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News Archive
First of a Series of 3

The unprincipled gall of Noynoy Aquino

By Jesusa Bernardo
 


On Aquino's position re the pardon of Erap:

WITH all due respect to the parents, late Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino and former President Corazon “Cory”
Cojuangco Aquino, I cannot help but lash out at the immoral gall of their son Sen. Benigno Simeon “Noynoy”
Aquino, III who attacked the pardon of former President Joseph “Erap” Estrada without seemingly reviewing
his family’s history first.

Noynoy stated his position by saying that: “….on the pardon aspect, it is my fundamental principle that if
anybody committed a crime, time should be served and if punishment is not meted out, what will happen to
us?”

For cosmic justice’s sake, what “principle” of his is Sen. Aquino talking about?

Is the yellow presidentiable forgetting that his very own father, Ninoy, was convicted of murder, illegal
possession of firearms, subversion and sentenced to die? While Ninoy’s conviction during Martial Law was
viewed as the kangaroo court type, so was Erap’s life conviction, which was made under the administration
of the power grabber Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and by special Sandiganbayan court justices who were soon
promoted to the Supreme Court.

Estrada was indeed convicted of “plunder,” but it was made by a special court created by the administration
of Arroyo who seized power from the democratically elected leader in 2001. The conviction of Noynoy’s dad
was also made by a special court–a military tribunal formed during the Martial Law period that begun
September 1972 and virtually lasted until the fall of President Ferdinand Marcos.

The late Sen. Ninoy was imprisoned for seven years and seven months but was allowed to seek treatment
and live in the US –a virtual pardon for what should have been a life sentence. The man whose pardon Sen.
Noynoy criticizes, Estrada, was imprisoned for six years and six months. Both did not serve the rest of their
sentences. So why is Noynoy putting the heat on Estrada’s case?

Conviction by itself means nothing if the political environment is unfair. Gloria Arroyo is perceived as the
“Most Corrupt President in Philippine History” but even rules the land and has not been impeached all
through nine years of illegitimate power.

If there’s anybody who’s actually more “criminal” between these two presidentiables, it might as well be
Noynoy Aquino and not Erap Estrada. Why? Three good reasons.



Reason 1. Guilt of Sedition

Sedition is a big crime against the state and everyone knows that Noynoy and his mother actively took part in
the unconstitutional ouster of then-incumbent Estrada during the so-called EDSA 2 in 2001. The fact that the
Davide Supreme Court soon declared with hilarious novelty that Joseph Ejercito Estrada was no longer
President of the Philippines does not in any way clear the EDSA 2 conspirators of their crime of sedition.

Those who took part in ousting Estrada may or may not be actually prosecuted in the post-Arroyo future, but
what is certain is that history will judge the never-previously-heard “constructive resignation” ruling as
nothing but a conspiratorial lame legal ploy to legitimize the power grab against a man popular with the
masses.

Cory Aquino, after having been diagnosed with fatal cancer, already apologized to Erap but Noynoy sure has
not. In fact, Noynoy the son tried to belittle the mother’s apology as a “joke,” to which the late President
apparently compromised by issuing a statement to the effect that it is, indeed, “a jest but she’s not taking it
back.“



Reason 2. Tolerance of, if not complicity in covering up, the 2004 electoral fraud

Noynoy’s little-spoken but nonetheless criminal deeds against the people did not end with the 2001 EDSA
coup. During the 2004 elections, Noynoy allowed, or perhaps helped facilitate the electoral cheating
committed against Fernando Poe Jr. in the conspiracy to fraudulently declare Arroyo as the winner of the
presidential race. Noynoy as Tarlac congressman did nothing as stalwarts of his Liberal Party and others
railroaded the congressional canvassing by refusing to open the contested COCs (certificates of canvass).
As Daily Tribune’s Ninez Cacho-Olivares notes, Noynoy Aquino “kept his mouth shut even in the face of
massive electoral cheating,” thus effectively preventing the Filipino public from knowing the real 2004
President-elect.

