Che icon. It was the exhortation that closed Che’s letter to Fidel Castro before he left for the Congo. It has become the rallying cry for revolutionaries around the world.

But Che had a more stirring call for revolutionary solidarity: “If you can tremble with indignation every time an injustice is committed in the world, we are comrades.”

Hasta siempre, Comandante Che Guevara!

 

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Cabalantian in memoriam

 

OCTOBER 1, 1995. 8 A.M. Stampeding elephants were coming again. Their thump was even fiercer than before. A second wave of lahar was avalanching.

“Dios co, Dios co po…” someone exclaimed not so much in prayer as in horror. The sounds heard four hours past became a nightmarish vision: parents and children flailing arms, shouting for help on their roofs being carried away like paper boats by cascading lahar, people stretching out their hands in their last struggle before being pulled under by violent currents to suffer death by quicksand, an entire neighborhood in fast forward mode toward muddy, sudden oblivion..

The Oct. 1, 1995 event later became known as the Cabalantian Tragedy.

Bacolor Mayor Jun Canlas cites official count placing the dead at 550. But Lucia Gutierrez, provincial social welfare officer, insists there were more.

“So many died there. I think the biggest number of lahar fatalities in Bacolor was during the Cabalantain incident,” she said.

The probability is that no one has made a serious effort to count the dead.  Relatives of those who died, it would seem, just want the past buried. They remember their dead, for sure, but it pains them to think of how they died.


Phivolcs volcanologist Jaime Sincioco, who was among those who had forecast what happened to Cabalantian, says that from 10 million to 20 million cubic meters of lahar debris avalanched on the barangay that day. He cites estimates that the entire community was buried under 10 to 20 feet of lahar materials.  

(From the book Pinatubo: Triumph of the Kapampangan Spirit (2008) edited by Bong Z. Lacson)

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

No mere construct is Marcos' martial law

 “THE PRESENT generation that is loud in its condemnation of Marcos never experienced Marcos. So that rant is directed at their construct of Marcos. Shouldn’t they be studying Derrida and Lyotard more?”

San Beda Law Graduate School Dean Ranhilio Aquino falls flat on his snooty nose at this vain attempt at intellectual snobbery timed for the dead dictator’s birthdate.

No scale of Derrida’s Deconstruction, no scope of Lyotard’s “postmodern incredulity towards metanarratives” can disprove – as they can only hopelessly dispute – that Marcos, and all that evil that outlived him, happened. What with   thousands upon thousands of Filipinos as living testimonials.

Generations of disconnect to the actual events are easily bridged by generations of those who were there. So, what stirred Aquino’s ­pa-intellectual idiocy?

Or did he just show what really lies beneath the veneer of his burnished law graduate school dean construct?     

No mere construct though is my own story of martial law. Here reiterated for the nth time is its beginning:

A SATURDAY. Up early for a “DG” – discussion group – at the Assumption College in San Fernando.

Something uncanny, there is nothing but pure static on the radio. The usual though – light banter, small-town gossip among passengers – at the jeepney from somnolent Poblacion, Sto. Tomas to the capital.

Something uncanny, there are no newspapers at the news stands. Only komiks are being hawked by ambulant newsboys.

At the Assumption bus, some sense of gloom, a foreboding of doom, guarded whispers among us students of something terrifying…

On campus, a disturbing quietude. Still, some two-dozen hardcore KM-SDK activists go on with the DG originally to finalize the agenda of the demo at the gates of Camp Olivas planned for Tuesday.

Marcos has declared Martial Law. First heard from a kasama with a brother in the military. The PC – Philippine Constabulary – has been rounding known activists since last night. Not even pipsqueak of Makibaka, Huwag Matakot! heard.

Just then, a platoon of uniformed constables enters the campus. Enough for all of us to find any and all means out of Assumption except the main gate where, we presumed more PCs are posted, maybe even with machineguns.

Downtown San Fernando, in front of the town hall are 6X6 PC trucks, military fatigues are everywhere. Long hair is sheared not by scissors but mostly by bayonets and hunting knives.

Jumped on a passing jeepney, just in time. My long tresses – down to my shoulders and back – saved for the day.

Proclamation 1081 – declaring Martial Law in the Philippines though dated September 21, 1972 came into the open in September 23.       

