12/20/2010
Coalition of the weak” and  “lovely collection of rogues and cowards” are some of the pejoratives  used for the countries that rejected this year’s Nobel Peace Prize award  ceremony in Oslo, Norway. Weak, rogues, and cowards… huh? Seriously?
Among  the 18 or so countries that joined the boycott, Vietnam, Venezuela,  Cuba and Russia are countries that have stood up to the foremost  imperialist in modern times. The United States of America, for  everyone’s information, maintains 800 military bases in 130 countries  and continues to trigger wars in smaller countries on all continents of  the globe (except Australia ).
Cuba, meanwhile, has withstood US  economic blockade since 1960; Vietnam defeated the US in 1975; Venezuela  has defied Uncle Sam to the benefit of Venezuelans and nationalized the  oil industry which the US once controlled; while Russia has gone  tit-for-tat with the US in arms control, missile defense, South Ossetian  independence, and a lot more since Putin restored Russian sovereignty.
It  would be more correct to describe the detractors of the Peace Prize  boycott as a gaggle of weak minds for wittingly or unwittingly missing  such obvious facts.
This gaggle among the local crop of naysayers  should not surprise anyone anymore.  The Philippine intelligentsia is  still a colonial vestige that survives and thrives on the handouts of  the imperial power.  From the nurturing of their journalistic careers  (with grants, scholarships, and visas), to the multi-national  advertising money poured in for their media organizations, to funding  for “human rights journalism” and recruitment to US academe, not to  mention prestigious awards and prizes, this intelligentsia merely sucks  from the great imperialist’s bosom.
Francisco Tatad, for instance,  tells a story of this writer he saw decades ago in Washington DC.  As  he saw the latter tugging his luggage and making his way to State  Department offices at the Watergate complex, the writer (now one of the  most vitriolic in the Philippine Star on the Peace Prize issue) said,  “Pera-pera lang ito,” revealing his role as a US hack.
The real  surprise is that among the countries that boycotted the Nobel Peace  Prize, Afghanistan and Colombia are both under US control. Were the  leaders of these countries instructed to join or was it their way of  nudging their American masters for more “aid” as it seems to be their  habit?
The boycott from Ukraine is no longer surprising as it is  under the new pro-Russia president Victor Yanukovych.  Sudan, another  country fighting off Western attempts to split it into two — the North  whose President Bashir is persecuted by the International Criminal Court  for “genocide,” a charge no African country believes, and the oil-rich  South that has pro-US rebel forces — also joined the boycott.  Iran, as  we know, has defied the West’s nuclear apartheid for quite some time, so  its boycott came as no surprise.
Other boycotting countries  include Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Serbia (which has real  issues against the West, such as the separation of Kosovo, later placed  under the leadership of a Mafioso and organ smuggler), Pakistan (which  has given the West the best runaround on its nuclear arsenal), Egypt ,  Morocco… and then the Philippines.
As I have said before, even if  the Philippine boycott was for mistaken reasons, it was the “right”  mistake, which may be a first step in wriggling a toe away from the US  straight jacket. Hopefully it won’t go the direction of Gloria Arroyo  who got one toe out in the Iraq pull-out but soon learned that the US  will still give her free rein if only for corruption, subservience, and  personal convenience — but never for political independence.
About  the Nobel Peace Prize’s latest Trojan horse, Liu Xiaobo, few know that  he rooted not only for the US attack on Iraq, but also praised the  US-Nato-led Afghan War and campaigns for China to be fully westernized.  For local intelligentsia such as the PEN writers who condemned China,  westernization and colonial mind slavery are a ticket to more visas and  Western literary awards or grants.
How can anyone with a right  mind award a Peace Prize to a war monger, and worse, to one that seeks  to erase Asian historical and cultural legacy? The mainstream of  Philippine opposition to the Peace Prize boycott is conveniently weak,  if not absent-minded. It likes to shoot from the hip while knowing very  little about the Nobel laureate and hardly considers the recent turn for  pro-war figures of the Peace Prize committee chairman, Thorbjoern  Jagland, a Nato war hawk and concurrent chairman of the hawkish Council  of Europe.
The Philippine anti-boycott voices reflect the  prevailing colonial mentality of local intelligentsia. It explains why  the Philippines is unable to break free from colonial exploitation and  oppression, making the nation exceedingly poorer.
If the nation’s  intelligentsia today were only half as proud and independent as those of  Cuba, Vietnam, Venezuela, Iran, or China, our nation would long have  stayed at the forefront of Asian intellectual leadership as the  revolutionary intellectual Rizal and company showed.  As things stand, a  Philippines that exists only under the shadow of the US will never grow  intellectually, cultural, politically, and economically.
(Tune in  to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on  1098AM; watch Politics Today with HTL, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay  at 11 p.m., on Global News Network, Destiny Cable channel 8; visit our  blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and  http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com; P.S.-“10 minutes lights out vs  power plunderers,” 7 to 7:10 p.m., Monday nights)
SLTC’s  gall. Take the case of the Slex operator, South Luzon Tollways Corp.  (SLTC) and its Malaysian partner, MTD Berhad. After perfunctorily  attending a TRB “hearing and consultation” meeting a week or so ago in  grudging compliance with the Supreme Court decision mandating it to hold  such meetings before even announcing any rate change, SLTC issued out  notice that: a) the TRB has approved its petition for provisional  increase of 300 percent over the present rate by Jan.1, 2011 but that b)  “‘out of goodwill’ and their sense of corporate responsibility they  will “grant” motorists discounts up to March 31, 2011. What gall!
