
Anti-US crusader Father Shay Cullen, and a US submarine in Subic Bay. Photo: Reuters
    Philippines  divided over US return to Subic Bay
    China, dollars and human rights are on the  agenda as Filipino society awaits American forces.
    The anti-child sex crusading priest Shay Cullen  plans to mobilize Filipinos to protest against the return of United States  forces to the former home of the US 7th Fleet at Subic Bay, north of Manila, 20  years after the Philippine Senate ordered them to leave.
    ''They are coming back and civil society will  not tolerate it,'' said Father Cullen, a  Columban priest from Ireland who helped whip up anti-American sentiment  across the Philippines that forced the US from its two largest overseas  military installations at Subic Bay and nearby Clark air base in 1992 and 1991.
    ''We are more organized than we were 20 years …  there is now a much stronger network built up to fight for human rights and  children's rights that will be able to mobilize the masses,'' he said from his  sprawling offices overlooking Subic Bay, where a US navy ship was loading  supplies.
    US and Philippine officials have confirmed that  Subic Bay, which has a port and airfield now known as Subic Bay Freeport Zone,  will play a much larger role in US Pacific Fleet deployments as the US military  shifts its focus towards Asia and the Pacific.
    While officials insist there are no plans to  reopen any bases in the Philippines, which would violate Philippine law, Subic  Bay is set to host US ships, marines and aircraft on a semi-permanent basis,  officials say.
    This time the anti-US campaigners will  encounter stronger opposition amid heightened tensions over China's territorial  claims in the South China Sea after a stand-off between Chinese and Philippine  ships at the disputed Scarborough Shoal, off the Philippine coast, earlier this  year, analysts say.
    ''We're open for business,'' said James  ''Bong'' Gordon, the mayor of Olongapo, a city of 240,000 people next to Subic  Bay. ''No matter what you call it … a base or semi-permanent hosting or  whatever, the US is back and its great news for Olongapo.''
    Mr. Gordon said residents of his city are  gearing up for the arrival of thousands of US marines who will flood bars,  restaurants, craft shops and sporting facilities.
    Father Cullen has crusaded against the sexual  exploitation of under-age Filipinos since 1974. He says 90 per cent of the sex  bars in Olongapo were closed after the US forces left in 1992.
    But he said new bars are already opening as US  ships dock more frequently at Subic Bay's wharf. ''We will mobilize. We will  say no, no, no … we cannot return to the past.''
    But Mr. Gordon said the returning forces would  greatly boost his city's economy and bring the Philippines closer to the US at  a time many Filipinos are fearful of the future.
    Also, US personnel coming off the ships are now  better behaved than they were 20 years ago, he said, mainly because many of  them are women.
    ''Before they were all men … it's still a  reality that some US personnel will get involved in prostitution. It happens  everywhere in the world,'' he said. ''We try to minimize it.''
    Twenty years ago Mr. Gordon's elder brother,  Richard Gordon, the chairman of the Philippines Red Cross and a former senator,  led the pro-US campaign to retain the bases, bitterly clashing with Father  Cullen.
    ''It was a tragic mistake to shut out the  world's most important country at that time,'' Richard Gordon said in his  Manila office. ''But people who didn't listen to me then are now running around  panicking, saying there's a genuine threat from China and we need a strong  alliance with the US.''
    Analysts say that moving back to Subic Bay on a  semi-permanent basis will give the US a strategically important force posture  for its shift in emphasis to the Pacific.
    Richard Gordon, who was mayor of Olongapo in  the 1980s and became head of the Subic Bay Authority which oversaw development  of the area when the US forces left in 1992, becomes angry when asked about US  personnel attracting prostitutes.
    ''How dare you people come here and call them  prostitutes,'' he says. ''They just want to survive … they don't have anything.  They don't have a choice.''
    Mr. Gordon said the ''noisy minority'' would  make a fuss about the US forces returning.
    ''But the majority of Filipinos want the  Americans here … we have to do what is in our interests as a nation,'' he said.
    Father Cullen, 69, who founded the People's  Recovery Empowerment Development Assistance organization, operates a squad to  rescue sexually abused children, some of them babies found with sexually  transmitted diseases.
    He has twice been nominated for the Nobel peace  prize, and often leads the squad, which was involved this month in rescuing an  eight-year-old girl.
    ''You are never going to wipe out the abuse  completely,'' he said. ''But with economic development that brings jobs and a  lot of effort we can reduce it by 60 per cent.''
    Father Cullen estimates there are still 10,000  to 15,000 sex workers in Olongapo and up to 100,000 in red light areas of  Angeles City, which is popular with Australian sex tourists.
    ''We see victims as young as eight sucked from  their impoverished home into the sex industry. The abuse … will only get worse  if the Americans return,'' he said. (http://is.gd/dtyXeb) 
    The Sydney Morning Herald