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by gerry kaimo 12.28.01
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TODAY Newspaper
Focus Section January28, 2001
Between the barricades
By Manuel L. Quezon
III
JANUARY 18 was supposed to be the day when a million Filipinos would
march on Malacañang Palace and surround it, and hopefully, convince
its tenant to resign if not evict him outright. But word began to filter
out that neither Cory nor Cardinal Sin wanted the march to push through.
There were too many young people at the Edsa shrine; too many youngsters
eager to be heroes, but too inexperienced to face the possible consequences
of squaring off with a PSG already preparing its arms; the march was,
to avoid widespread disappointment, announced as having been ³postponed².
The 11 am assembly preparatory to the march, we were told, early in
the morning, was being called off in order to await delegations expected
to arrive from the provinces. But other plans were afoot. From the 16th
to the early hours of the morning of the 18th, Iıd gone to the shrine
night after night to shout with the rest, then come home to get some
sleep and crank out editorials and columns; with the march called off
on the 18th, I looked forward to some rest before returning to Edsa
for a scheduled Mass at 5 pm on the 19th.
It was while resting at home that I saw, in television, the sudden collapse
of the Estrada government and the strange defection of the Armed Forces
of the Philippines. It was less of a defection that a carefully stage-managed
balancing act. Angelo Reyes, AFP Chief of Staff, appeared on television
to say that while he thought Joseph Estrada was ³a good President,²
the AFP was, anyway, joining the side of the people and withdrawing
its support from its commander-in-chief. Nothing more, nothing less.
This announcement, more along the lines of a publicity stunt than a
courageous and firm stand, certainly relieved the public; there was
widespread jubilation even Satur Ocampo, noted Communist, clapped,
perhaps one of the few times in his life that he has applauded the military.
ABS-CBN had already shown footage of helicopter gunships on the tarmac
at Villamor airbase and tanks lurking between buildings in Fort Bonifacio:
at the very least it seemed the sword of war, if not exactly returned
to its sheath, would not be used against the people. It was at that
point, with the AFPıs top brass having gingerly tiptoed to the side
of the people at Edsa, that I returned to Edsa to hear the crowd roar
with delight as Johnny-come-lately after Johnny-come-lately was proclaimed
as having suddenly seen the light and, to prove it, was appearing on
the stage of the Edsa shrine to be caught in the light of the cameras.
Even in revolutionary times, our politicians follow Filipino time. Always
late, but somehow, they manage to show up.
If a conscience and love of country wonıt move your heart, the fear
of missing out on a historic photo opportunity will: this thought occurred
to me as I saw suddenly-resigned Interior Secretary Fred Limıs familiar
white hair, and again, the same thought occurred to me much later, when
I heard the crowd on the steps of the shrine booing and jeering Robert
Jaworski (one of the 11 notorious senatorsı whose refusal to let the
evidence be opened sent us into the streets and aborted the impeachment
trial in the first place) who tried to show up, only to be hooted at.
Served him right. But between seeing Lim and hearing Jaworski being
yelled at to go home, together with a friend, I was able to hear the
Cardinalıs prayer and Coryıs speech; confetti was raining down from
every flyover. Never had the crowd been so dense. But after a few hours,
it was nothing but speeches. We circled the shrine; I saw Mar Roxas,
who had resigned over the corruption in the government months ago, shyly
lurking in a corner of the chapel seemingly embarrassed to be associated
with those who were only climbing on to the bandwagon now. I shook my
head and told my friend we needed food. With other members of the bourgeoisie,
Jay and I headed to Ortigas to get some food.
In the restaurant, two televisions were on; Joseph Estrada appeared
on TV to announce he was calling for a ³snap² election in which he would
not run. Too little, too late. Footage on television also showed the
scorpion tanks of the Presidential Security Group revving up, and the
heavily-armed members of the PSG themselves, both in the sort of urban
camouflage we hadnıt seen since the coup attempt of 1989, preparing
to defend the man who was still President. We headed back to Edsa; the
speeches had given way to dancing and music. I told my friend, ³the
action will be at the Palace, I want to see whatıs going to happen.²
And so to the Palace we went or as close to it as we could possibly
get. At first we headed to Mendiola, saw a small stage, and decided
that the press pass on my car was an invitation for trouble. The place
to be, I felt, would be JP Laurel street. That is where we headed; spotting
a GMA network pick up truck, I parked my car in front of it and proceeded
to cross the street where two very large GMA mobile vans were parked.
