Honorable Capt. Gary Alejano’s struggle
09/17/2010
When  I watched the farcical Senate, with the likes of Joker Arroyo faulting  media’s work in the hostage crisis, and read such do-nothing solons  criticizing our colleagues Michael Rogas of RMN and the TV crews, I can  only thank media for risking life and limb to get the full story or else  the tales of the dead hostages and Senior Insp. Rolando Mendoza may  never have come to light — this, as the highest officials of the land  are still trying to cover up their dark motives, siopao predilections,  and gross incompetence.
Media need not apologize;  the authorities failed to direct the scene in every way. But as I watch  these farces, I remember the real struggle of a few good men of idealism  and vision, continuing their fight for justice and social change  despite the absence of media’s klieg lights: Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV,  still in unjust detention, and Capt. Gary Alejano, who won the mayorship  of Sipalay, Negros Occidental but was Hocus-PCOSed and now fights for a  manual recount.
Media should pay more attention  to these real struggles, as these people are the ones who can make the  difference. In fact, the women behind these warriors are as dedicated  and visionary, too: Arlene Trillanes, once a military officer in her own  right, and Minnie Alejano, who carried the campaign when Gary was in  detention. The public knows much more about Senator Trillanes than they  do about Gary Alejano. The latter is a young 
Marine  officer who abandoned the much-coveted Medal of Valor Award almost  eight years ago on the day he chose to join the Bagong Katipuneros’  march to Oakwood to make a stand for change by condemning corruption in  the military and beyond. In all these years, Alejano’s twin girls only  grew up visiting and playing with him inside the Fort Bonifacio brig and  later the Camp Crame detention center.
Capt. Gary  Alejano’s aborted Medal of Valor was based on his rescue of a team of  soldiers from another unit trapped and under severe threat from enemy  combatants in an encounter along the Narciso Ramos Highway, which  connects Marawi and Parang to Cotabato. The Medal of Valor is the  highest, most prestigious, and most coveted honor given to any member of  the Armed Forces of the Philippines for “acts of conspicuous gallantry”  and a deed “of personal bravery and self-sacrifice above and beyond the  call of duty so conspicuous as to distinguish himself clearly above his  comrades in the performance of more than ordinary hazardous service.”
Gary,  whom I have come to know well since his detention in 2003, exhibits  truly heroic humor and equanimity in the face of the worst possible  crises, as I have witnessed when I was arrested and detained with him  after the Manila Peninsula stand-off at Camp Crame.
Candidate  Alejano ran in the last elections, along with fellow Magdalo partymates  in other parts of the country, such as Navy Seal Lt. James Layug, Army  Capt. Dante Langkit and Lt. Ace Acedillo, who ran for congressional  seats in Taguig, Kalinga, and Cebu, respectively.  Even though Magdalo  was not accredited as a party despite its track record as a national  organization of around 85,000 card carrying members to date, these four  gentlemen still had the fortitude to run as independents.
By  all accounts, Alejano won in his bid for the mayorship of Sipalay, a  city which he has great vision for — a vision that inspired his  constituents to come together to vote for him in the hope of freeing  their beloved place from the monopoly of the Montilla dynasty that  prevents the full development of tourism and mining potentials there.
On  election day itself, the camp of the Montillas had already become  mournful. Their impending debacle became clearly written on the wall.  Eight of 10 “deacons” of a religious sect had joined the campaign of  Alejano despite the promise of money and threat of expulsion from their  church. Volunteer campaign workers for Alejano had swelled the ranks,  and nothing stood in the way of a people’s victory over the old dynasty.
The  mood in the other camp only turned for the better when rumor filtered  out from their headquarters that they had found the “fix” to deliver the  “winning” votes. Alas, as in so many areas of the country, such as in  the premier city of Manila, where candidate Lito Atienza is now engaged  in a recount of the Hocus-PCOS votes, the issue of manipulated voting  machines reared its ugly head.
Alejano has filed a  protest with the Commission on Elections, calling for a recount, and is  still being asked to fork over P235,000. That is not an amount easy to  come by; yet he is determined to push through with the recount to prove  the election anomaly — in the interest of future election exercises  which would become meaningless if the Hocus-PCOS is allowed to wreak  havoc again. I have joined Alejano’s struggle to obtain this manual  recount of votes, to prove the Hocus-PCOS fraud and seat the rightful  and deserving leader in place.
Contributions to Alejano’s “
Election  Protest Fund” can be sent directly to Gary Alejano, Samahang Magdalo  HQ, 2/F Timog Bldg., Barangay South Triangle, Quezon City. I am also  doing the rounds of friends and supporters personally to raise funds for  this cause. Please help restore our democracy; let’s each do our share.
(Tune  in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on  1098AM; watch Politics (and Economics) Today, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with  replay at 11 p.m. on Global News Network, Destiny Cable Channel 21;  visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and  http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel) 
Source:  The Daily Tribune
URL: 
http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100917com5.html