Martial Law! The news is out – even in barriotic Sto. Tomas. Arriving home, in time to see my mom stoking the last flames flickering on a mound of ash that used to be my beloved Communist Manifesto, Das Kapital, Lenin’s thoughts in volumes of pamphlets, Mao’s The Five Golden Rays and the Little Red Book, Amado Guerrero’s Lipunan at Rebolusyong Pilipino, posters of Che Guevarra, Marx, Lenin, and Mao.

In between tears, a jumble of Marx-Lenin-Mao thoughts – The history of all hitherto existing society is a history of class struggle… Capital is dead labor, that vampire-like, only lives by sucking living labor, and lives the more, the more labor it sucks…The way to crush the bourgeoisie is to grind them between the millstones of taxation and inflation…Trust the masses, rely on the masses, learn from the masses…The people, and the people alone, are the motive forces of history…

And Che’s mind too: What do the danger and sacrifices of a man or a nation matter, when the destiny of humanity is at stake?

All gone in a holocaust!
An early morning date with the neighbourhood barber the next day. After a long while, the sun burns my ears and nape again.

Lie low, really low. Take refuge in the rice paddies. In morbid fear of what tomorrow may bring.  

So, what hath Martial Law immediately wrought?

Resumption of classes. By the main gate of Assumption College, the dreaded Black List is posted – names of activists who will not be re-admitted unless with clearance from the PC commander.

A piece of advice from my political science professor: “Don’t go to the PC alone, they will just arrest and detain you, as they did to a number of your comrades. Bring somebody influential with you.”

Apu Ceto

So, whom am I to seek but my spiritual director and rector at the Mother of Good Counsel Seminary – the Rev. Fr. Paciano B. Aniceto. (I was not even a year out “on probation” from San Jose Seminary then.)

At the Pampanga PC Command beside the Capitol, Apu Ceto vouched for me as a character witness before a panel of interrogators, and then took my case to the provincial commander himself – the dreaded Col. Isidoro de Guzman who would later earn infamy in the Escalante Massacre in Negros.

Alone at the interrogation room, I was subjected to romanza militar at my every answer the berdugos did not take to their liking.

“KM o SDK?”

Wala po – A smack on the head.

“Name? Alias?”

Caesar Lacson y Zapata. Nickname: Bong. No alias – A slap on the face.

Ikaw si Carlos. Di ba ikaw itong nasa mga letrato (shoving to my face a number of photographs of marches, rallies and demos)”

Kamukha ko po – the table suddenly kisses my face.

Then off to the detention center at the side of the command. At each single cell, the sergeant – Pascua or Pascual? – shoves my face between the iron bars and asks the detainee: “Kasama mo ito?” and then turns to me: “Kilala mo yan?”

Of course, we knew one another but no one ratted out. Conscientization most manifest there.

Contusions and all, I managed to be remanded to the custody of Apu Ceto. I have written this and I write it again: The good father, in what could only be deemed as a leap of faith – in his God unquestionably, in me too, maybe – signed a document that said in part, “…in the event that subject activist-provocateur renew his connection with the Communist Party of the Philippines and its various fronts in the pursuit of rebellion; or undertake acts inimical to peace and order, or in gross violation of the provisions of Proclamation 1081 and other pertinent decrees, the signatory-custodian shall be held responsible and as liable…” with a proviso that in my stead, he would be placed in the PC stockade.
Did he tell me to change my ways? Did he impale in my conscience the gravity of my case, his implication in any instance of carelessness or recidivism on my part thereon?
No. From the Constabulary command, his mere request was for me to please accompany him to church.
Before the Blessed Sacrament, he knelt and silently prayed. He did not even ask me to pray with him. He just motioned me to sit near him.
By the side of the good father, in that darkened corner of the Metropolitan Cathedral, I wept. Washed by a torrent of tears was my rebirth, the renewal of my faith.
No spectacular drama presaged my epiphany, no blinding light, so to speak, shone on my own Damascus Gate. There were but flickering votives. And Apu Ceto.     

My return to faith. That’s principally what Martial Law wrought.

NO DECONSTRUCTION can alter, much less wreck, my martial law narrative. Not simply fact-based, but faith-grounded as it is.