Every few minutes ABS-CBN pick-ups and mobile vans would zoom by; several
pickups from radio stations reconnoitered the area more cautiously.
I kibitzed with the kind people from GMA. It was already about 11:00
pm by then. Word was that Estrada was holed up in the Palace with, depending
on whom you talked to, a bottle of Johnny Walker Blue Label, presidential
buddy and thug Baby Asistio, notorious senator and martial law mastermind
Juan Ponce Enrile, and Executive Secretary Ed Angara, all of the above,
some of the above, none of the above.
The GMA crew in one of the mobile studio vans monitored channels 2 and
7; their colleagues ate instant noodles and other napped on chairs;
then came news that Nani Perez and others were headed to the Palace
to parley with the President. ³Looks like heıs getting ready to leave,²
I told Jay. ³Letıs stick around to see if heıs going to leave by chopper
or if weıll witness the last motorcade of his presidency.² Shortly after
midnight a source called me and told me the talks had broken down because
Gen. Angelo Reyes, so recently the man who was proclaimed a hero even
though he had said he still thought Estrada was a good president, had
made certain commitments to Estrada that were unacceptable to the opposition.
I talked to someone in charge of the GMA crew and asked for independent
confirmation of the call I received; after a few minutes, the lady came
back and said yes, their reporter within the Palace confirmed what had
happened. Meanwhile, the radio stations announced that the opposition
delegation had left the Palace but there was no news of whether talks
had been fruitful or not. By 1pm everyone knew the talks had broken
down and that Estrada wanted five to seven more days to do something
that did not seem to include signing a letter of resignation. The GMA
reporters and I talked things over; the man in Malacanang showed no
signs of leaving. ³This means people are going to march, isnıt it?²
I asked them. They agreed; the opposition had given Estrada until 6
am to step down, or the march would push on as was originally planned
the day before.
Around half past one, the PSG soldiers manning the already barricaded
JP Laurel gate had increased from a couple to four or five; an hour
earlier weıd tried to get through, but had been politely refused entry;
a couple of foreign journalists now tried doing the same thing and were
told to get lost. I sat on the sidewalk, listening to the radio. The
evacuation of San Miguelıs residents began. Cars of homeowners from
the neighborhood of Malacanang trying to exit were turned back from
the JP Laurel gate; fifteen minutes later small groups of people carrying
suitcases and plastic bags began walking out. You could, apparently,
leave the Palace perimeter on foot. An old woman, carrying two big bags
was helped along by two young men: this must have been her umpteenth
evacuation since the war. A little while later some vans and a Tamaraw
FX taxi or two arrived outside the JP Laurel gate, and families trickled
out from the vicinity of the Palace. By this time Jay and I had been
joined by a Chinese Filipino who lived in the San Miguel neighborhood
but who couldnıt get back home because his car wasnıt allowed to enter
the restricted area that his neighborhood had become. He waved goodbye
to his departing neighbors. It turned out heıd just arrived from Edsa.
I asked why heıd gone to Edsa: ³I went,² he told me, matter of factly,
³because I was ashamed of what the senators did, and I want to live
in a country where I donıt have to bribe the Bureau of Internal Revenue
to keep my business going.² He explained that he had to pay off the
BIR so much he couldnıt even give his employees a raise. ³I think this
is the countryıs last chance. If things donıt change, even my people
want to go abroad, and Iıd want to go abroad.² He called his wife on
his cellphone and told her he wasnıt allowed back in, and for her not
to worry. He would become our companion for the rest of the day.
