OFW Filipino Heroes

Monday, January 9, 2012

US-China rivalry behind fresh corruption charges in the Philippines

By Joseph Santolan

9 January 2012

Graft and corruption charges were filed against former Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on December 28. The charges stem from a scandal that erupted in 2007 over the alleged rigging of bids for the construction of a national broadband network (NBN) on behalf of a Chinese corporation, Zhongxing Telecommunication Equipment (ZTE). This is the second set of charges filed by President Aquino's administration against Arroyo and clearly reveals what lies behind Aquino's political battle against the former president: the geopolitical struggle between China and the United States in the region.

Arroyo is currently under arrest in the Philippine Veterans Memorial Medical Center on charges that she committed electoral fraud during the 2007 senatorial elections on behalf of candidates from her Lakas-Kampi-CMD party. Electoral fraud is a charge that precludes the possibility of posting bail, and was thus the first case filed by the Aquino administration in a rush to prevent Arroyo from leaving the country.

The electoral fraud case that the government has filed against Arroyo is threadbare, built on the testimony of a single witness. Norie Unas, a former provincial administrator from the southern province of Maguindanao, has sworn that he overheard Arroyo issue orders to engage in cheating in the 2007 election. No evidence beyond this claim has been presented.

In 2009, the political clan of the Ampatuan family massacred 59 people, 34 of them journalists, in one of the bloodiest acts of electoral violence in the Philippines in years. Unas, the Aquino administration's sole witness, has been repeatedly accused by witnesses in the Ampatuan trial of not only being party to planning the massacre but of having ordered the backhoe that was being used to bury the bodies in a mass grave. It is widely speculated that Unas cut a deal with the Aquino administration to testify against Arroyo in return for immunity in the Ampatuan case.

There is a wealth of evidence that Arroyo cheated in the 2004 presidential election. Presenting a case against her for this, however, would expose the entire corrupt political system in the Philippines, implicating both her and her rivals. Aquino, a congressman in 2005 when the election fraud scandal broke, defended Arroyo, then an ally, against charges that she rigged the election.

The political blitzkrieg now being carried out against Arroyo is at its base not about corruption or poll fraud. It is about the shift that occurred during her administration, reorienting the Philippines' economic and political ties away from the United States and toward China.

In 2007, the Arroyo administration proposed to construct a national broadband network connecting all Philippine government offices and was soliciting bids from private contractors for the construction. Three corporations bid: ZTE, a Chinese state corporation; Amsterdam Holdings, a local start up backed by Chinese firm Huawei Tech; and the US telecommunications company Arescom. Arescom significantly underbid both rival offers.

The US ambassador sent a letter to Arroyo urging fair and transparent consideration of all proposals. Arroyo favored the more expensive ZTE bid over its rivals. The head of Amsterdam Holdings, son of the long-time speaker of the House of Representatives, cried foul. Accusations emerged of bribery and secret deals cut during golf games. The bid from Arescom was entirely left out of the Philippine press.

Lurking behind the sordid mess of who said what and to whom is a simple fact: Arroyo gave a massive infrastructural contract to a Chinese state corporation over a rival bid from a US firm.

This NBN-ZTE deal, as it became known, was part of a trend. In the same year, the lucrative contract for the operation of the Philippine power transmission grid, TransCo, was given to the China State Grid over a rival bid from San Miguel Corporation. Thirty five percent of the San Miguel Corporation bid of $US3.905 billion came from the US-based Texas Pacific Group—now TPG Capital—one of the world's largest private equity firms, specializing in leveraged buyouts.

Leading the TPG bid was Ernest Bower, who, according to WikiLeaks cable 07Manila3966, met with US Ambassador to the Philippines Kristie Kenney to discuss the widespread rumors of corruption on the part of the Arroyo administration in the TransCo bidding. The cable concluded, "It is unlikely that we will ever know whether collusion took place in this bidding, or whether there were other irregularities. There is a consensus among Filipinos that Congress will get its share when the franchise comes before it." Bower is now head of the Southeast Asia section of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), an important think tank behind the Obama administration's "pivot" to Asia and aggressive imperialist maneuvers against China.

Other substantial contracts were bid out to Chinese corporations, including the construction of a 90-kilometer railway, Northrail, in late 2004, at the time one of the largest Chinese-funded projects in Southeast Asia.

Aquino has been consolidating political power against his rival Arroyo for the past year. At every turn he has had the support of Washington. US diplomatic attaches supplied his administration with evidence of corruption on the part of high-ranking military officials beholden to Arroyo. The day Aquino announced that he would be prosecuting Arroyo for corruption; US Pacific Commander Admiral Robert Willard visited him and promised to ensure additional US military supplies in the mounting tensions with China over the South China Sea. The day Aquino prevented Arroyo from leaving the country, though she had not yet been charged with any crime—a clear violation of the Philippine constitution—Hillary Clinton visited Manila. She praised Aquino, offered additional US economic aid and promised that US would supply the Philippines with a second warship.

