Press Statement
16 November 2011
Reference:
Atty. Edre U. Olalia, NUPL Secretary General (09175113373)
Licensed to Flee
GMA must come to
court with clean hands while PNoy twiddles his fingers
Former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s
attempt to escape justice and frustrate efforts to prosecute her is in plain
view that nobody could have missed it. The minute she steps out of the country,
the quest for justice will almost certainly fall apart. She will most probably
wait it out till the political atmosphere and conditions are more conducive or
accommodating to her political rehabilitation while she is “recuperating” or
dodging imagined “political persecution.”
Amidst the competing views and the complex legal
and political implications surrounding the issue, it is sad that prudence took
the back seat. The Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) was seen by not a few as
having been issued with rather undue and unusual haste even as there is no
compelling urgency. Oral arguments and studied contemplation should have
been done first. Arroyo’s health condition is, fortunately, not life
threatening.
While the Arroyos cry that their rights are being
violated, the speedy issuance of the TRO has made some sectors of our society
squirm in astonishment. It does not help any that there are pervasive perceptions
that the results appear to hew to clear partisan lines. It could be seen as
giving a relief that is precisely the meat of the petition and may in fact
result in irreparable justice that can not be undone, to the utter
disadvantage of the Filipino people and their interest in making high public
officials really accountable and that impunity must stop, once and for all. There also is an
apparent double standard with which the cases of privileged litigants with
power and influence, like the Arroyos, are being treated.
The situation must
be put into perspective. Needless to say, the surrounding facts and
circumstances show that Arroyo is
abusing the right to travel as a plausible ruse to escape accountability
for the grave crimes she allegedly committed, where there is strong evidence.
Even the “devil can quote the Scriptures,” so to speak.
But the law should not be taken in abstraction;
instead it must be applied in a concrete legal and political situation, with
the dispensation of justice as the overriding goal. As has been said before, “general propositions do not
decide specific cases.”
Ironically, it bears
noting that DOJ Department Circular 41 was issued during Arroyo’s time. It is
downright odd and curious that she and her allies cry justice and due process now
that things have turned and they are on the other receiving end. She and the
former First Gentleman must come to court with clean hands. They must also drop
the tasteless “persecution complex” and poor victim stunt.
We support all efforts
to exhaust all possible remedies to stop
attempts of the Arroyos to flee. Too many tyrants, here and abroad, have
tried to escape accountability through the hospital door. For history not to
repeat itself, we should be vigilant as the events that surely have long term
effects on our nation unfold before our eyes. We can argue how many angels can
dance on a head of pin but at the end of the day, the issue all boils down to
accountability of our public officials. Can we really get justice?
Had President Aquino accompanied the rhetoric and
blame game with prompt and concrete legal actions in prosecuting the Arroyos as
part of its campaign against corruption, it would not have come to this high
drama. While the Arroyos are rushing to leave the country, PNoy was twiddling his
fingers in decisively filing cases in court against them not only for big time
corruption and unmitigated plunder but also for the most heinous violations of
basic human rights. #