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 The
circus of Philippine politics

IN THE WORLD of Philippine politics nothing should surprise
anyone anymore. Especially during election time: Old enemies
become best friends, and ideological allies suddenly see each
other on opposite sides of the political fence.
Just look at the waves of discontent produced by Senator
Loren Legarda joining hands with opposition candidate Fernando
Poe Jr. As the "crying lady" of the Senate, who
became a symbol of the EDSA People Power II forces, Legarda
has catapulted herself into the middle of the opposition,
accepting Poe's invitation to run as his vice presidential
candidate in the May 10 elections. This irked former senators
Francisco Tatad and Miriam Defensor-Santiago.
Across town, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's endless
flip-flopping around for political advantage finally made
civil society groups come out and declare that they were alarmed
by the president's outrageous "opportunism." They
were referring not only to the President's announced pledge
a few months ago of trying to achieve national reconciliation
by pardoning former enemies such as ex-president Joseph Estrada
and the Marcoses, but to the administration's proposed
line-up for the elections. Not only have Senator John Osmeña
and Orlando Mercado filed papers to run for the Senate under
the administration's Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats party,
but a slot had been reserved for Santiago too! Unfortunately,
Santiago has accepted the Lakas-CMD invitation to run under
its banner.
But EDSA People Power II activists must be heaving with horror
at Osmeña and Mercado running on the administration's
slate. Just as they must be upset at seeing Legarda run with
Poe, who many in the administration claim to be a doppelganger
for Estrada. But as Legarda pointed out in many interviews
this past week, Poe is a man of integrity, a man who cares
deeply about the poor and the nation, and someone who cannot
be manipulated. As she rightly pointed out to columnist Rina
Jimenez-David, Poe doesn't need a Harvard education to run
the country, which is exactly what I've been saying all along
to those sneering doubting Tomases.
The loser in all this ship jumping seems to be presidential
candidate Raul Roco. His campaign started with a loud bang,
but now seems to be sinking into oblivion with hardly a whimper.
He's been losing candidates right and left, the first being
Senator Rodolfo Biazon, who after jumping ship from the LDP
party to Roco's Aksyon Demokratiko party is now running on
the administration's ticket. On Wednesday, former president
Fidel Ramos' daughter Cristy withdrew from Roco's ticket after
her father told her to. Ramos is the chairman emeritus of
the Lakas-CMD, and naturally doesn't want his daughter running
against the administration.
Of course the official campaigning period hasn't started
yet, so Roco still has a chance of rebounding, but I wouldn't
bet on it. All the money seems to be on a Macapagal-De Castro
vs. Poe-Legarda fight. It's going to be bloody and it won't
be pretty.
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What's going on in Kuwait?
IT is unfortunate but true: Young Filipina housemaids in
Kuwait seem to be the target of choice these days for young
Kuwaiti men when they decide to rape someone.
Rape cases involving Filipina maids have cropped up in Kuwait
and the United Arab Emirates over the past six months. In
the UAE a few months ago, a young Filipina woman was gang
raped by several UAE men after she accepted a lift home from
them after attending a party. They drove her out to the desert,
raped her and dumped her there. Luckily, the police found
her in time and took her to a hospital for treatment. Now,
in Kuwait the Philippine embassy is pressing charges against
three Kuwaiti policemen who not only raped but also sodomized
an 18-year-old runaway Filipina maid. She had run away from
an allegedly abusive employer to seek refuge in a police station.
One can only imagine her horror to find out that rather than
be protected by the police, she was repeatedly raped by them!
Such cruel irony.
The three policemen have been detained and are denying the
charges, but according to a Kuwaiti newspaper forensic tests
have shown that she was indeed raped by the policemen. In
a heartening move, the Kuwaiti Ministry of Foreign Affairs
has said it is determined to have charges pressed against
the three policemen.
This is not the first rape of a Filipina in Kuwait. Just
a few months ago another Filipina domestic helper was gang-raped
by nine Kuwaiti teenagers at a desert camp. The late Foreign
Secretary Blas Ople protested strongly to the Kuwaiti chargé
d'affaires in Manila last November, but I haven't heard what
happened to the nine teenagers.
The problem with all these rapes is that it just shows how
many Gulf men think that foreign women, especially Asian ones,
are mere objects to satisfy their more obscene sexual desires.
I think it is symptomatic of a macho culture gone horribly
wrong, one where the rigid segregation of the sexes only serves
to make some Gulf men into sexual monsters.
The other side to these nasty rapes is why is the Philippines
deploying 18-year-old women to the Gulf to be housemaids?
I thought there were strict age restrictions for the domestic
helpers sent abroad, and that they had to be at least 25 years
of age and above? It is obvious that corruption allows some
underage women to slip out of the country, but the Philippine
Department of Foreign Affairs, the Overseas Workers Welfare
Administration and the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration
have to do more to make sure that 18-year-old women are not
deployed abroad, especially as domestic helpers which places
them at great risk of sexual molestation.
I just hope that the Kuwaiti policemen who raped the housemaid
get severely punished for their nasty act. Being fired from
their jobs, losing all their benefits and facing at least
20 years in jail, should be the least punishment they receive.
Comments or questions? E-mail the author at manilamoods@hotmail.com.
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