The only time Filipinos got to know that Fernando Poe Jr. (FPJ) really won in the 2004 polls was when the
Hello Garci wiretapped tapes came out, which primarily showed that Arroyo engaged in conversations with
elections commissioner Virgilio Garcillano in connection with operations surrounding the May 11, 2004
polls. However, even when the Aquinos already learned about the tapes, Noynoy did not immediately
withdraw support from the Illegitimate “President.” In fact, he even voted AGAINST the airing of the tapes
during the fifth Congressional hearing on the “Hello Garci” issue on June 30, 2005, the first anniversary of
the surreptitious wee-hour-of-the-morning congressional proclamation of Arroyo as “President-elect.”

In reaction to election-related criticisms of his 2005 Hello Garci vote, Noynoy’s camp has resorted to virtual
lying to counter the issue. Noynoy’s website claims:

When the “Hello, Garci” tapes were exposed in 2005, Aquino withdrew his support for the president, but
voted against the use of the tapes in impeachment cases. Why? As damning as they may be for PGMA,
Aquino argued against the use of the tapes as evidence because the law forbids it: Republic Act. 4200, or
the “anti-wiretapping law,” prohibits and penalizes wire tapping and other violations of the privacy of
communication. Simply said: you may not use as evidence in a court of law any and all material that has
been unlawfully obtained, such as the Hello Garci tapes.

Herein, what Sen. Noynoy Aquino’s camp foxily omits is that for over month after the scandalous tapes
surfaced, his family firmly stood by Arroyo. Noynoy even praised Arroyo’s televised July 2, 2005 I am sorry”
speech, claiming it’s a “good start” for the controversial administration. Cory, for her part, even warned
against resorting to extra-constitutional means to remove Arroyo, even as they themselves had four years
earlier ousted Estrada and installed the Illegitimate in his place.

The sequence of events that his defense implies also constitutes falsehood: Noynoy Aquino actually
withdrew support for Gloria only in July 8, 2005–six days AFTER he voted against the airing of the Hello Garci
tapes. (As to why the Aquinos ultimately dropped Arroyo, GMA-7’s Stephanie Dychiu seems to point to the
not-exactly favorable report of Task Force Luisita that came out that same month).

Moreover, Ninoy’s use of the illegality of using wiretapped evidence in defense of his Hello Garci vote
sounds extremely lame in the face of his support for Estrada’s unconstitutional ouster in 2001. HIs claim
that his Hello Garci vote is proof that he “abides by the law” either means Noynoy is inconsistent in the
application of his beliefs, or that he neither understands nor genuinely respects the very Constitution his
mother ratified in 1987, at least with regards presidential vacancy/succession. Then again, it could mean
that Noynoy is nothing but a closet political opportunist masquerading as “holier than thou.”

Articles VII and XI of the 1987 Charter clearly stipulate that only four conditions warrant the succession of a
new President: (1) death; (2) permanent disability; (3) resignation of the incumbent President; and (4)
removal from office on impeachment. Truth is, Noynoy Aquino showed nary a sign of being legally bothered
when he and his own mother joined and led the Anti-Erap Movement and seditiously helped swore in Arroyo
in the mob-filled streets of EDSA in January 2001, even as the President sitting in Malacanang adamantly
refused to resign.



Reason 3. Hacienda Luisita: Land Theft, Killings and SCTEx Overprice?

Hacienda Luisita well symbolizes the oppression of the Filipino masses both from white-skinned colonizers
and local elites. The sprawling Hacienda belonged to the Spanish firm, Compaña General de Tabacos de
Filipinas, or Tabacalera, which acquired it in 1882 from the Spanish colonial crown. While the Philippine
Revolution against Spain virtually succeeded, United States imperialist conquest of the islands ensured not
only American exploitation of the islands but, as well, that remnants of Spanish colonization remain.
Tabacalera’s ownership of Hacienda Luisita was one of those remnants.

In the 1920s, the Spanish company shifted from tobacco to sugar plantation and built a sugar mill as the US
sugar quota guaranteed a profitable market. In the late 1950s, Tabacalera decided to sell the land together
with the Central Azucarera de Tarlac sugar mill. President Ramon Magsaysay is said to have offered the
land to Don Jose “Pepe” Cojuangco, Sr., Cory’s father, in the bid to prevent the then-already very wealthy and
powerful Lopezes from acquiring it.

Persisting labor problems and threats from the Hukbalahab rebellion forced Tabacalera to sell Hacienda
Luisita, along with the sugar mill in the 1950s. President Ramon Magsaysay thought of offering it to Don
Pepe, supposedly in the bid to prevent the then-already very wealthy and powerful Lopezes from acquiring it.
The deal was brokered by Don Pepe’s son-in-law, Ninoy Aquino who was then a rising politician.