 

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Libel-free



“WHEREFORE, THIS court hereby (a) provisionally dismisses the case; (b) orders the release of the cash bond…”
So ordered the Honorable Judge Jonel S. Mercado, RTC Branch 52 in Guagua town, of Criminal Case No. G-16-11638 – People of the Phil. vs. Diosdado “Ding” Cervantes Jr. y Cabrera, Caesar “Bong” Lacson y Zapata, and Eduardo Manugue y Guiao – on Aug. 12, 2020. Copies of which were released Aug. 25.
This dismissal arrived at after the complainant SPO3 Jimmy Santos failed to be present in the hearings scheduled July 29, Aug. 5, and Aug. 12, 2020, with Public Prosecutor Marlyds L. Estardo-Teodoro manifesting she was amenable to the provisional dismissal.
The brevity of the order totally belies the length of time the libel case took in court.
It was in Oct. 2015 that Santos filed a libel complaint with the Pampanga Prosecutors Office over the news story “2 Guagua cops under fire for hiding shabu evidence, acts of lasciviousness” inconspicuously published in page 2 of Punto’s Aug. 10-11, 2015 issue.
Written by Ding, it cited Manugue, identified as  provincial head of the Anti-Poverty Commission, as having accused Santos of keeping from the court one of three plastic sachets of shabu as evidence seized from a suspected drug dealer in a buy-bust operation and putting to personal use a vehicle impounded in the raid for use as evidence.
The complaint was brought to court in August 2016, at the RTC Branch 50 in Guagua town. There it remained virtually on “pre-trial” until Feb. 20, 2020 when the Honorable Judge Amor M.  Dimatactac-Romero inhibited herself from the case “to provide a clean slate for the parties to start with” citing the certiorari filed a year or so ago by the accused but dismissed by the Court of Appeals, whereby it was raffled off and landed at the RTC Branch 52.
What did not move – for a variety of reasons – for four years under one judge, was decided in three weeks by another judge. Quirks of justice, I just have to say. Especially given that the complainant, in all those four years, presented himself in court not more than three times.  
Long in coming, but the dismissal is finally here. And I cannot be any happier, consoled with the thought that it did not take another 20 years for this case to be resolved as the one previous to this had.
20 years ‘warranted’
Aye, I remember precisely praying for that with the dismissal of the first case coming immediately after I posted bail on the second. Writing here under the headline 20 years ‘warranted’ thus: Uh-oh, could have been speaking too soon. Yes, I have yet to be arraigned in one more libel case. Though I have already posted bail – P10,000 this time – to pre-empt the issuance of any warrant of arrest. Hopefully, this one won’t last another 20 years.
Criminal Case No. 97-149 for libel may be one for the books, if only for the 20 years it took for its resolution.
The case was filed in 1996 by one Rowena Domingo of the Mabalacat Water District over a Sun-Star Clark news story which exposed alleged cases of nepotism and abuse of authority in the managerial succession in the agency. Accused were publisher Joe Pavia, managing editor Ody Fabian, associate editor Bong Lacson, and of course the writer whose name I can’t immediately recall.
Immediate to the filing, veteran newsman Toy Soto brokered a meeting between us and the complainant where she said she would withdraw the case soonest. Taking her word, we did not present any counter-affidavits anymore and forgot all about the case.
In the course of time, Sun-Star Clark re-birthed itself as Sun-Star Pampanga in 2001. Ody died in February 2005, and Joe in 2011. Toy died in 2007, or thereabouts.
In November 2015, I was at the NBI applying for clearance pursuant to the renewal of my gun licenses when CC No. 97-149 surfaced in the agency’s records   with a corresponding alias warrant.
I had to rush to RTC 62 where my case was lodged, and posted the required cash bond of P2,000 for my provisional liberty. With RTC 62 designated a “drug court,” and me having not been arraigned yet, the records of my case were turned over to the Office of the Clerk of Court for re-raffle.

