those dollar accounts #cj trial

MANILA, Philippines – Day 37 of the impeachment trial of Chief Justice Renato Corona began with a bold assertion by defense lawyers he will face squarely charges he kept $10 million in secret accounts. By day’s end, however, the defense team appeared shell-shocked, after its hostile witness, Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, shared with the court highlights of the chief magistrate’s dollar stash. Her source: a report by the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC).

Corona has $12 million in “fresh deposits” in various banks, Carpio-Morales said Monday. This is aside from the $10 million Carpio-Morales said Corona had maintained in 82 accounts in five banks and where he had made deposits and withdrawals “on very significant dates,” including the 2004 and 2010 elections, and on December 11, 2011, the day he was impeached by the House of Representatives.

i was fascinated by the huge amounts, and puzzled by the movement of funds, in and out, in and out, and i wondered “aloud” via facebook and twitter what that was all about, why move money around in different accounts that are all under his name anyway.  obviously it wasn’t to hide the money, because then he would have put it in the names of other people or aliases ala jose velarde.

no one had an answer on twitter, though one said it was indeed “very weird.”  but on facebook a friend seems to have figured it out:

he was trading his US dollars in the dollar trading market. Interest in FCDU deposits are extremely low. I wonder who was busy trading his accounts, or was he doing it himself on his spare time? … on just the transaction flows I estimate he lost about $2M over the years — which should reflect the general FC market trend of the same period. I hope some traders will be available to confirm these speculations.

now i want to know where those dollar deposits that coincided with “signfiicant events” came from.  unless the ombudsman’s testimony was indeed all a ‘lantern of lies,’ as the chief justice insists.

Morales noted that there were significant transactions made during significant dates, particularly in 2004 and 2007, which were election years, and during the week Corona was impeached. She said $418,193.32 in time deposit was withdrawn when Corona was impeached, and $417,978.80 was transferred to a regular trust fund.

“We will debunk all her bloated numbers. And once she is proven wrong, I urge her to immediately resign from her post for allowing herself to be used by this Administration and making a laughingstock of government auditing,” Corona said.

“bloated,” hmm.  so, less than bloated would be acceptable?  the lantern metaphor, though, is intriguing.  around here, lanterns are usually more decorative than illuminating.

claudine, tulfo, media

i disagree with senior journalist luis teodoro that the naia brawl deserved only “passing mention” in the news, the scuffle was a mere “incident of no public consequence,” and “most of us don’t really care” who threw the first punch.

it’s not as if such a public brawl, involving a celebrity couple and a media personality, were an everyday event around here; in fact it was the first of its kind, and what a sapakan show it was, with a spectacular touch of irony, to boot.

imagine — claudine baretto and raymart santiago* confronted mon tulfo because he was taking photos of her ranting at a cebu pacific rep about missing luggage, photos that would add documentary spice to the story tulfo must have been planning to write which would surely hurt her image, reputation, whatever.  in the end, it was a one-minute video (taken surreptitiously and uploaded on the internet by unknown parties) that was made public and it was a hundred times more maanghang, showing the couple and friends ganging up on tulfo the senior citizen.  unfortunately for claudine and raymart, the video was incomplete and doesn’t show who threw the first punch.

that’s of no public consequence?  we all have lessons to learn from the naia thrilla and the lack of working CCTVs, as well as from all the talk it has generated especially about media, mainstream and new, and appropriate public behavior in a world where everyone has a celfone with camera and can publish on the worldwideweb in a flash.

and, hey, if teodoro is correct that most of us don’t really care who threw the first punch, then media’s job is to make people CARE to know: we should WANT to know who’s telling the truth and who’s lying.

already, media people have passed judgment on claudine based only on tulfo’s story, and tulfo’s after-thoughts, and the viral youtube video.  basta, tulfo, their media colleague, is the aggrieved party, and the basagulero moviestar couple and friends are guilty of assaulting, ganging up, on a lone senior citizen who was only doing his job.   even inquirer columnist rina jimenez-david was quick to defend him: tulfo daw has a soft spot for the underdog, whereas claudine… and she dredged up past chismis about the actress as though to say, well, what can we expect.  the unspoken is, next to tulfo the gutsy reporter, claudine is just a movie actress with a spoiled-brat iskandalosa reputation.