Stephanie Dychiu of GMA News.TV writes that Don Pepe “received significant preferential treatment and
assistance from the government to facilitate his takeover of Hacienda Luisita and Central Azucarera de
Tarlac in 1957.” While the Cojuangcos also had their small sugar plantation and had plenty of lands, bank
holdings and Philippine pesos, they did not have enough dollars, which was then tightly regulated–to make
the purchase.

The Central Bank was the first government entity to help Cojuangco. So as to facilitate the foreign exchange
flow needed to ensure acquisition of controlling interest in Tabacalera, the CB deposited a portion of the
Philippines ’ international reserves from a New York bank where Cojuangco took a 10-year loan of $2.1
million. The Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) stepped in next, providing a 5.9 million loan to
finance the purchase of Hacienda Luisita.

Assistance was extended by the Central Bank with the view that the Cojuangco acquisition would further the
government’s land reform program. The 1957 Monetary Board Resolution No. 1240 stipulated that
simultaneous with the accommodation for his foreign exchange needs, Cojuangco should purchase
Hacienda Luisita but distribute it within ten years “to small farmers in line with the Administration’s social
justice program.”

That same year, GSIS Resolutions Nos. 1085 & 3202 essentially backed up the Central Bank ruling with
different wordings by requiring the subdivision of the hacienda among the tenants who will shoulder the cost
at terms and conditions that are reasonable. However, within only a little over two months, Cojuangco had a
new GSIS resolution (No. 356) amended to limit it to “….shall be sold at cost to tenants, should there be any.”

(To be Continued)
 
Second of a Series of 3

The unprincipled gall of Noynoy Aquino

Blood in Noynoy’s Hands, lies in his lips

By Jesusa Bernardo
 
Theft of Agrarian Land?

Beginning April 1958, Hacienda Luisita and the Tabacalera sugar mill became properties of Jose
Cojuangco and his TADECO (Tarlac Development Corporation) company. Instead of Pedro or “Pete”
Cojuangco who was Cory’s eldest brother, Ninoy Aquino was chosen as its administrator.

Ten years passed but the Cojuangco-Aquino families did not keep their end of the contract. In reply to Land
Authority Governor Conrado Estrella’s letter inquiring about the implementation of the loan condition,
Cojuangco rather smugly wrote back that “it is doubtful whether the Central Bank had the power to impose
that condition which was so alien to its function of stabilizing the country’s monetary system”.

Don Pepe died in 1976 without fulfilling his promise to distribute land.

In 1972 when Martial Law was declared, President Marcos imprisoned his political nemesis and
presidential material Ninoy Aquino but did not forcibly compel his family and Cojuangco kin to abide by the
land distributorship terms of the 1957-1958 loan and foreign exchange assistance agreements. The
TADECO owners did continue to receive written communications seeking to follow up on the 1967 notice(s)
but which they always dismissed by claiming that there were no “tenants” and, thus, Hacienda Luisita
couldn’t possibly be distributed. Herein, Cory’s family has largely banked their claim to the hacienda on what
could be a technicality–the different wordings of the Central Bank and GSIS resolutions–”small farmers” and
“tenants,” respectively.

Just before Ninoy and his family were allowed to leave for the United States for medical treatment, the
Marcos government pursued the issue in court of the hacienda’s distributorship in court. Civil Case No.
131654 prospered and in December 1985, some two months before the 1986 snap presidential polls
contended by the now-widowed Cory Cojuangco Aquino and strongman Marcos, Branch XLIII of the Manila
Regional Trial Court handed its decision for TADECO to yield Hacienda Luisita to the Agrarian Reform
ministry. In response, the Cojuangco-Aquinos elevated the case to the Court of Appeals.

Following the ouster of Marcos via the 1986 EDSA “People Power,” Cory Aquino was installed as President.
The 1987 Mendiola Massacre involving the death of farmers pressing for genuine agrarian reform seemed
to have made Cory speed up the implementation of land reform but not without first inserting a novel Stock
Distribution Option (SDO) into her Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP). The SDO gives farmer
tenants shares in a plantation corporation without actually transferring land. SDO had been criticized not only
as possibly unconstitutional but more so, as a way for landowners to keep control of the land and farmers–
and for the Cojuangco-Aquinos to avoid distributing Hacienda Luisita. As well, the Cory administration had
the Court of Appeals dismiss the government case filed against the TADECO owners, who were no less
than the President’s own family and kin (she is said to have divested herself of personal shares in the
company).