Atty. Rico
Initially assigned to RTC 60, CC No. 97-149 was – upon motion of my counsel Enrico P. Quiambao – re-raffled and landed at RTC 56 in April 2016. (Reminds me I haven’t thank Atty. Rico for being our counsel too in the case just dismissed).   
Right at the arraignment in June 2016, Rico made manifest the absence of the complainant and highlighted the number of years the complaint remained archived without any word from the complainant or her counsels. And moved for its dismissal.
WHEREFORE, this case is ordered DISMISSED against accused Caesar Lacson y Zapata for lack of interest to prosecute…
SO ORDERED. Given in open Court this 18th day of August, 2016 in Angeles City.
Thus, the Honorable Irin Zenaida S. Buan, presiding judge of RTC Branch 56, in a single-page decision, thoroughly expunged any iota of guilt and definitively “unwarranted” an alias arrest order on my person.
The case that dragged on – absent my knowledge – for all of 20 years took but two hearings to be scratched off the court archives.
Two decades for one case. Four years and ten months for another. Why am I keeping my strong faith in our justice system?
Because the cases have been dismissed and I am exonerated. Duh!
Beyond that is my core belief that a libel case is par for the course in the journalism field.
It is the only legal recourse of the citizen who felt maligned in print, broadcast, or personal utterance, to seek redress for her/his grievance. Indeed, the exercise of a civil right in our democratic state.
It is precisely owing to this that I never begrudged all those people who took me to court for libel. Seven or eight, I have lost count.
I respected their right to seek my comeuppance for whatever perceived and felt wrong I did them. I respected them for their civility – of going the judicial course instead of taking the extra-judicial route with extreme prejudice… 
Ay, I think I have read that in one of my previous writings. Maybe, I can just look it up and reprint it here as supplementary to this piece.
In the meantime, let me savor that “libel-free” vibe after 24 long years. For who knows how short this will last.   




Friday, August 7, 2020

Terminal case

 
“THE CLARK International Airport New Passenger Terminal is on track to be fully operational by January 2021, with the building shell already 99.52 percent completed.”
Good news amid all that gloom and doom wrought by the rampaging cases of the coronavirus disease afflicting the nation and the world.
“We are excited to see this project open in five months. Clark’s new and modern terminal will not only enhance connectivity and improve passenger experience, it will also further boost economic growth in the region,” enthused Flagship Programs and Projects Sec. Vince Dizon, also president-CEO of the Bases Conversion and Development Authority.
The new CRK passenger terminal is a joint project of the BCDA and the Department of Transportation under the Build, Build, Build program of the Duterte administration.
We, the people of the Metro Clark area, are as much, if not more excited than Dizon over this development, long, long promised it has been to us but only now on the verge of being delivered.
So, even as we relish the emerging realization of that dream long cherished, we can’t help but recall all the frustrations through all these years over the failure to launch the Clark terminal. That, we chronologized in a Zona piece dated July 16, 2012 aptly titled Terminal delirium, to wit:
In September 2006, on or around the birthday of her father, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo presided over the laying of the time capsule for the construction of Terminal 2. It was announced then that the sum of P3 billion, to come from the Manila International Airport Authority, the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp., and the Bureau of Immigration, among other agencies would be allotted for the project.
The plan did not pass beyond the publicity for the event.
Under the CIAC chairmanship of foremost architect Nestor Mangio, came the $1.2 billion proposal from an ALMAL Investments Co., a subsidiary of the Kuwaiti mega developer M.A. Kharafi Projects, “to cover all civil components of the DMIA Terminals 1, 2 and 3 plus the adjacent 1,500 hectares in the aviation complex strictly following the CIAC original master plan.”
Travels to Kuwait and Egypt by CIAC officials and even GMA herself yielded nothing but loose talks of Rolexes and Patek Philippes finding themselves on non-Arab wrists.
