Editorial : Tangled web
First posted 02:32am (Mla time) Aug 10,
2005
Inquirer News Service
A TANGLED web of charges, countercharges, witnesses and
counter-witnesses is all the country has to show for all
the efforts of its leaders. No institution has emerged unscathed
and unsullied. The administration is presenting -- and demolishing
-- witnesses with as much viciousness and enthusiasm as
the opposition, while the Catholic Church, the military,
the police, media and civil society have all gotten into
the act, in one way or another. Everyone has a witness,
and everybody else has found a way to destroy that witness.
It is not our role to play prosecutor for
either side, but it is our responsibility to point out the
depths of irresponsibility and ruthlessness our major political
players have sunk into. One side presents someone, only
for that person to retract his story or modify it to the
extent that his testimony becomes hopelessly muddled. Large
sums of cash are just some of the considerations that are
allegedly dangled. The use of police power, legal threats
and personal appeals add to a general picture of power being
used for the sake of power, and not in the search for the
truth or the greater good. What is happening now serves
as an indictment of the low regard in which the major players
hold the public. Innuendo and slander are replacing facts;
demolishing -- and not building up -- a case is the name
of the game.
The public knows that when a witness bursts
into tears, begging the forgiveness of the First Family,
the tears weren't inspired by a sudden call to greatness,
but most likely by a promise of cash to make crying worthwhile.
The public also knows that when a witness with a large number
of police officers hovering in the background steps forward
to demolish the testimony of another witness, that demolition
is inspired as much by fear of the policemen's guns as it
is by a desire to tell the truth. The truth, such as it
is, is only this: that both sides regard it as something
that can be changed and modified at will.
The personal nature of the charges and
countercharges is increasingly reflected in the persons
perceived to be behind them. There is the President, with
her loyal lieutenants moving heaven and earth to demolish
hostile testimony. There is the opposition, moving with
equal resolve to keep producing witnesses who will testify
at least until new witnesses can be produced. On a certain
level, it is perhaps more understandable to see the President
and her people, moving with such ferociousness, since the
life of the administration is on the line. It is less understandable
to see opposition leaders virtually abandoning all pretense
to either objectivity or statesmanship.
Sen. Panfilo Lacson has warned that if
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo wants to make this a personal
match, he would gladly accommodate her. After being accused
of being the main mobilizer of witnesses against the President,
Lacson has vowed to redouble his efforts to produce damaging
witnesses.
The problem is that Lacson is a senator,
and belongs to a body that everyone expects to hear the
charges leveled against the President. We have heard time
and again that an impeachment is a political process, that
it isn't expected to be composed of completely impartial
individuals, but neither is it expected to be a body devoid
of even the appearance of having an open mind.
Public opinion has spoken out strongly
in favor of the impeachment process. While some sectors
have called for senators who have clearly expressed a position
unfavorable to the President to inhibit themselves, this
call has not been taken up by the majority. The public knows
better than to expect a fair hearing of the administration
case from the likes of the Estradas, mother and son, for
example. Their hostile questioning will be par for the course,
and their vote a foregone conclusion. But even the Estradas
have resisted the urge to volunteer to do the job of the
House of Representatives, which is, if it resists the temptation
to throw out the impeachment complaint, to prosecute the
case before the Senate. There is partisanship, and there
is such a thing as crossing the line. Lacson has exhibited
both.
This week should see the debate over the
complaints in the House heating up. It should also mark
the start of a period of preparation and reflection in the
Senate. Few institutions get a second chance to prove themselves
capable of living up to the highest, instead of the lowest,
expectations of the public. The Senate, unless denied that
opportunity by the House, will have that chance.