When CARP took effect in 1989, the family adopted the SDO option despite many criticisms that the option
disadvantaged the farmers. Only less than 5,000 out of the nearly 6,500 hectares of the original Hacienda
Luisita land were submitted to the Agrarian Reform department. The exclusion of the combined 386.6
hectares of residential, commercial, road and other land improvement portions of the hacienda markedly
lowered the value of land earmarked for land reform to only P40,000 per hectare. The valuation process was
also seen as irregular if not appropriate, with the standing crop not only being included but also being
categorized as non-land asset. The result is that when the land was incorporated into what is now Hacienda
Luisita, Inc. (HLI) as spin-off of TADECO, the farmers became nominal shareholders, getting only 33.296%
versus the 66.704 percent shares of the Cojuangco-Aquinos.

What is more, the SDO scheme was spread over 30 years, which meant that when a worker was fired, quit,
or failed to complete require work hours, s/he was no longer eligible to receive the unreleased portion of his
or her share, mandays or work hours being the basis of SDO distribution. It also meant that farmers’
entitlements were bound to shrink because new workers could be hired–which is what happened when the
original 6,296 farm workers ballooned to almost double by 2005.

In June 2005, Noynoy Aquino’s family eventually distributed all the stock shares to the farmers in one fell
swoop and ahead of the controversial 30th year schedule. However, this happened only following the
November 16, 2004 Luisita massacre when some seven or so farmers were killed during a protest.

The farmers decided to hold a strike amidst fears for their job security and dwindling wages following claims
by management that the land was losing money. The Cojuangcos’ long-term land use plan for the HLI–
which included NO agricultural area and which already included the controversial Subic-Clark-Tarlac
Expressway or (SCTEx)–had been uncovered.*

The farmers realized that the SDO had to go, subsequently petitioning for its revocation in 2003. Their
frustration over always being outvoted 4-7 in the HLI board and the mass retrenchment of over 300 farmers
in late 2004 also figured in.



Massacre and Assassinations

On November 6, farm workers and Central Azucarera de Tarlac Labor Union workers had launched a
prolonged picket of the Gate 1 of the hacienda’s sugar mill. When Arroyo’s government declared an
Assumption of Jurisdiction, the Philippine National Police (PNP) forces were called in. Even with the police
operation on November 15, they still but failed to disperse the strikers with the usual tear gas, water
cannons, and truncheons.

The following day, the union officers were told to proceed to Noynoy’s uncle, Jose “Peping” Cojuangco, Jr. in
Makati for negotiations: they did but nothing happened. While the union leaders returned, however, 2 tanks,
17 trucks of soldiers, 700 police, a payloader, 4 water cannon fire trucks, and snipers were already in
position. Initially, the dispersal of protesters was attempted with the use of the usual stuff but they fought
back by slingshooting with rocks and burying tear gas canisters. When the police and military forces ran out
of tear gas and water from the fire trucks, they started firing.

Based on the Senate investigation on the incident, no less than 1000 rounds of ammunitions were used to
disperse the Hacienda Luisita strikers. Those who were caught were beaten, arrested, and dragged into the
military trucks.

Seven people died while 121 were injured, including 32 who sustained gunshot wounds, during what is now
commonly referred to as the Hacienda Luisita Massacre. The unfortunate victims who died directly from the
protest actions were: Jhayvie Basilio, 20; Juancho Sanchez, 20; Jhune David, 27; Jesus Laza, 34; Jaime
Fastidio, 46 Adriano Caballero, 23 Jesse Valdez, 30. Up to the present, no one has been caught or charged
for the carnage.

Then Congressman Noynoy Aquino decried the violence but claimed that the police and military merely
acted in self-defense. The investigation by doctors led by Dr. Carol Pagaduan-Araullo of the Health Alliance
for Democracy would reveal details showing Noynoy was either lying or did not know what he was talking
about.

Autopsies of the dead and medical examination of the wounded revealed that they were in running, lying,
crouching positions when shot. Three bodies supposedly tested positive for gunpowder; however, the
doctors, staff, and nurses of the Cojuangco-owned St. Martin de Porres Hospital where the bodies were
brought had earlier been told to leave as the military and police took over.