Thereafter followed the CIAC report of a group of major government-linked and private firms in Malaysia called Bristeel Overseas Ventures, Inc. (BOVI) offering to infuse at least $150 million in foreign direct investment to immediately undertake the much-needed expansion of the passenger terminal of the Clark International Airport.
And then we came to read that in a regular meeting on May 17, 2010, the CIAC Board “resolved to accept for detailed negotiations” the proposal of the Philco Aero Inc. on the Passenger Terminal 2 Development Project of the DMIA, as it was deemed “superior” to the BOVI proposal.
That was the first and last time we read about and heard of Philco Aero…
As one of the last official acts of GMA as president though, she inaugurated the refurbished terminal, complete with two airbridges two or three days before she stepped down. That was the only concrete, albeit incomplete, improvement at the CIA terminal after all those billion-dollar proposals
In January 2012 the CIAC was high with terminal fever again.
(CIAC President-CEO Victor Jose) Luciano announced that “they” are pushing for the construction of a budget terminal that will handle about 10 million passengers a year at the CIA.
According to the press release, “The new facility, amounting to P12 billion, will take three years to complete and make (the CIA) the second largest airport in the country, next to Manila’s NAIA.”
“This budget terminal is the kind of terminal that meets the requirements of our airport in Clark. Our terminal right now can only accommodate 2.5 million. So, we need a budget terminal to effectively say that DMIA is the next budget airline airport of the country.” So hyped Luciano.
In February 2012, CIAC signed a P1-billion loan facility with Land Bank of the Philippines for what it said was the Phase II expansion of the passenger terminal and other support infrastructure of the CIA, including navigational equipment.
Luciano said the bidding of the Phase II expansion of the P360-million passenger terminal was to start on March 5… 
Only a month or two ago, CIAC announced it was seeking some P8 billion for a low-cost carrier terminal, soon after upgraded to P12 billion, complete with presidential backing…   
With CIAC in this perpetual state of terminal delirium, Clark’s premier international gateway future could only be in coma.    
And it did not end there. Further terminal non-developments thereafter, as culled from past columns too:
P7.2-B LCC terminal
On October 2, 2013, Luciano announced, at the sidelines of Emirates’ inaugural Dubai-Clark flight, that the construction of the proposed P7.2-billion budget terminal at the Clark airport will likely start in the second quarter of 2014 and is expected to be completed by the second quarter of 2016.
The terminal, he noted, will have a capacity of between 10 million and 15 million passengers. He added the government may fund the project or place it under the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) program.
In May 2015, Luciano’s successor, Atty. Emigdio Tanjuatco III disclosed that CIAC “is set to bid out the contract for the first phase of the P7.2-billion low cost carrier passenger terminal building…within the next two months.”
Tanjuatco said the first phase of the project worth P1.2 billion would be presented to the NEDA for approval: “Once the President approves it, hopefully the bidding for the project will start by the middle of this year.”
In September 2015, Tanjuatco again announced that President BS Aquino III “finally approved the allotment of P1.2 billion for a new French-designed modern airport passenger terminal” at the Clark airport.
Tanjuatco went on to say that “the terms of reference for the project, which would cost a total of P15 billion when totally finished, are now being prepared for bidding.”
Rejection
In March 2016, Tanjuatco said CIAC “is bidding out the P500-million plan for its mixed-use passenger terminal this month.”
This, he said, was the result of the rejection by the NEDA Board of the Aeroport De Paris design as it was “too ambitious” for the 8 million passengers expected to use the airport by 2022.
Ay, illusions, deceptions, delusions, hallucinations – all make a terminal case of the Clark airport spanning two presidencies. Bred – in the bitterest irony – in Clark’s own home ground of Pampanga and Tarlac.
Comes now the Davao ascendancy, and a brighter promise for Clark…
SO ENDED our piece Clark, terminally published here in August 30, 2016, two months into the presidency of Rodrigo Roa Duterte.
And four years after, lo and behold: the new CRK terminal is 99.52 percent finished. No promises Duterte made here, he simply delivered.   