Around 2:30 in the morning, starving, Jay and I had breakfast in the
Goodah! at the corner of Adela and JP Laurel. A sour-faced, rather pale
Filipino was sitting at the counter, listening to a portable AM radio
while his rather more pleasant-looking Chinese Filipino looking companion
idly leafed though a copy of the Bulletin. ³Are people going to push
through with the march,² I asked, referring to the 6am deadline given
by the opposition to Estrada. The man harrumphed and replied that he
didnıt know what was taking everyone so long, they should have begun
marching the moment news that the negotiations had failed had been broadcast.
A roly-poly Chinese Filipino and his girlfriend were on another side
of the counter, enthusiastically having breakfast with a mestizo friend.
After everyone had eaten, we all crossed the street and stood around
a lamp-post staring at the JP Laurel PSG checkpoint bristling barbed
wire. The mestizo, in between amused ³coños² and other expletives speculated
Estrada was drunk as a skunk; the rest debated on what to do. Should
they wait for the crowd? One bystander agonized that he had an important
business meeting in Makati. ³Puta!² exclaimed the mestizo, ³Iım not
going to any meetings, this is history!² But within twenty minutes they
had all left; some said they would head to Mendiola; the others didnıt
explain where they were going. An overweight, extremely dark man sporting
a Lakas-NUCD Secretariat Badge materialized and accosted me, demanding
to know what was happening. I told him what Iıd heard on the radio:
talks had failed; some people had already begun to march toward Malacanang;
the rest would march after mass at 6 am; he inquired about the PSG.
I pointed at the PSG checkpoint and informed him they werenıt allowing
journalists through. ³Aha,² he snorted; ³I-psy-psywar ko sila.² He waddled
over to the PSG, shook their hands, and, I suppose, did his best to
do psy-war ops in the best tradition of the leadership of Lakas. Then
he waddled over to the GMA crew, and then waddled out of sight. It was
now 3:30 a.m. Expecting an assault on a presidential palace is like
waiting for an invasion to begin; it involves one part adrenaline to
three parts boredom and fatigue. Jay went off to take a nap in the car
(after weıd moved it, for safetyıs sake, to a small side street). I
engaged in that favorite time-killing activity of media men and women,
speculating on what might happen, with the kind people of GMA.
More of their colleagues arrived. By now I was falling asleep on my
feet and went to my car to nap a bit. Sometime between 4 and 5 in the
morning Jay jolted me awake and told me the radio had announced that
the vanguard of the marchers had already gone past the Welcome Rotonda,
reached España Avenue, and were regrouping, waiting for the rest. I
got out of the car where one of the Channel 7 people said to me, ³Iıve
been looking for you, theyıre headed here, although the Cardinal and
Cory donıt want them to go.² It seemed only the militant groups were
intent on marching on the Palace. ³Itıs only a matter of time,² the
lady from GMA said. Shortly thereafter, the OB-Vans of GMA revved up
their engines and headed for Mendiola. All night long, Philippine National
Police trucks, hardly any of them fully laden with troops, had been
zooming around the neighborhood, apparently headed toward Mendiola.
Squad cars would whisk by. But at 5:30 am about thirty PNP soldiers,
without helmets, but armed with shields and very nasty looking wooden
clubs (not even proper police batons) showed up. By the side of the
road, a stack of packed breakfasts also materialized. The policemen
ate; ten minutes later the PNP men in blue were reinforced by PNP troops
in brown. ³Whatıs the difference between your being in blue and those
people being in brown?² Jay asked one policemen. ³Well,² explained the
cop, ³weıre NCR PNP, those are from RECOM 3,² that is, from the provinces.
The same policeman volunteered that those in brown were the ones authorized
to carry weapons while those in blue only had shields and their nasty
wooden clubs. After breakfast a new barricade was erected at the beginning
of JP Laurel St.; street urchins enthusiastically helped push metal
barriers into place. A pudgy officer showed up and directed his troops
to fortify the metal barriers with barbed wire. Then, more waiting.
Policemen smoked. Some could be seen sending text messages. Two or three
were reading the Pinoy Times. Having planted a copy of Today on a nearby
log used as a rest area by the policemen, I was pleased to see one cop
pick up the paper, read it, and pass it on to a fellow cop. Two cops
read Todayıs op-ed section, two others seemed to prefer the lifestyle
section.
