The founder of the Communist Party of the Philippines, who has been asylum in The Netherlands since 1992, shares his impressions of the 5 major contenders for Philippine president
JOMA SISON. The founder of the Communist Party of the Philippines
UTRECHT, Netherlands – While a Leftist bloc in Philippine Congress has endorsed a presidential candidate for 2016, and the New People's Army (NPA) just announced that it will again impose permit-to-campaign fees on candidates, communist leader Jose Maria Sison said he does not support anyone in particular.
“The NDF
(National Democratic Front) cannot support anyone, it’s against the ruling
system. But the NDF is pleased that all the major candidates are for the
continuation of the peace negotiations,” he said in a recent interview with
Rappler at the NDF information bureau here, which also serves as his home.
But there are at
least two presidential aspirants whom he thinks will entice him to come home to
the Philippines
to talk peace if either of them wins: Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte and
Senator Grace Poe.
Then again, Sison
– founder of the Communist Party of the Philippines
(CPP), is also chief political consultant to the NDF – is wary of the automated
electoral system, which the Philippines
started using in 2010. He said the machines could be “pre-programmed” and could
be used in tampering the election results.
What does he
think of the 5 major contenders for the presidency?
Mar Roxas
“Unless he will
be innovative, he will follow the tuwad na daan (crooked path), right?
If he wants to play copycat to [President] Noynoy [Aquino], that means to say,
he’ll continue the old system. But I don’t know, he might be more intelligent
than Noynoy.”
Sison argued that
Noynoy only “sits back” and lets whoever he appoints, such as Presidential
Adviser on the Peace Process Teresita Quintos Deles, decide for him.
Commenting on the
Wharton graduate controversy, Sison said the whole issue is an
“indication of how low is the quality of the debate.”
“Parang
labanan ng mga bata (Like a fight among children).”
Sison observed
that Roxas believes he will win if he boasts of continuing the Tuwid na Daan
(straight path) slogan of Aquino, but Sison calls this move a “kiss of
death.”
On Roxas’
similarity to President Aquino, Sison said the candidate lacks heart and
compassion for the poor. Roxas only mimics the poor with his Mr Palengke
commercials, he said.
Sison also
questioned Roxas’ performance in the Yolanda rehabilitation and Zamboanga
siege.
Grace Poe
“Makabayan is committed to Grace. She has made an agreement,
general terms of alliance, with Makabayan: upholding national sovereignty and
territorial integrity, democracy and human rights, industrial development with
land reform. So they agreed on that.”
Makabayan is a
bloc of leftist groups associated with the national democratic movement in the
House. Bayan Muna party list Representative Neri Colmenares, a Makabayan bloc
member, is running for senator under the Poe ticket.
Sison
acknowledged that Poe is ahead of all other candidates. The question, however,
is whether she will honor the agreement once she is in power, he said.
On the question
on Poe's citizenship, Sison said he leans toward the opinion of lawyer Katrina Legarda that foundlings are to be recognized as
naturnal-born Filipino citizens.
Rodrigo
Duterte
Unknown to many,
the Davao City mayor was Sison’s former student at
the Lyceum.
He shared that
when Duterte was still “atras-abante” (undecided) about running for
president, his staff would visit Sison in the Netherlands .
“He has very many
nice things to say about me and I also have very many nice things to say about
him,” Sison said. “So some people would have the impression that I would be
endorsing him.”
He clarified,
however, that the NDF, CPP, and the NPA do not endorse candidates.
“But, of course,
we classify the candidates, parties, and coalitions. It has its own way of
reckoning or weighing the characteristics and values of the candidates – who
are easier to talk to, who has more potential to agreeing to just peace,” Sison
explained.
“Si Duterte,
kung dahil disqualified si Grace, siya na ‘yung effective na kapalit as
opposition.” (If Grace is
disqualified, then Duterte will be the effective replacement as opposition.)
It is
unfortunate, said Sison, that the media cannot detect Duterte’s sarcasm and jokes during interviews.
Sison also
praised Duterte for having strength of character and for standing against the
Americans. For example, Duterte turned down the request of Americans to put up
a drone center in Davao .
Sison, however,
admitted that he “does not know how true” the claims are against Duterte
regarding human rights violations.
Miriam
Defensor Santiago
“She does not
have the organization, and everybody suspects she has not overcome her health
problem,” Sison said. “But you don’t know what can happen if Roxas, Binay, and
Miriam would be left, you cannot tell.”
Jejomar Binay
“Tumalab ang
banat sa kanya sa corruption.” (The attacks on him about corruption
worked.)
Sison observed
that while the corruption allegations have decreased Binay’s numbers in
surveys, however, the Vice President still maintains a big following at “any
weather.”
If Duterte and
Poe are disqualified, where else will their followers go? They might go to
Binay, he said.
All of them of
'low quality'
In summary, Sison
said, all the candidates are of “low quality.”
“Kahit sino na
lang. Mas marami mababa intellectual caliber,” said Sison. (Anybody can just run. Most of them
are of low intellectual caliber.)
Still, Sison, who
has been on political asylum in The Netherlands since 1992, said the chances
are high for him to someday return to the Philippines if there is a decent
president "willing to negotiate seriously."
"If the
likes of Duterte or Grace were to be president, I can go home."
http://www.rappler.com/nation/politics/elections/2016/117230-joma-sison-2016-elections-president
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