naturally, tulfo is milking the media sympathy for all it’s worth, more confidently and vehemently insisting now that he did NOT throw the first punch, he had no reason to want to hurt the couple: wala akong dahilan na sipain o sumipa dahil, unang-una, hindi ko sila kakilala.  i suppose he has been advised: deny and deny until you die, ‘wag aamin — the conventional macho advice to pinoys caught with their pants down.

but there’s this anonymous account from an alleged eyewitness who, it would seem, was closely watching the sequence of events from start to finish.  thanks to  interaksyon.com:

A woman who claims to have witnessed the Sunday airport brawl involving columnist Ramon ‘Mon’ Tulfo and celebrity-couple Raymart Santiago and Claudine Barretto is corroborating the claims of the actors that Tulfo had kicked Barretto in the moments just prior to the melee.

The woman, who had also arrived at the airport’s Terminal 3 within the same hour as Tulfo and Santiago and Barretto, said she was within 20 meters and “hearing distance” of the three personalities last Sunday when the fight – captured and made infamous by a video posted on YouTube – erupted. By the woman’s estimate, up to 100 other people – airport workers as well as mostly passengers from various flights standing around baggage carousels – also witnessed the incident.

“We saw this woman ranting at these personnel over what I presumed was lost baggage,” the alleged witness going by the pseudonym “Anna” told InterAksyon.com over a phone interview. “But what really made me turn and take notice was when she started addressing this man in a photographer’s jacket.”

Anna says she did not recognize Barretto, her husband, Raymart, nor Tulfo, and did not realize who they were until she got home and some hours later saw news reports and the YouTube video of what transpired next.

“The woman started shouting, ‘Abusado yan!’ and ‘Are you taking photographs of us?'”

She said she saw “the man in the gray shirt” – apparently referring to Santiago – approach “the man in the photographer’s jacket” – Tulfo – asking, “Ano ‘yan? Ano ‘yan?”

Tulfo, she said, started making “fast” movements, “not really punches the way a boxer would do, but more like kung fu moves.” He jabbed and “pushed with a kick” – a hand and a foot moving forward simultaneously – apparently trying to create space and ward off the approaching Santiago.

Tulfo has acknowledged shoving Santiago, saying the actor was trying to confiscate his cellphone.

“Sinapak niya,” Anna said, though she could not say exactly where Santiago was hit.

Claudine then started approaching as well, Anna said. Tulfo again moved with his arms and legs, while Claudine was shouting, “What are you doing?” the witness said.

“Tumili si Claudine, and at this point, security was rushing,” Anna said. She then noticed how Tulfo hid his phone in a breast pocket, and, with empty hands waving the air, “mocked” Claudine.

“Wala, wala akong cellphone,” Anna quoted Tulfo.  [emphasis mine]

At this point, Anna said, “we had thought that the whole thing was about this dirty old tourist who was taking pictures of this lady. And so we were actually trying to support her.” She admits she wasn’t aware of Tulfo’s own claimed context behind Sunday’s confrontation. The Philippine Daily Inquirer columnist, radio commentator and TV5 talent says he was taking pictures to document Barretto’s behaviour towards the Cebu Pacific ground crew, which he suggested had gone from being rude to being abusive.

In any case, Anna said, they could only make out how Tulfo had hidden his phone and was denying he even had one on his person.

“Nasa bulsa ang cellphone! Nasa bulsa ang cellphone!” Anna said.

Santiago and Barretto supposedly asked aloud if there were any policemen or security personnel who could compel Tulfo to give up his cellphone.

Anna quotes Barretto as saying, “Hanapin niyo ang cellphone. Pakita niyo sa akin.” Within arm’s length, supposedly, of Tulfo, she was egging on security personnel to get Tulfo’s phone, ostensibly to verify whether or not he had taken pictures of Barretto.

Then, Anna said, “We saw him assault Claudine.” She said Tulfo “pushed and kicked” again.

“Natamaan si Claudine. I can’t say where exactly, but sa may thigh area,” she said.

That, Anna said, is what caused Santiago and his companions to pounce on Tulfo. “The video that we saw and that everybody has seen, that was the end of the whole thing na.”

