It only took 10 days to mobilize Filipinos in the world wide web to march in protest against the misuse and abuse of the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF), popularly called pork barrel. This came in the wake of the exposé of a Php10-billion scam allegedly perpetrated by the company of Janet Lim-Napoles over the past 10 years involving the use of pork barrel funds for ghost projects.
Ito
Rapadas, music production manager and a musical artist himself, started in all
with his Facebook posting of August 16.
“Nakakasawa
na,” he said. “What we need is a MILLION PEOPLE MARCH by struggling Filipino taxpayers--a
day of protest by the silent majority that would demand all politicians and gov[ernment]
officials (whatever the political stripes, color they may carry) to stop
pocketing our taxes borne out from our hard work by means of these pork barrel
scams and other creative criminal acts. They don't want to investigate
themselves, they remain relaxed and unperturbed because they believe it will
die down in time. Let's make them feel that this time is different [be]cause we
are all sick and tired of it! Pls. share if you agree!”
Peachy Rallonza-Bretaña picked it up immediately
and suggested it be at the Luneta on August 26, Araw ng Mga Bayani (National
Heroes Day), a national holiday in the Philippines, “[b]ecause we the taxpayers
who pay our full taxes from our wages are the real heroes who should be heard
by these Mafia senators and congressmen. We need this outrage, anger to reach
critical mass. Spread the word. Repost.”
He may be innocent of what was going on around him. Will pork barrel still be a hot issue in his time? I took this photo at the Gabriela group's area. |
The digital ball started
rolling/flying to all corners of the web, and pretty soon, memes, posters,
slogans and calls for collective action sprouted in social media accounts of
netizens: Facebook, Twitter, blogs and emails. Permit not needed, declared
Manila City Mayor Joseph Estrada.
Overseas Pinoy netizens all over
the world staged their versions of the Luneta Million People March in front of Philippine
embassies and consulates (New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, London), and even
in their work places (Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong), and shared them in real time
via the social media with their fellow protesters in the homeland.
There may not have been a
million people who gathered in Luneta; about a 100,000, police authorities
said. But there were also marchers in
towns and cities in Luzon (Olongapo, Baguio, Vigan), Visayas (Cebu, Dumaguete,
Iloilo) and Mindanao (Davao, Zamboanga), and those who participated virtually
through text links to their marcher friends and relatives.
People gathered in front of the Quirino Grandstand, around the iconic Rizal monument, on the steps flanked by the carabao and tamaraw sculptures. |
What mattered was that there was
collective action by diverse groups even if there was no formal organizing
party at all. They came just the same to
the historic Luneta passing by the giant statue of Lapu-Lapu, the busts of
revolutionary heroes lining the parallel lanes leading to the iconic monument
of the national hero, Dr. Jose Rizal, and gathered at designated places in
front of the grandstand: individuals and families, young and old, Christians
and Muslims, people with handicaps, students and teachers, workers,
professionals and businessmen, priests and nuns, artists and celebrities,
retired and current public servants, unaffiliated groups and, as expected,
activist organizations. Someone called this the gathering of the new middle
class.
'Makibaka, Huwag MagBaboy! Oink! Oink!' with clenched fists, thumbs down. |
Many veterans of the EDSA revolts were around like Prof. Andy David, who, in an interview later in the evening, recalled that his 12-year old granddaughter inspired him to go to the March. She asked if he's going, and that she would be going with him. He remarked that he was astonished to find so many politically conscious young men and women at the Luneta event.
Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle joined the march and, according to reports, called the participants to be “guided by their conscience” and later led them sing “Pananagutan.” We saw former Supreme Court Justice Renato Corona arriving with his family but we heard, he did not stay long because his presence was not exactly welcome. We listened to the venerable Sister Mary John Mananzan, OSB, calling also for the abolition of the president’s own pork barrel, the Php310-billion Special Purpose Funds.
It was a peaceful gathering,
more like a picnic of groups and individuals predominantly dressed in white or
tee-shirts printed with anti-pork symbols or slogans. Everyone was free to move around to read
protest banners and manifestos, to sign petitions, to hop from one forum to
another and listen to views of different speakers, to listen to various musical
expressions accompanying calls for better governance—the sound of ram horns
from a religious group, a reminder of the fall of Jericho; the buzz of butakas, bamboo clappers from the
Cordilleras; the rhythm of kulintangs and gongs; a vintage Hagibis song transformed
by singer Jograd dela Torre into the day’s theme song; and patriotic songs from
activist groups.
More slogans. I like the 'Porktang*na Nyo!' in the bottom picture. |
Vendors also said their piece. |
The Luneta event had shades of earlier
people power movements. Texts, tweets,
blogs, Facebook messages replaced the Xeroxed protest papers; and the digital
memes, slogans and posters were reminiscent of peryodikit clandestinely posted on walls during the repressive
martial law years.
The battle cry Makibaka,
Huwag Matakot at the activist front during the First Quarter Storm
became Makibaka, Huwag Magbaboy, at the Luneta mass rally.
Instead of Ibagsak!, the protesters
shouted, Oink, Oink!, with clenched fists and thumbs down.
Going as far back as 1896, the
day was when Andres Bonifacio and his fellow katipuneros cried in rebellion
against the Spanish authorities. The
late noted historian Teodoro Agoncillo called that struggle the revolt of the
masses.
August 26, 2013 may be the
beginning of the revolt of the netizens. They will keep vigilant watch on Malacañang
and the lawmakers, on what they do and what they say in response to the demands
voiced out in Luneta: abolition of the pork, and
transparency and accountability in the investigation of the pork scam.
The President's Special Fund was not spared. These caricatures provided colorful political commentaries. |
As
we write this, a new call has appeared in Facebook: “Ituloy ang laban: MARTSA ULIT SA SEPTEMBER
21!” [Continue the fight: Let’s march again on September 21!”]. That’s the date when Marcos declared martial
law.
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