Thursday, February 21, 2008

a statement from malcolm hall



A CALL FOR TRUTH AND ACCOUNTABILITY
(A Statement of Members of the UP Law Faculty and Students)
 
We are members of the faculty and students of the College of Law of the University of the Philippines. As lawyers, educators, students of the law and citizens, we applaud the courage of Mr. Jun Lozada, who has volunteered information at great risk to himself and to his family.

We also, by this collective statement, express our outrage and indignation at the official response to the recent revelations on the NBN-ZTE controversy. We call on the concerned public officers to do what is right.

Public Office is a Public Trust. This is the core principle of our republican and democratic nation. In the wake of the initial revelations of Mr. Jose De Venecia III, Chairperson Romulo Neri and the more recent revelations Engineer Jun Lozada, the silence and inaction of the President and the Ombudsman directly violate this core principle.

Under the Constitution, the Ombudsman is an independent Office—accountable to none save the people and the Constitution. It has the power to investigate on its own initiative, which power it has not effectively exercised. The current Ombudsman's dismal failure to investigate recent exposes involving Malacanang has created a perception that she is not independent. Her recent inhibition from investigating the NBN-ZTE deal is not sufficient and does not reassure. By simply remaining in office, she still has enough influence to ensure that the current investigation goes the way of the other major investigations—nowhere.

The President's own silence on this matter is totally unacceptable. The exposes have directly implicated her. The resources of government have been mobilized to suppress the truth—the Philippine National Police, the Aviation Security Command, and the Presidential Security Group have been implicated in detaining Jun Lozada without his consent; her former Chief of Staff and the current DENR Secretary have also been implicated; members of her official family, from the DENR Secretary, the Justice Secretary, the Press Secretary, the Cabinet Secretary have all diverted time and effort to protect her and her husband. Instead of adopting a policy of full disclosure, she has allowed her former NEDA Director General and acting CHED Chairperson to keep a selective silence—when summoned by the Senate but not by Malacanang. Her Justice Secretary has indicated that a parallel investigation will focus on the key witness rather than on the possible crimes committed by those whom Mr. Lozada has named.

We now make the following calls:

First, for those in government who have been implicated by key witnesses, as a minimum response, to take a leave of absence until the controversy is resolved.

For the President and the Ombudsman, while we have asked, at the minimum, for them to take a leave of absence, we say also: resignation is always an option.

Second, for the Department of Justice to immediately terminate its investigation which, on its face, appears irregular considering that there has been no complaint filed with the Department.

Third, for those that the Constitution has vested with mandate and jurisdiction, such as the Ombudsman's Office and the Office of the Special Prosecutor, to charge and prosecute those responsible.

Fourth, for all UP ALUMNI, specially those who have graduated from the College of Law, to be faithful to the interests of our people. For those privileged to have power by appointment or election, to exercise their discretion wisely and not serve the whim or greed of others. For those who have knowledge of what is legally or morally wrong, to be courageous enough to step forward and allow justice to be served. Our patience has been tested during the past years.

Once again, we are faced with yet another scandal involving allegations of corruption at the highest levels of power. We choose not to turn a blind eye or a deaf ear, but to be active, vigilant and responsible in demanding accountability from our institutions. It is only in doing so that we may prevent anarchy.

Malcolm Hall. 19 February 2008.



Signed: professors and students



A.S.A.R. ka na ba?

The Law Student Government Coordinating Council (UP Law Student Govt, Ateneo School of Law Student Council, UST Faculty of Civil Law Student Council and UE Law Student Government) invites you to A.S.A.R.an on 2/22@2.  (Feb 22, 2008 Friday @ 2pm).  A.S.A.R. stands for Advocacy for Sustained Accountability and Reforms.  

