Even the most hardened pessimist could not help but hope that perhaps, Jun Lozada can be that guy who can finally expose the Arroyo administration for what it really is: corrupt and self-serving. Because hell, we all know that it IS corrupt, but so far, not even coups had managed to topple it down.
I first heard of the ZTE controversy when JDV III cried foul, exchanged heated words with FG Arroyo, then promptly left the country. I am not especially fond of JDV and his clan but even then, I believed JDV III. One, he is the lesser of two evils (come on, FG has horns!) and two, he would not have had the courage to go against the administration if he weren't telling the truth. I was hoping for a showdown. A let's-say-bad-things-about-each-other-until-we're-blue-in-the-face. That would have been so much better than any soap ever produced. But then it died down.
And then Jun Lozada comes along. I cannot follow the live telecast of the Senate investigation that started last Friday so I had to content myself with checking the Inquirer every so often. Like everyone, I had to hold my breath fearing that Lozada might get cold feet and refuse to talk. After all, it happened with his friend Neri before. But Lozada did not disappoint.
As expected, Arroyo's allies are now pouncing on Lozada's credibility. Again, anyone willing to go against the president's hubby already has credibility points in my book. Strangely enough, the very things they're throwing at him and should supposedly make him unreliable are the things that make him more believable.
I believe Jun Lozada because he does not paint himself a saint. He admits to his own irregularities while he was serving as President of the Philippine Forest Corporation under DENR. He admits to giving out projects and deals that did not go through the proper biddings. He admits to advising Abalos (I've always hated that prick) to lower his commission because "bubukol ang $130M." He admits to flying to HK to evade the Senate investigation. He is every bit a person who gets tempted, follows his bosses (he was asked to "moderate their greed." Abalos' greed, of course, knows no moderation.), fears for his life but is now capable of telling the truth as it really is.
In a country where heroes are always lacking, the likes of Jun Lozada surface from time to time. For now it's enough to keep the rest of us afloat.
Abalos is ovbiously guilty. Yung nag sampa sya ng libel case strategy nya lang yun.
ReplyDeletere: Lozada...naniniwala ako sa mga sinasabi nya.Mayaman sya di nya kelangan magpabayad para sabihin yung mga sinasabi nya..unlike other witnesses before Alberto Mawanay,Rose Bud etc etc.
Sana si NERI tumulong na rin magsabi ng katotohanan(sana)
Sadly, Lozada can't be a real hero. Remember he admits being a practitioner of the government's “dysfunctional procurement system.” Pumalag lang siya vs Abalos because Abalos was asking too much. But I admire him for having the balls to do what he did, and for not taking the easiest route out of the mess, which is to keep silent.
ReplyDeleteI don't take that against him. He did what he had to do while he was within the system.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ellentordesillas.com/?p=2106
ReplyDeleteI think I'mma go and cry in the corner now.
i watched both lozada's testimony the day before and the govt officials rebuttal yesterday. i watched it from 1030am to 800pm. i was hooked! lozada answered every question as if he was taking you on a tour of every conversation and scenario he had during his ordeal leading to the senate committee. he was true to his word, even pointing out that he himself is not a saint. he simply grew a conscience.
ReplyDeleteatienza, razon, etc. on the other hand could not give any straight answer to simple inquiries on lozada's abduction. it was like when all else fails, the unanimous answer was "hindi ko po alam your honor". i cant wait for abalos and arroyo to take their turn in front of the committee.
'nuf said.
Exactly. Lozada's stories are, for lack of a better description, too real. Let's see where all these will lead us... Abangan ang susunod na kabanata...
ReplyDeleteThis from the highly respected Conrado de Quiros in his column There's the Rub:
ReplyDeleteIt was Lozada’s simplicity that won the day for him. He was brilliant in his simplicity. He was touching in his simplicity. He was believable in his simplicity. All the king’s horses and all the queen’s men came to break him, but in the end they just broke themselves like Humpty Dumpty and could not put themselves back again. They kept harping on a point that they thought would thoroughly damage Lozada’s testimony, which was that it was he who did not want to appear in the Senate and therefore the threat to his life came from other than government. To which Lozada readily agreed: He truly did not want to appear in the Senate. But only because, as he had told Atienza, Defensor, et al., if he did, he would be compelled to tell the truth. And therefore the threat to his life could only come from government.
Full text here: http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view/20080213-118485/Vindication
i'm willing to march on the streets again. i just hope all this would not be for naught. as everything was before.
ReplyDeleteNice article, joni. I completely agree. This Lozada guy sounds like Schindler in Schindler's list. Selfish, also part of the sins of the system, but it comes down to it, he does what needs to be done. The worst times makes surprising heroes of even those hesitant to be so.
ReplyDeleteAt oo, gago si Abalos at GMA, shame on them for mocking and stealing from all of us!
them and everybody else in government, really.
ReplyDeleteAgain I turn to Conrado de Quiros to so eloquently say what I cannot find the words for: http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view/20080217-119538/Hero
ReplyDeletei attended PDP-Laban rallies in 1978 during the batasang pambansa elections
ReplyDeletei marched in 1981 in liwasan vs oil price increases
i marched in 1983 after ninoy was shot
i marched in 1986 during edsa 1
i marched in 1999 against the VFA
i marched in 2001 sa Erap resign
march lang nang march no? kasi kapag napagod ka at nag give up, mas malaki ang kurakot
isipin mo na lang, baka kung walang nag ma march, baka 100 x pa ang kurakot