Each new step in the prosecution of Arroyo has been spearheaded by the various groups of the Philippine 'left.' Bayan Muna, the largest party-list organization with ties to the Maoist Communist Party of the Philippines, filed the NBN-ZTE case charges against Arroyo. Bayan Muna representative Neri Colmenares indicated clearly the direction that further prosecution of Arroyo would take in a message sent to the press on December 29. He called on the Aquino administration to turn a microscope on any deal that "China is involved in, including the Northrail project, for possible anomalies."

The Aquino administration's prosecution of Arroyo serves the interests of Washington in its increasingly tense confrontation with China. The filing of the NBN-ZTE case is simply the most transparent evidence yet of this.

See more in World Socialist Website

Sunday, January 8, 2012

China's Warship Intruded Philippines Sabina Shoal - December 2011 - Gains another Protest

Photographed through the window of a closed aircraft, an aerial view shows Pag-asa Island, part of the disputed Spratly group of islands, in the South China Sea located off the coast of western Philippines on Wednesday July 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Rolex Dela Pena, Pool)

Philippines accuses China of maritime intrusions in December before Christmas

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines has protested to China over three Chinese vessels that intruded into its waters last month, in the latest flaring of tensions over disputed West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) regions.

The Philippines accused China of intruding into its "maritime jurisdiction" after three Chinese ships were spotted last month in disputed areas in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea), the Department of Foreign Affairs said on Sunday.

China, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan have conflicting claims in the Spratlys, an area believed to contain huge deposits of oil and gas in the South China Sea

A Philippine foreign ministry statement said it had summoned the Chinese embassy's charge d'affaires on Thursday to convey "its serious concerns over recent actions of the People's Republic of China in the West Philippine Sea".

Manila refers to the South China Sea as West Philippine Sea to strengthen its claims on parts of the Spratlys. Philippine troops occupy nine islands and shoals in the Spratlys.

Citing reports from the defense and military establishments, the foreign ministry said two Chinese vessels and a Chinese navy warship were seen around Sabina shoal in the Spratlys on December 11 and 12, respectively.

Sabina shoal is around 124 nautical miles from the western island of Palawan and is within "Philippine sovereignty and maritime jurisdiction".

The Philippine government expressed its "serious concerns" to the Chinese Embassy after the three vessels, including a Chinese navy ship, were sighted near Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea on Dec. 11 and 12, Foreign Secretary Alberto del Rosario said Sunday.

In May 2011, Philippines protested China of intrusions into its territory, citing six instances, including one in March when two Chinese patrol boats tried to ram a survey ship.

The disputed ownership of oil-rich reefs and islands in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea), through which $5 trillion in trade sails annually, is one of the biggest security threats in Asia.

"These intrusions of the Chinese are clear violations of the 2002 ASEAN-China Declaration on the Conduct of Parties (DOC) in the South China Sea as well as the provision of the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)," the foreign ministry said.

Regional military commander Lt. Gen. Juancho Sabban said a Philippine navy patrol ship and an air force plane kept watch from a distance until the Chinese vessels left the country's territorial waters.

The three vessels apparently came from the Chinese-occupied Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands then cruised into Philippine waters on their way back to China as part of a regular shifting of forces, he said.

"We were watching them. They did not drop anchor or unload construction materials and appeared to be just passing through," Sabban told The Associated Press.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In Beijing, Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told the official Xinhua News Agency that the situation in the South China Sea "is peaceful and stable." China will always opt for negotiations to peacefully resolve disputes on "some islands ... and the demarcation of parts of the sea," Liu said.

Claimants should set aside the disputes and pursue common development ahead of a solution, Liu said, reiterating that outside "forces" should not meddle in the conflicts. China has repeatedly warned the U.S. not to intervene in the disputes.

Del Rosario said the new Chinese intrusions violated a 2002 accord between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations that discourages claimant countries to the South China Sea's disputed Spratly Islands from taking aggressive steps that could ignite tension or confrontations.

China, the Philippines and four other claimants have long been locked in a tense dispute over potentially oil- and gas-rich West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) territories, including the Spratlys.

Many fear the region could be Asia's next flash point for conflict.

The Philippines and Vietnam separately accused Chinese vessels of repeatedly intruding into Spratlys areas under their control and sabotaging oil explorations in their regular territorial waters in the first six months of last year.

China denied the claims and reiterated its sovereignty over most of the South China Sea.

Amid the disputes, the Philippines turned to the United States, a defense-treaty ally, to strengthen its underfunded military, one of Asia's weakest. The Philippine navy relaunched an old U.S. Coast Guard cutter as its biggest warship last month to guard its waters near the Spratlys.

President Benigno Aquino III and other top Philippine officials plan to travel to the United States this year to seek two more ships and a squadron of F-16 jets, according to del Rosario.

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