The Hacienda Luisita-related killings did not stop on November 16, 2004, though. Aglipayan priest William
Tadena was shot dead while traversing the La Paz , Tarlac provincial highway on the way to say his next
mass; Fr. Tadena had mobilized his parishioners in support of the hacienda picket workers.

Then there’s sexagenarian peasant leader Ben “Tatang” Concepcion who was shot dead inside the house
of his daughter in Angeles City ; he also supported the Luisita strikers.

Perhaps the most obvious kill in terms of association with the fateful picket strike is that of sugar mill union
president Ricardo Ramos who was killed by a sniper bullet on the head on October 25, 2005, hours after he
distributed what served as wage compensation to the sugar mill workers. He had earlier sought the help of
the sheriff to inspect the Cojuangco warehouse when management claimed they had no money to pay
wages.

When the warehouse was found to be full of sugar, an agreement was made for the sale of the sugar by the
Department of Labor and Employment, with the proceeds going to the workers. Management then tried to
take charge of the money so they could make payroll deductions for the loans but Ramos refused and
demanded the payroll list instead.

It should be noted that Noynoy Aquino did express shock at the murder, saying that Ramos had been always
fair to him. The PNP claimed that the communists probably executed the killing because he had been on
cooperative terms with management.

Given the fact, however, that no police nor military personnel involved in the violent Hacienda Luisita
dispersal has ever been charged, the PNP statement does not seem reliable.

There will be more murders of individuals connected with protest actions revolving around Hacienda Luisita.
Tirso Cruz, a director of the United Luisita Workers’ Union, was shot dead by motorcycle-riding men on
March 18, 2006; Cruz, a member of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, had led actions demanding the
withdrawal of the military in ten barangays of the hacienda and protesting against the constructions of the
Hacienda Luisita portion of the SCTEx toll way.

Another Aglipayan priest connected to the hacienda strikers would bite the dust. Fr. Alberto Ramento, no
less than the Supreme Bishop of the church, was stabbed to death on October 3, 2006 while sleeping
inside the church rectory: while it appeared to be a robbery, persons close to him strongly suspect his killing
was related to the hacienda because he had taken the cause of Fr. Tadena by tending to the farm workers.



Current Status

In what could possibly be a politically motivated but not exactly unfair move, the Presidential Agrarian Reform
Council (PARC) placed the Hacienda Luisita under forcible acquisition following its revocation of the SDO on
December 23, 2005.

The Cojuangco-Aquinos dubbed the development as Arroyo’s vendetta for the Aquino family’s call for her
resignation. They appealed and obtained a TRO (temporary restraining order) from the Supreme Court. The
case is pending while the TRO has been in effect for over three years now.

Further complicating any future distribution of the hacienda are the loans incurred by the Cojuangco-Aquino
family using some portions of the land as mortgage with banks. Noynoy Aquino had changed his
statements as to the position of his family with regards Hacienda Luisita and its distribution multiple times
over time.

In one of them, he defended the SDO option by saying that his family wanted to first make sure that the land
that would eventually be distributed to the farmer-beneficiaries are cleared of debt. This one was made quite
last February 9, 2010.

That same day, he is reported to have stated that he has already talked with his family and relatives from his
maternal side to find ways to implement the distribution of land to the approximately 10,000 farmer workers
before the expiration of the agrarian reform law ends in 2014.

However, four days earlier while campaigning in Davao City , he is reported to have said that the question of
Hacienda Luisita will be a difficult issue to resolve even if he wins as president because it is supposed to be
a private corporation.

Perhaps, Noynoy’s changing statements are not at all unexpected, given that he is in the midst of his
presidential campaign and election periods are always the time for making promises.

What is troubling is the report of the New York Times that counters Sen. Aquino’s claim that his family has
been cooperative with regards the issue of distributing Hacienda Luisita. In its March 16, 2010 issue, the
American publication quotes Fernando Cojuangco, the chief operating officer of HLI and the sugar mill as
having denied there would be land distribution.

Responding to Times reporter Norimitsu Onishi’s query, Noynoy’s cousin reportedly said: “No, we’re not
going to. I think it would be irresponsible because I feel that continuing what we have here is the way to go.”