She insists that Tulfo’s account of the incident, as she’s seen in the news, “is not correct.”

sounds credible to me, because unbiased.  and it’s consistent with claudine’s and raymart’s stories.  if true, it would seem that tulfo was not quite innocent, he was ready to rumble — why else that “kung-fu” stance and those “fast” moves with his hands and feet — and start the rumble he did.  he was so palaban, for a senior citizen, which would have been quite in keeping with his brusque belligerent macho persona.  all to defend his right to take photos of claudine, sabay deny daw that he even had a celfone?  how honest was that.

that tulfo, according to his own account,  started out siding with claudine vs cebu pacific, and then ended up siding with the cebu pacific rep, naawa na daw kasi siya, only tells me that by then he knew it was claudine, and nagkick-in na ang paparazzi mode, at biglang si claudine na ang villain.  how opportunistic was that.

claudine had every right to be angry and to express her anger at cebu pacific — 9 out 11 bags offloaded without notice!  and cebu pacific representatives, as frontline for the company, should have known how to handle irate customers like her, and should know better than to take any of it personally.  suing claudine now for abusive language, whatever, is just another distraction, it seems to me, and i wonder if cebu pacific is behind it.  hala, bawal nang mag-complain, what a twist.

what if tulfo had been big enough to join forces with claudine vs the real villain, cebu pacific.  wouldn’t that have made a bigger better story?  claudine and tulfo taking on cebu pacific for its dismal service that has long been a public issue?  what a scoop that would have been.  instead, tulfo ended up being complicit with cebu pacific.

read cito beltran’s “Aviation crisis in the Philippines”:

Are spin-doctors or public relations specialists working double overtime, or are Filipino consumers easily distracted that we can no longer focus on the REAL problems?

Up until this week, the big consumer issue was about how budget airlines have failed to deliver on their promises to customers and the growing discontent or anger of consumers because of government’s inability to do anything about the problem.

All that have taken a back seat as members of media and opinion leaders are “suddenly” focused on the “Thrilla in NAIA” or the brawl involving columnist Mon Tulfo and the tag team of Raymart and Claudine Santiago. It is sickening how government officials are now redirecting media and public attention to the brawl at NAIA and the non-existent CCTV because at the end of the day the aviation authorities along with DOTC officials should be held responsible for the whole mess.

I can understand the momentary attraction of watching the protagonists in this made for TV celebrity brawl. Unfortunately there was no actual or good video on the brief scuffle so you have to wonder who has been stoking the interest on air, in print or on the web for the “Thrilla in NAIA” instead of abuses in the airline industry?

It’s ironic that Tulfo and the Santiagos, who are both unhappy with the business practice of a budget airline actually ended up slugging each other, presumably because of their frustration, providing the airline timely and awesome distraction that effectively takes away the bad publicity from the airline. In the US, lawyers would have looked at the big picture and initiated a combined civil suit against the airline instead of each other.

read “Claudine’s ‘taray’ is refreshing,” which drew this retort addressed to readers vehemently disagreeing with katrina in the comment thread:

Roy Quintoa: If you wanted Claudine or Raymart to act like children respecting their elders, then TULFO should have acted like a father respecting his children and talked to them with proper manners as well… I would rather see a MEDIA MAN who would show some concern in such situations like approaching them properly and offering some help and suggestions and doing efforts in resolving problems like that. 11 may 1:23 pm

meanwhile, luis teodoro has kind of changed his tune.  read “Hyping it” where he takes media to task for its “tayo-tayo” culture:

… although it’s been said before, it still bears repeating: some if not most press people dish out criticism with such enthusiasm you’d think they were perfect. But when the other shoe drops, they can’t take criticism, especially when it’s other members of the media and press community who’re doing it. In one more demonstration of the “tayo-tayo” culture, they demand that everyone should look out for everyone else in the community, and should hype what’s basically an encounter between people who’re simply too quick with their fists (and feet) into an issue of principle. And they use not only Twitter and Facebook, but also the pages of their newspapers and their networks’ airtime to do so — acts that, while ethically dubious, they apparently think they can commit with impunity.