Again, tedium, broken only by a surprise visit from General Aglipay,
who arrived to say hello from the other side of the barrier, but wasnıt
allowed through. ³We like him,² one cop volunteered, ³he cares for our
welfare, unlike Lacson who is just a political general². At 6:30 a.m.
a woman arrived, in a woven straw hat with a yellow ribbon, the rest
of her draped with a yellow sash; she got on her knees, and, through
a megaphone, began to wail a novena to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. The
policemen looked puzzled; several made the sign of the cross; orders
were issued for them to firm up their formation. By 7 am the flags of
the militant left could be seen approaching beneath the Nagtahan flyover,
while the flyovers themselves began to be filled with people. The cops,
during idle moments, practiced swinging their clubs. In half an hour
the protesters were there in full force; former Interior Secretary Raffy
Alunan made a dramatic appearance; a few minutes later, noted professor
Randy David was by his side; militant leftist leader Teddy Casiño showed
up; an impromptu stage was erected. There was a program. The national
anthem was sung; Bayan ko was sung; an artist got up on the small stage
and proceeded to lead the crowd in hurling good natured and quite scandalous
abuse at Estrada and the 11 senators of by now, more-than-ill repute.
It was as if every time the fuse was lit, the protesters made a deliberate
effort to snuff it out. They even called for cheers for the policemen.
The policemen looked embarrassed.
Several times, Raffy Alunan, Randy David, and various politicians who
decided to make a cameo appearance at the JP Laurel barrier linked arms,
while others shouted, ³let us through!² But then the tension would subside,
and people would start cheering, or chanting, or singing. Then the truck
appeared in the distance. It was an enormous truck; probably a 16 wheeler.
It tooted its horn several times. And for the first time, one heard
drums in the distance. What seemed to be close to a hundred people stood
on the flat bed of the truck, waving flags; the banner-waving militants
on the ground by the barricade waved their banners. Fists were raised;
CNNıs Mike Chinoy was spotted on the rooftop of the Chow King behind
the barrier; everyone cheered and started chanting ³Erap resign!² The
truck was coming closer. The officer in charge of the police called
for two PNP buses, lurking in a side street, to be called out to barricade
the street further; JP Laurel now had seven lines of defense; the line
of barbed wire; the line of shield and truncheon wielding troops; the
two buses; another line of policemen, this time those dressed in brown
combat uniforms; another line of buses; a line of Philippine Air Force
troops; and finally, the original PSG checkpoint. While all this was
going on, the news on the radio was that more marchers had decided to
go through Mandaluyong, down Nueve de Febrero Avenue; and that the Air
Force had decided to order ³persuasion flights² over the Palace. Soon
enough, the choppers spotted at Villamor air base the previous day soon
thud-thudded overhead; people cheered; people began to chant ³Erap resign!²
once again, and this time, not merely for the gratification of the CNN
crew; the policemen looked up, looking puzzled, and then looked more
alarmed when a crowd of civilians, caught between the Chow King and
the 7-11, both of which were within the policeıs first line of defense,
started chanting ³Erap resign!² too. The defenders of the Palace had
civilian oppositionists at their front and rear. The ominously large
truck, which the PNP officers obviously expected to attempt to ram through
their defenses, suddenly began to swing away. The radio announced those
at JP Laurel were giving up on trying to get to the Palace through this
street, and would join their comrades now storming down Recto. The truck
would be more useful there. Upon hearing this news, we decided to head
to Mendiola, trudging down Concepcion Aguila until we reached Mendiola
bridge. The foot of the bridge nearest the Palace was even more strongly
fortified than it was the night before; by the statue of Chino Roces
at the other foot of the bridge, there stood a media platform where
more potbellied police generals surveyed the scene.