(To be continued)
 
Third and Last of a Series of 3

The unprincipled gall of Noynoy Aquino

Principles built on opportunistic clay

By Jesusa Bernardo
 
SCTEx Luisita Insertion & Overprice?

Beyond the non-distribution of Hacienda Luisita, the reclassification of much of the lands, and the actual
conversion of 500 hectares into the Hacienda Luisita park 2 sans consultation with their “co-owners,’ the
farmer workers, is the Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway (SCTEx) Luisita interchange diversion and overprice
issue.

The SCTEx is P32 billion-worth 94-kilometer four-lane expressway north of Manila , Subic Bay Freeport Zone
in Zambales as its southern terminus and the Central Techno Park in Tarlac City , Tarlac as its northern
terminus. It is aimed at boosting efforts to promote the former Subic and Clark military bases as freeport
zones. A SCTEx interchange passing through the middle of Hacienda Luisita and leading directly to the
private road in the hacienda’s Central Techno Park was constructed by the government at the cost of P170
million.

The House Congressional oversight committee is looking into allegations that the San Miguel/Luisita
interchange portion of the SCTEx is an expensive political accommodation for the Cojuangco-Aquino family.
The said interchange is said to have been that benefitted Noynoy’s kin not only in terms of the link to the free
zones but also in questionable direct monetary compensation of P83 million for the right of way (RoW).

Questions have been raised as to whether the controversial interchange was part of the original plan for the
expressway. The Daily Tribune reports that project documents shown the newspaper clearly show:

...that the costly interchange to nowhereland was inserted into the projected sometime before it went through
a bidding in 2004, at a time when Gloria was preparing for reelection and was trying to woo the late Cory
Aquino for active support against then strong opposition candidate Fernando Poe Jr.

The irregularity and inappropriateness of paying the Cojuangco-Aquinos for the right of the way for the
interchange have also raised eyebrows. Cavite representative Crispin Remulla cites that the Luisita
interchange RoW is the opposite of the usual practice: Asia Brewery, Greenfield Corp, Mamplasan, and
Southwoods all donated eight hectares each and paid P241 million even for the construction of their
interchanges that exit on the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX).

Even worse, payment for the RoW seems to have been grossly overpriced. During a congressional hearing,
a Department of Agrarian Reform official confirmed that the RoW paid by the Bases Conversion
Development Authority (BCDA) for the HCI was overpriced. By how much? By around P70 million, because
sugar lands are valued only at about P150,000 to P170,000 per hectare, instead of the P1,000,000 per
hectare that was actually paid.

When the issue first came to light, Noynoy’s camp tried to make it appear that the SCTEx was forged during
President Joseph Estrada’s time, seemingly suggesting that the anomaly found today was of the making of
the deposed president. The truth is while Estrada initiated the SCTEx, the whole contract back then was only
worth P15.73 billion–and didn’t include the San Miguel/Luisita interchange. Under the administration of
Arroyo, the “President” installed by Noynoy, Cory, the Liberal Party and the rest of the seditious mob of EDSA
2, the SCTEx ballooned to more than double its original project price.

While Noynoy claims, through his spokesman, that he “did not participate in any meeting relating to the
[SCTEx] project; neither did he lobby for it in any forum,” other accounts tell that he actually did much
lobbying. What is undeniable is that he was Deputy House Speaker at the time and he had the means to
influence a needlessly expensive irregular project that benefitted them. The presidentiable’s possible role
is, of course, on top of Cory’s pre-July 2005 influence on the administration of Arroyo.



Questions. Questions.

With regards Hacienda Luisita, Noynoy seems to be condoning the actions of his family–what others could
describe as theft of a land that the government has earmarked for agrarian reform. Possibly to confound the
public as to the Cojuangco-Aquino family’s real plan for the hacienda and the land distribution issue, Noynoy
keeps changing his tune, apparently in the bid to win votes for his presidential ambitions. What should then
be taken instead as a more reliable gauge of whether he’s not ‘criminal’ are his actual actions in the past.

Cory’s son may only control around 1/32 of the HCI shares but that should not have prevented him from
castigating the November 16, 2004 massacre and subsequent assassinations of individuals connected to
the strike or the strikers. Has he taken any step towards finding justice to the seven victims of the violent
dispersal of the 2004 Hacienda Luisita strike? Perhaps, one can ask: did he help mastermind the carnage?
As it is, the wheel of justice doesn’t seem to move towards the victims of the Hacienda Luisita Massacre and
Noynoy has been of no help.