and what about the lady broadcaster who said on her radio-TV show that what happened to claudine happens to everyone, why get so angry, accept it na lang.  made me wonder if cebu pacific and/or tulfo has been passing out envelopes or calling in favors.  then, again, maybe she sincerely thinks she’s right.  i don’t know na which is worse.

and the whole spin that it was so wa-class and ill-bred of claudine to lose her temper and then to throw in some punches, too, no matter how provoked? — the lady columnist has even brought up claudine’s pink halter top and shorts, as if that were indecent, too, hello — is just so telling of how messed up we are.

anger is good, people, and the situation called for it.  let’s not lose our capacity for anger because there is much to be angry about.  and never mind “class” or “breeding” if “class” or “breeding” means doing nothing, or not fighting back, in the face of oppression.

*no, we’re not related to raymart

The laughter and love of friends

By Elmer Ordonez

From quiet homes and first beginning,
Out to the undiscovered ends,
There’s nothing worth the wear of winning,
But the laughter and love of friends.
(H. Belloc) 

I was deeply moved when Narita Manuel Gonzalez showed up unexpectedly at the memorial last April 29. Wheeled in by her daughter Selma, the widow of the late National Artist for Literature NVM Gonzalez, in her mid 90s, practically blind, took time away from her home in UP Diliman to come to Cavite to bid farewell to Elenita.

The Gonzalezes were longtime friends and senior colleagues in UP Diliman, in the English Department and the UP Writers Club. The young NVM was a student of my father, principal of Mindoro High School in the late 20s.

Narita who could no longer see tightened her grip on my hand when I told her my name – the grip of love and friendship. I remember NVM visited me in the hospital in 1999 several months before he passed away at 84. The Gonzalezes are so loved and revered that when their “Pioneer Home” in UP Diliman was burned, their friends rallied to replace the lost books and photos with copies of their own.

Inevitably a number of friends/relatives in our age group and over would be in wheelchairs. Two others came thus —each of them carried by four waiters up the second floor of the resort hotel which elevator had broken down.

Atty. Aurora Sayoc Abella, in her 90s, the last surviving aunt of Elenita, always comes as the matriarch of the Topacio-Sayoc family, to preside over family occasions — weddings, anniversaries, and departures. Her daughters, Dr. Arlene, Atty Cecile, and Bessie assisted her, granddaughter of Magdalo general Licerio Topacio. Former Prime Minister Cesar Virata, my contemporary in U.P., noted his lineage from the Topacio family tree. He remembered our putting out the 1952 Philippinensian.

Jacinto Buenaventura spoke in behalf of Tita’s high school classmates (’46-‘48) at Imus Institute, oldest college in Cavite.

Prof. Raul Segovia, first chair of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers, slightly younger than me, came in a wheel chair, assisted by his wife professor Lorna.

National Artist for Literature Frankie Sionil Jose, 87, could still manage to walk straight with a cane, accompanied by his wife, Tessie. Frankie recalled their having known us since the 50s and our spirited arguments over literature and politics. His fifteenth novel, The Feet of Juan Bacnang, was launched recently.

National Artist for Literature Bien Lumbera and wife professor Cynthia “Shayne” came. At 80 Bien was honored by progressive artists and cultural groups – an event I missed.

Novelist Rony V. Diaz and playwright/director/fictionist Amelia Lapena-Bonifacio, friends from the early 50s shared their pleasant memories of Elenita. Dear Aida, Rony’s wife, couldn’t come for health reasons. Rony and Amel have both finished their novels to be launched soon.

Professors of English Thelma B. Kintanar and Maybelle de Guzman remembered Tita by coming. Both had lost their loved ones recently. Other (colleagues/former students) from English showed up: Mila Carreon-Laurel, Nonilon Queano with Bella of Ateneo, Jennifer-Romero Llaguno (just widowed).

Fictionist Lilia de Leon came despite the fact that she was looking after her ailing husband in Pilar, Bataan. Writer Luning Bonifacio and Rene Ira sent regrets they couldn’t come. Tita was Luning’s maid of honor 57 years ago. Novelist Ester V. Daroy in mid 80s couldn’t come but sent her donation for the cancer fund and a beautifully designed book of Canadian authors.