2pm - forum: Chika with Jun Lozada (Ateneo School of Law)
4:30pm - motorcade of Ateneo & UST Law Student Council to UP, and UP Law assembly at Malcolm Hall
5pm - sunduan ng kolehiyo sa UP (UP Law)
6pm - A.S.A.R.an (Quezon Hall, UP Diliman) - convergence of various groups in a cultural night / candle lighting for truth and accountability.  with Jun Lozada as special guest and performances from an Ateneo band, poetry reading from UST, etc. /  Mass of undergraduate UST students in UST

Wear white.  Please spread the word.  Tnx!



-----------


Law students to fete Lozada
By Abigail Kwok
INQUIRER.net
First Posted 15:01:00 02/20/2008

MANILA, Philippines -- Student and young professionals have banded together to call the administration to "stop efforts to cover up the truth and be accountable for its immoral and corrupt acts as they pointed out the "sovereign right" of the people "to change a morally bankrupt and corrupt regime."

The 40 organizations, among them groups and student governments from major Metro Manila universities as well as schools in Mindanao and Northern Luzon, banded under the Youth for Accountability and Truth Now (Youth ACT Now), lauded Rodolfo Noel Lozada Jr., key witness in the Senate inquiry into the scandal-tainted national broadband network (NBN) deal, for exposing the alleged corruption that accompanied the now scrapped contract.

"We unite in collective aspiration to knock on the conscience of our leaders and to awaken hope in the spirit of the Filipino people to bring forth a movement for truth and social change," the youth alliance said in a statement issued Wednesday.

The student governments of Metro Manila-based law schools, under the Advocacy for Sustained Reform and Accountability (ASAR), are also holding simultaneous activities on Friday in support of Lozada, which will end in a Grand Salubong (Welcome) at the University of the Philippines in Diliman, Quezon City, where the NBN witness will be accorded a hero's welcome.

Lozada himself will be guest speaker at a 2 p.m. symposium at the Ateneo Law School in Rockwell, ASAR said in a statement.

At the University of Sto. Tomas, Lozada's alma mater, the law student council will issue its stand on the NBN issue, while at the University of the East, student leaders will launch a "brown ribbon campaign," symbolizing the Filipino people.



Wednesday, February 13, 2008

lino niccolo

he's my eldest brother, and for a guy who is extremely busy in school and with other stuff that he does, he can still be counted on to perform his "brotherly" duties when needed!

his name is on everyone's lips, especially mine.  when i need a driver, companion, photographer, and all-around guy, nicx is the guy i call.  he has never let me down. never, ever...

i wonder why he has never introduced any girl to me.  i remember asking him before why i haven't met his girlfriend yet.  he only said, "te, makuri kasi pumili ha ira ngatanan.  mas maupay it diri ka nala mapili." (ate, it's difficult to choose among a lot of girls, so i'd rather not choose any one.)  ayos. 

 

so... nicx, happy, happy birthday!!!  your future lies before you, so finish na your schooling... sige na... hahahaha...

balit, thanks for everything.  i owe you bigtime, for never giving me any problems and heartaches and disappointments (wellll, except for that schooling thing...).  i'm super proud of the person that you have turned out to be. 

sana, sana you'll never get tired of being the brother and friend that you are to me.   mwa!

 

 

Thursday, February 7, 2008

balanced mind


got this test from janjan... 


Apryll, you are Balanced-brained


That means you are able to draw on the strengths of both the right and left hemispheres of your brain, depending upon a given situation.

When you need to explain a complicated process to someone, or plan a detailed vacation, the left hemisphere of your brain, which is responsible for your ability to solve problems logically, might kick in. But if you were critiquing an art opening or coming up with an original way to file papers, the right side of your brain, which is responsible for noticing subtle details in things, might take over.

While many people have clearly dominant left- or right-brained tendencies, you are able to draw on skills from both hemispheres of your brain. This rare combination makes you a very creative and flexible thinker.

The down side to being balanced-brained is that you may sometimes feel paralyzed by indecision when the two hemispheres of your brain are competing to solve a problem in their own unique ways.



take the same test here!

on my facebook account, i got a "i am right-brained" result.  so what's true???  oh well...
a quiz is a quiz is a quiz...