Doesn’t Noynoy smell the crime of corruption in his family’s Hacienda Luisita deals?

When management offered the option of SDO to the farmer workers, did he speak out against it as
essentially being non-distributive and, thus, in violation of the spirit of social justice? When a SCTEx
interchange exit was constructed to lead to Hacienda Luisita, when all 10 others lead to public
roads/complexes, did he lift a finger to oppose preferential treatment, or didn’t he actually lobby for it?

Did he find it irregular that his family had to be paid a whooping P83 million by the government for Hacienda
Luisita’s right of way (RoW) for the interchange, when the normal course is for the government to charge
private entities for connecting their industrial complexes or properties to major public roads? Isn’t he aware
that it is virtual standard operating procedure for any private land owner to donate a portion of their lands just
to have a highway interchange lead to their properties?

Makes one wonder if Noynoy got surprised at all that the government had to assume construction of the
interchange connecting their estate to SCTEx because every educated big-time landowner such as him
knows that along with the right of way donation, it is the private estate owner that foots construction of such
interchange?

In the first place, should not the entire Hacienda Luisita, except perhaps for their residential area, have been
distributed to the farmers as actual land in keeping with the true spirit of agrarian reform and with the
principle of its 1957-1958 acquisition? long ago? Doesn’t Noynoy find it criminal to sell what is morally not
theirs?

Perhaps, the ultimate question is: doesn’t he find it plunderous that he and his family have held on to
Hacienda Luisita when they should have long divested themselves of the property and distributed it “at cost”
to farmers as was the condition set by government half a century back?



Averse to Criminals?

So who’s more criminal between Noynoy and Erap? Of course, Sen. Noynoy Aquino has not yet been
charged, much less “convicted” for any of the issues/charges I’ve laid herein. The Hacienda Luisita land
issue, if ever, will only be a civil case. For all we know, he’ll never be found guilty ever. Or, farfetched as it may
seem to the Hacienda Luisita farmers and his detractors, Noynoy and his extended family might not have
been guilty at all of anything unholy.

So back to my main point. The late Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino, the anti-Martial Law hero, was a convicted
murderer. The former President Joseph “Erap” Estrada, the ‘Father of the Masses,’ is a convicted plunderer.
So why has Noynoy’s “principles” not made him decry, even just as a matter of historical note, Marcos’
decision to let Ninoy fly to the US ?

The yellow presidentiable, along with his family, has attacked Martial Law many times in the past, but he
never once castigated Ferdinand Marcos for letting his convicted ‘murderer’-father free and be able to leave
for the US . Of course, Marcos was a dictator; but Noynoy’s 2001 bet Gloria Arroyo is illegitimate. If it can be
argued that Ninoy’s conviction was rendered by a kangaroo court, so was Erap’s. It’s not hard to realize that
the power grabbing EDSA 2 President arranged to have Estrada convicted of ‘plunder’ so as to make her
rule appear legitimate.

It is clear is that Noynoy has no moral right to question Erap’s pardon since he has not done the same to the
case of his father, the late Sen. Ninoy Aquino.

Noynoy used the idea of “principle” to argue his belated opposition to Erap’s pardon. He might as well be
talking of the unholy principle to depose a democratically elected President at will. Or take part in the cover-
up, if not in the actual operations of electoral fraud for the presidency. Plunder government wealth to the tune
of over 250 million, perhaps? Or to conspire with family members and corrupt government officials in
denying farmers of their agrarian reform rights?

Ultimately, Noynoy’s apparent aversion to ‘criminals’ might as well extend inwards–to aversion to himself
and his kin.



Postscript

By the way, it is on record that Sen. Aquino sought former President Estrada’s blessing when he first ran as
senator in 2007 under the Genuine Opposition coalition party. Erap recounts how Cory interceded and
asked the favor of dropping her sister-in-law, former Senator Tessie Aquino Oreta, so Noynoy can be
accommodated in the party’s senatorial slate. After having used the former President’s help to win a Senate
seat, Noynoy is now attacking the pardon two years after the fact.

Doesn’t that reek of political opportunism? Sounds like the Liberal Party standard-bearer has “principles”
built on opportunistic clay.#30