So,  is the public supposed to thank SLTC and the TRB which is headed by the  DoTC secretary, for this show of magnanimity? Are we supposed to sing  hossanas to these guys? Of course not. If, as these guys reported, they  can afford to offer discounts and take a P75 million cut, what prompted  them to even ask for a 300 percent increase in the first place? And  then, in the same breath, why are they now asking TRB to give them the  means to “...recover P1 billion in lost revenues” since according to  them the automatic toll hike increase as provided in their agreement was  delayed since its implementation was suspended last July?
Obviously,  these guys have a mastery of their numbers and the terms and conditions  of what is now turrning out to be a “sweetheart contract” with the TRB  so they can play around with all this  false sense of responsibility and  sensitivity to the fate of the riding public. As lawyer and consumer  rights advocate Jun Francisco noted during the TRB hearing, the agency  was not being fair and responsible in the discharge of its functions as  it only gave the oppositors 24 hours notice to file their comments.  Moreover, Francisco noted, the TRB did not even discuss the genuineness  of the figures which the SLTC presented much more the accuracy of the  same. He advised, for example, that the submitted P10 billion cost for  the Slex rehabilitation and expansion submitted by SLTC’s Malaysian  partner to the Kuala Lumpur Exchange where it is listed is very  different from that which it submitted to the TRB. In the former, the  cost was supposed to cover the stretch from Alabang to Lucena City while  in the latter, it was adjusted to cover only the currently usable  portion from Alabang to Calamba. That is a huge difference by any  measure.
Given that submission alone, it does not take a rocket  scientist to figure out that the SLTC can very well afford not to  petition for any rate increase for the usable Slex stretch for the next  six maybe even 10 years even if its agreement with TRB stipulates that  it can do so every two years. That the TRB never even mentioned that  huge differential in any of its issuances or, if it believes that  Francisco’s data are wrong, to correct it shows how this regulatory  agency has been captured by the entity it is supposed to be regulating.
To those in the know this sorry state of affairs at the TRB comes as no  surprise at all. They tell us that Isaac David, SLTC’s president, and  the other Filipinos who joint ventured with MTD Berhad and wangled this  one sided contract with PNCC and thence TRB, were once connected with  both entities. They were, in one way or the other, instrumental in the  forging of these agreements whose incredibly disadvantageous terms they  are now imposing on the public. In short, they are dealing with  themselves.
MRT3, Stradcom redux. The sad, sad  story of these “public service” operators and these include, as we  earlier mentioned, the inter island shipping companies, domestic  carriers and, yes, those in the power sector (remember the IPPs and the  privatized entitities now all raring for rate hikes?), the water  utilities and even the telecoms groups, aew  the reality staring us in  the face by 2011 and beyond. These guys have gotten themselves highly  advantageous (to them and their owners and cohorts, in and out of  government, of course) contracts which the regulatory agencies are  hardly reviewing and whose contents they have yet to fully disclose to  the public.
What makes the Slex issue especially problematic for  Secretary De Jesus is the fact that he himself knows what these tollway  contracts are all about having been the head honcho of the Manila North  Tollways Corp. (MNTC) which is handling the North Expressway and  recently the SCTex. With such knowledge and experience the public was  reassured that which he did sensitively in the north he would or could  do in the south. Unfortunately, he seems to have given up on this one  and left everything to his subalterns and the likes of the TRB spokesman  Julius Cesar Corpuz who is acting more like the SLTC defense lawyer  than a government official. So, the question persists: can the DoTC  still hack it?
That question gained more currency with the  revelation that government will continue to subsidize MRT3 rates to the  tune of P7 billion by 2011 on top of preparing the public mind for a  possible rate increase on this facility. Again, the question being asked  is: Has the DoTC taken a second even third look at the MRT3 contract,  especially since it has been bruited about that government spent $800  million to and  more than 80 percent of the “economic interests” of the  MRT3 system? So, how does that “buy out” square with this multi billion  peso subsidy and fare increase? It is time the DoTC comes out with its  own study and assessment of this contract as it now stands given all the  changes which have happened since the time it got on track to this  time, six months after the P-Noy government’s take over.
The same  can be said of the Stradcom contract which has metamorphosed into a  multi hydra kind of operation with all kinds of fees being imposed on  hapless drivers, vehicle owners and transport operators. Quite apart  from refereeing the corporate intramurals which has consumed the company  lately to the detriment of the public doing business with the LTO and  LTFRB what has the DoTC done about this contract? Can it at least  explain to us mortals what the features of this contract are, what is  its standing at this point, how long will it still be in place and so on  and on. In a word, can somebody from the DoTC tell us what is happening  on this front and how much more suffering are we supposed to endure  before we can see the light of day?
These and other issues are  hounding and will continue to hound the DoTC until and unless it clears  the air and truly provides a clear path out of these “sweetheart  contracts” it has on its plate,most if not all of which this  administration merely inherited. And because it so inherited these  problems the more aggressively it should be able to secure solutions to  these. That is, if it hopes to gain the people’s trust and not be cast  like the others before it as a captive of the past. It is time the  regulators truly become what they are supposed to be — regulators — not  the regulated or the captured ones. 
Source:  The Daily Tribune
URL: 
http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101220com7.html