Dr. Serafin Quiazon, the longest serving director of the National Library, his wife pharmacist Sonia, and retired SSS official Rey Gregorio, were among those who came — close friends and colleagues in UP Diliman. So did former RTC Judge Federico Alikpala, Jr. Serafin, Jun, and I belong to “Batch ‘50” of the Upsilon.

Artist/professor emeritus Brenda Fajardo spoke in behalf of the U.P. Arts Studies Department who came in full force, 20 of them led by Prof. Cecile de la Paz. Prof. Rosemarie Magno read a poem for Tita.

Penman Jose “Butch” Dalisay, jr. and his wife artist Beng (whose father is gravely ill) arrived. They are among the set of friends whom we met upon our return from exile – all active in the movement for social change. Butch wrote for the Philippine Star: “Tita was all sweetness and light (not unlike Beng herself, which was why they got along so well) but you could sense that underneath all that was a tough lady, steeled by her marriage to an accomplished writer forced into exile by martial law. Hers was a family of academics, artists, and achievers and I am sure that Tita would not have had it otherwise.”

Poet Roger Mangahas and feminist author Fe Mangahas came to see Tita off. So did ex-congressman from Bayan Muna Satur Ocampo with his wife, “Bobi” Malay. Satur spoke for the progressives present – Prof. Roland Simbulan, Prof. Roland Tolentino, Efren Yambot, Lerma de Lima-Yambot, Vivian de Lima, Rey and Cora Casambre, Norma Binas, and Rita Baua (representing BAYAN) .

The memorial was a reunion with ever supportive relatives (like Tita’s siblings and families, her cousins (Jacinto sisters, Sarroca sisters and families), nieces and nephews, plus those on my side (altogether, too many to name), friends old and new, all made aware what Elenita liked – “No sad songs for me” (from her favorite poet, Christina Rosetti). Any solemnity vanished as laughter and the love of friends and relatives held dominion.

My family’s deepest gratitude to all for remembering – and generous giving for the cancer fund.

national defense

DEFENSE Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said Wednesday  the United States seemed more interested in showing off its military might than helping the Philippines build up its capability for territorial defense through their 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty.

… the two cutters that the Philippines had acquired were often portrayed as “warships” by the media, but those were really gunboats without guns when they were turned over to the Philippine Navy.

“My only request which I have conveyed to him [Panetta] is that the cutters be upgraded,” Gazmin said, noting that the first ship, the BRP Gregorio del Pilar, had been stripped of all its weaponry except for one 76mm gun.

“We requested that the second cutter be given with its weapons system [intact],” Gazmin said.

He said the Defense Department, with a P70-billion budget for military modernization, was eying a third gunboat from Italy.

Earlier, Vice Admiral Alexander Pama acknowledged that the cutters that the US had sent to the Philippines came without their weapons.

meanwhile, senators enrile and honasan are practically saying that we should look out for ourselves and prepare vs. China:

“We must prepare. We better buy war equipment. We better buy our weapons, our means of defense,” Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, a former defense minister, told reporters.

Enrile issued the statement after Chinese vice foreign minister Fu Ying on Tuesday accused the Philippines of being responsible for escalating tensions over the disputed area in the South China Sea (also called West Philippine Sea).

“The Chinese side has… made all preparations to respond to any escalation of the situation by the Philippine side,” Fu reportedly told a Philippine diplomat.

Enrile said the Philippines should be prepared to face this head on.

“China is grabbing the place from us. Nagiging grabber na ang China. Anong gagawin mo kung ang kapitbahay mo, malayo ang bahay niya pero pupunta sa iyong kapaligiran at mayroon siyang espada, tampilan at pana o javelin. Di bumili ka rin ng tampilan. Maghasa ka rin ng gulok,” said Enrile.

Senator Gregorio Honasan, chairman of the Senate committee on public order and illegal drugs, supported Enrile’s sentiment but said the country should first pool its resources.

“Tama si Senate president [pero] alamin muna natin kung meron tayong pambili, importante yun,” Honasan said in a separate interview. Honasan is a former Army colonel who had served under Ernile at the Defense Ministry then.

since money is the problem, it is clearly a job for congress, to find the funds, and to do it fast.  in case diplomacy and non-violent protests fail.  and before we lose more territory.  parang this is just as, if not more, important than the corona trial, or the 2013 elections.  mag-multi-tasking sila.