We went to the sort of plaza where Recto Avenue meets the foot of Mendiola
bridge and, looking forward toward Recto, saw the left side of Legarda
Street barricaded by policemen wearing modern-style American army helmets,
to hold back the Estrada loyalists, while the right side of Legarda
was barricaded by policemen with shields and clubs to hold back the
rallyists awaiting reinforcements. Catcalls were being exchanged. A
line of brown-clad policemen, wearing padded body armor, and with the
usual shields and clubs, blocked Recto itself. I sat on a sidewalk,
hoping I wasnıt sitting on human waste, for everywhere, from canal,
from sidewalk, from street and gutter, from JP Laurel where we earlier
were, to Mendiola where we now milled around with the rest of the media,
one could only smell the stench of garbage: the sickly-sweet, putrid
odor of decayed and decaying things. Another line of policemen was ordered
to form at the foot of Mendiola bridge itself; behind this line of troops,
mainly policewomen, was parked a fire truck, twin of the one parked
along JP Laurel. Slowly, but inexorably, you began to see the flags.
Waving constantly. Moving forward agonizingly slowly. Then the truck,
the same truck that had menaced the JP Laurel barricades, could be seen
in the distance. If there had been a less than two hundred at the JP
Laurel gate, here now approached thousands, if not tens of thousands.
The other group of protesters on Legarda street could hear their comrades
coming. And still the protesters marched on. Foot by foot, tirelessly
waving their flags; the truck was getting closer and closer. You could
hear the steady beating of drums. This was the steady tattoo of a plebian
army intent on liberating the Palace. The second line of policemen on
Mendiola bridge itself was ordered into formation and banged their shields
in the manner Roman legionaries must have done as they prepared to do
battle. I overheard an officer say that they would hold the line at
the last column of the still uncompleted MRT before the bridge itself.
Closer and closer came the truck; from the radio came a call from the
pro-Estrada leaders telling their people to abandon their position on
Legarda. But the pro-Estrada people stayed. The truck passed column
after column of the unfinished MRT; then something strange happened.
The truck began to turn; it passed between two columns and proceeded
to block the entire breadth of Recto. It was not going to ram the troops
after all. It was going to be turned into an impromptu stage.
How funny, I thought; here they were, ready to run over policemen in
padded body armor, and instead, they were going to put on the Leftist
equivalent of a vaudeville show. But journalists more experienced than
I, apparently sensed what was going to happen, and a photographer beside
me advised me to pull back to Mendiola bridge itself. We clambered on
to a shack. As far as the eye could see, Recto was a sea of humanity,
waving the banners of cause-oriented groups; the impromptu stage provided
by the flatbed of the truck now filled with people. Fists were raised;
the national anthem was sung. The last lines were not even sung at all;
they were roared. At the police. At which point, the sound system on
the truck started to blare out one of the rock and roll songs from the
famous ³white album²; and the tens of thousands of the proletariat,
which only a minute ago seemed ready to charge the police, began to
dance. They danced and shouted; their comrades on Legarda began to shout.
The dancing was not, as I thought it was, an attempt to defuse the tension.
It was, instead, what was needed to provide the last, vital surge of
adrenaline that led to the conquest of Mendiola bridge. For even as
the song ended and the tens of thousands at Recto cheered, a great roar
went up from those at Legarda, and in their enthusiasm, the crowd surged
forward and knocked over the barricade; Jay, who was closer, later recounted
to me that even as the barricade collapsed, the surprised activists
at first instinctively pulled back; some even shouted ³peace, peace!²
But the police themselves fell back, and with a great roar those on
Legarda charged ahead. Padded body armor, shields and clubs and all,
the policemen barricading Recto hadnıt a chance. Their comrades having
broken through, those on Recto surged forward, linked arms with those
coming from Legarda, and in a few moments, a sea of flags covered the
ground between Recto, Legarda, and the foot of Mendiola bridge.