Wednesday, August 5, 2020

That Clark aerotropolis


 IN THE thick of the coronavirus pandemic, more mirage than miracle do I make out of a recent announcement of an aerotropolis rising “soon” inside Clark. Call it unguarded skepticism.  
“Just like its vision for CRK, LIPAD envisions to transform its project land to be a premier mixed-use township destination North of Manila – an aerotropolis that integrates logistics, general aviation, and tourism to work, lifestyle, and leisure with CRK as the center and key component of this development.” So was quoted, in a press release some days back, Bi Yong Chungunco, CEO of the Luzon International Premier Airport Development Corp., the consortium handling the operations and maintenance of the Clark International Airport.
Turnover of O&M to LIPAD: Bi Yong Chungunco, Transport Sec. Art. Tugade, BCDA president-CEO Vince Dizon, CDC president Noel Manankil, among others
To actualize that transformative vision, Chungunco said LIPAD plans “to leverage” on the combined commercial wealth experience of its consortium members as they are closely working with Filinvest Development Corp. -- itself the main cog of LIPAD, and Robinsons Land Corp., corporate siblings of LIPAD partner JG Summit Holdings Inc.
Chungunco said the development of some 800 hectares within the aviation complex “which includes both airside and landside areas” is part of the 25-year concession agreement LIPAD signed with the government for the O&M of the CRK.  
Aye, there’s the rub.
“Eight hundred hectares could only be for ‘aero’ or aviation component, the ‘polis’ part or township would demand much, much more,” somebody that looked like a former CEO of the Clark International Airport Corp. chuckled, nearly choking on his N95 mask in a chance meeting last week.
But ain’t the Clark civil aviation area comprising some 2,360 hectares?
Yes, he said, “under the jurisdiction of CIAC, outside the concession agreement.”
Turf war
Instant connection now to this latest news of turf war brewing at the CRK: CIAC asking the Department of Transportation for oversight functions over CRK, in response to LIPAD’s non-recognition of CIAC authority over the Clark Civil Aviation Complex as mandated by EO 716. (Read “Turf war brews at CRK” in  Punto, Aug. 4)
A matter of hectarage – the undeclared casus belli – right there is the arena of conflict that impacts directly on LIPAD’s aerotropolis vision for the CRK.  Our friend Transportation Secretary Art Tugade will have his diplomatic skills tested here.
Then there is Ramon Ang’s mega airport in nearby Bulacan province that any Clark aerotropolis would have to contend with. At a clear disadvantage for the latter, sheer size a giveaway advantage to the former. Why, the very viability of CRK will be at issue once the touted New Manila International Airport comes into being.    
Scale model of Ramon Ang's airport in Bulacan
So, am I raining down on LIPAD’s parade?
Far from these seeming gloom-mongering, I am all for the CRK. In all ways have been. Always will be. My writings will bear me out, dating back to the American occupation of Clark when we advocated for a dual use of the Clark airport – military and commercial.
It’s just that experience has shown that any talk of a Clark aerotropolis remained  just that. Talk.
Chichos
There was in February 2013 the Clark Aviation Conference 2013 with the theme ''The Case for Asia's Next Aerotropolis,” aimed to highlight “Clark's compelling case as an aerotropolis, an idea in community planning where airports serve as the center for new cities growing around them.”
Declared then CIAC president-CEO Victor “Chichos” Luciano: ''The event will highlight CRK's critical role in easing air traffic congestion in Manila and driving economic expansion in Central Luzon. It will also identify infrastructure and policy developments at Clark Freeport Zone that are designed to attract airport-related businesses and investments.''
Emphasizing: ''More importantly, the conference is a call for the full development of CRK as an aviation nerve center in light of the economic growth in Asia.''
The conference ended as it began. In verbiage.
Guiao
In May 2014, there was the 2nd Clark Aviation Conference dubbed “Clark: Reshaping Philippine Aviation – The Aerotropolis Concept.”
“…(A) compelling case to be an Aerotropolis, identifying the infrastructure and policy developments which will enhance Clark’s growth potential and economic impact.” So, it was hailed by its principal convenor, then Pampanga 1st District Rep. Joseller “Yeng” Guiao: “This is consistent not only with my own advocacy but with the clamor of various stakeholders in Pampanga and Region III to maximize both the advantages and resources of the Clark airport not only as a global aviation hub but as an economic driver of enormous potential for the province, region and the country.”
Note the operative words both fora shared which I highlighted – compelling case. As it turned out, no one was impelled even the slightest to walk the talk.  
Alas, Guiao lost in the elections that followed, his aerotropolis advocacy dying unbirthed.   
In June 2018, at the 1st Aeromart Summit at Quest Hotel, it was the turn of BCDA senior vice president Joshua Bingcang to bat for the “huge potential of Clark as Asia’s next aerotropolis” with the development of the CRK and the New Clark City going into full swing. And nothing more was heard of it.
Three tries at the bat. All three striking out. And they were not even the originator of the aerotropolis concept at Clark.
                                        Chichos Luciano and Manny Angeles
EYA
That distinction goes to then CDC president-CEO Dr. Emmanuel Y. Angeles.
In a forum of the Society of Pampanga Columnists which I headed in 2002, EYA broached the idea of an aerotropolis for Clark which he defined as – if memory still serves right now – “an airport-driven growth and expansion of cities into globally-competitive urban centers.” He even gave a time frame of 25 years for its realization into something like Schiphol in the Netherlands or any of those in the United States.
I remember The Voice’s Ody Fabian, still much alive then of course, asking EYA what would distinguish the Clark aerotropolis from those in other countries.
“It will have the biggest sundial in the world so that the time in Clark could be   seen even from up in the skies,” was EYA’s ready reply.
Persistent Ody asked: “So how would that sundial show time to evening flights?”
EYA’s instant answer: “We will put spotlights all around it.”
If only for that, Ody could have laughed his way to his grave.  
And I remain a skeptic.