Where the statue of Chino Roces had had been surrounded by police officers
and media men, a swarm of men and women waving flags now stood. The
moment we saw the barricade on Legarda give way, we pulled back to the
fire truck on Mendiola itself; from there we saw the two groups of rallyists
link up; from the fire truck we saw policemen drop their shields; policewomen
ran past in shock; the thousands at the foot of Mendiola seemed preparing
to regroup and were about to surge ahead; indeed, they did start moving
forward again. A long-haired photographer, perched on the fire truck
with me and a perhaps a dozen other media people, turned to me and said,
³brod, lumipat na tayo, matindi na ito.² So we pulled back some more,
to the vicinity of the San Beda College and Centro Escolar University.
Where, minutes before, weıd been perched on a fire truck the Police
in their hurry to flee hadnıt even the presence of mind to use, more
militant protesters now stood, waving their flags. From Concepcion Aguila
St. came screeching the black SUV of General Aglipay, followed by two
pick up trucks of SWAT teams. A new phalanx of policemen bearing shields
was ordered to form; behind them, the SWAT teams began preparing their
weapons. After the position of the SWAT team, there was only the PSG
gate at the foot of Mendiola and then the ornate Commonwealth-era gates
of Malacanang itself. On the radio, the night had been spent with news
of Vice-President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo being urged to take her oath
of office as president, and news too, that Chief Justice Davide was
prepared to swear her in, provided Estrada would resign.
The 6 a.m. deadline of the opposition for Estrada to resign was moved
to 12 noon; then it was announced, around the time the truck of the
militants had been inching its way up Recto, that the Vice-President
was in an emergency meeting at Villa San Miguel, Cardinal Sinıs residence.
Soon after that, Justice Panganiban would announce that Davide had agreed
to swear in Arroyo as President at noon, at the Edsa shrine, to avoid
bloodshed. It was shortly after the SWAT teams had set up their positions
that people suddenly went quiet and those who had radios turned them
on, so people could hear what was going on. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
was about to take her oath of office. The SWAT teams relaxed; the soldiers
rested their shields on the ground. The tens of thousands at the foot
of Mendiola began another impromptu program. It looked like the tension
had been defused. Now the attention of the country turned to the Edsa
shrine. Jay and I trudged toward JP Laurel, stopped at a carinderia
which had a television showing the ABS-CBN coverage of the inauguration
of the new president. We were joined in the carinderia by sweaty policemen
and tired rallyists; we watched the crowds at Edsa roar as Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo was sworn in. We hurriedly finished our food and headed back
to Mendiola to see what, if anything, would happen. Policemen were sitting
on the ground.
The rallyists were holding a program on their truck-cum-stage. Citizens
stood by, listening to the new Presidentıs inaugural speech. An old
journalist asked me if Estrada had resigned; we both stood silently
as a hoarse, tired Edgardo Angara announced that Estrada had prepared
a resignation letter but would not sign it because the Supreme Court
had taken matters into its own hands. At the conclusion of Gloriaıs
speech, a few people applauded; the rest seemed stunned. There would
be no invasion of Malacanang. The statue of Chino Roces was as far as
the army of invasion headed toward Malacanang ever got. Cory and the
Cardinalıs call for a halt to the march had been defied; but the marchers
never did get to Malacanang. When Chief Justice Hilario Davide, Jr.
said he did what he did to save lives, and when it was later announced
that both Cardinal Sin and Cory Aquino had told Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
to take her oath of office now, lest blood be shed, they knew what they
were doing. For there was all the making of a bloodbath on Mendiola
that day. And even as I trudged back to my car, eventually to escape
the closely guarded perimeter of Malacanang by being allowed to squeeze
through a one-way street leading to San Rafael, I could hear a group
of young girls singing this song (to the tune of the Battle Hymn of
the Republic): Gloria, Gloria labandera Gloria, Gloria labandera Gloria,
Gloria labandera Labandera lang si Gloria! It was not the victory nor
the manner of victory Gloria Macapagal Arroyo may have wanted; but she
prevented a bloodbath by shifting attention from the attempted invasion
of Malacanang by taking an oath of office she wanted to take only when
Estrada had properly resigned. I head the drums of the Left; I saw the
clubs and rifles of the PNP; the whole country saw the scorpion tanks.
Edsa II as peaceful people power was literally kept as such at the last
minute, by the swearing in of a little woman by a kindly white haired
man.
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