Showing posts with label transparency and accountability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transparency and accountability. Show all posts

Thursday, January 9, 2014

UP ETC President and UP ALYANSA's AJ Montesa on the Philippine Daily Inquirer: #FOInow!

(Read AJ's original Inquirer column piece entitled "You’ve Got Nothing to Fear if You’ve Got Nothing to Hide" HERE.)



The year 2013 has just ended and we’re barely into the new year. It’s the perfect time to look back at our victories and successes, but it’s also an opportune time to think about the steps we’d like to take moving forward. That’s why the new year is the time when people start making resolutions and renewing promises long forgotten.

A resolution that we’d like to see from our government, if that government does choose to move on the straight road forward, is a commitment to transparency and accountability. For all the talk of reform and the clamor against corruption, there is one great resolution that has yet to be realized: the Freedom of Information Law. It is a resolution, an old promise, that we’ve been trying to keep for more than 20 years now.

Now, more than any other time, we are hopeful. We are hopeful that our Congress will finally decide to take that great step towards reform. We are hopeful that our public servants finally make the change to end all the corruption and abuse of power we are so tired of hearing about. The new year gives us new hope: that our government can finally act out that commitment to a transparent, accountable and democratic standard.

The Senate is making great progress with the FOI bill. But this leaves much to be desired from the House of Representatives which has a great deal of catching-up to do. So to the representatives of the people who are having second thoughts or doubts about the FOI bill, you’ve got nothing to fear if you’ve got nothing to hide.

Hopefully, 2014 will be the year when we can finally fulfill that commitment to the freedom of information.


—AJ MONTESA, President,
UP Economics Towards Consciousness (ETC)
convener, FOI Youth Initiative (FYI)
youth4foi@gmail.com


Friday, September 27, 2013

Pass the People's FOI Act Now!



In 2002, more than half a century after the very first session of the UN General Assembly that pronounced* freedom of information (FOI) as a "fundamental human right" and the "touchstone of all the freedoms to which the United Nations is consecrated," advocates and organizations from around the world, gathered in a conference in Bulgaria, declared the 28th of September as the International Right to Know Day. Since that day, around 65 countries** have adopted their own versions of laws implementing FOI, constituting about two thirds of today's total number of countries with FOI laws.

In the Philippines, the citizens' right to access public information was first nominally recognized under the 1973 Constitution. This was followed by a declaration in the 1987 Constitution of full public disclosure as a policy of the State. However, without a law providing for procedures and penalties for violations, these express constitutional provisions have been nothing more than words on paper. Indeed, without an FOI act, Marcos smoothly facilitated a dictatorship, Estrada and Arroyo freely stole while in power, and Napoles, transcending administrations, schemed for senators and congressmen fake projects and NGOs.

Thus, in the midst of scandals of systemic corruption orchestrated for years and decades beyond the public eye, UP Alyansa ng mga Mag-aaral para sa Panlipunang Katwiran at Kaunlaran (UP ALYANSA), in solidarity with more than a hundred other organizations under the FOI Youth Initiative (FYI) and the Right to Know, Right Now! Coalition, challenges the legislature on this eve of the International Right to Know Day: Legislate the People's FOI Act now.

For a right so basic in any democracy, the struggle for freedom of information in the country has been far too long. 

As years pass by without an FOI act, billions and billions of public funds are lost to secret transactions and unexplained items of expenditures in government. The pork barrel scam today, for example, covers several years of misuse and misappropriation in the past that would have been discovered earlier by the public under the People's FOI Act. If only the measure were already in force, ordinary citizens would have had the right to demand, through appropriate procedures, information on PDAF projects in the past - including reports on disbursements and whether or not the projects were in fact implemented. If officials charged with custody of these documents refused, penalties under the law would have been imposed.

Beyond procedures and penalties, however, the People's FOI Act also represents a crucial element of democratic political life: a culture of participatory governance. If passed, the People's FOI Act will institutionalize people power by providing access to information needed by ordinary citizens to take a more active role in policymaking, administration, and service delivery. Indeed, beyond the obvious benefits of the measure to media institutions, the People's FOI Act will also encourage professionals, academics, volunteers, and legitimate non-profit organizations, with their dynamism and political will, to conduct research initiatives, start visionary projects, and assist government in its various services. The end result is a mature democratic culture wherein both government and civil society serve as key partners in governance.

The struggle for freedom of information in the country must now therefore end. While we laud the recent expression of support from Malacanang and the start of plenary debates over the proposed legislation in the Senate, the real battle now lies in the House of Representatives, where the bill met its fiercest, albeit hushed, opposition in the previous Congress.

Thus, we challenge the President, who promised passage of the bill during his election campaign in 2010, to start walking the talk and certify the People's FOI Act as urgent. Indeed, without an FOI act, the Aquino administration would have practically failed in its anti-corruption drive. Without the passage of the People's FOI Act, the tuwid na daan will be nothing more than a PR campaign and a slogan for impeaching and arresting opponents.



Pass the People's Freedom of Information Act NOW!

Monday, August 19, 2013

NO MORE NAPOLES: Abolish Pork, Pass FOI!



The President was wrong. 

It is not a time to be proud of being Filipino.

The recent controversies surrounding the Napoleses' P10 billion pork barrel scam reveal to us a harsh truth about our times: That, despite all our efforts as a nation, the war against plunder and impunity remains far from over. 

We ousted Merci in 2011, arrested Arroyo after a few months, and impeached Corona in 2012. Yet beneath these well-publicized victories persists an intricate network of corruption meant to re-channel the taxes of the many into the pockets of the few. This is the system that operates beneath our institutions; this is the system of our government. And, as we study and dream today, the wealthy and the powerful have already robbed us of our tomorrow.

The Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) or the congressional pork barrel is, in both appearance and reality, nothing more than an institution of patronage. In appearance, the pork barrel is intended to fund whatever projects for development congressmen and senators wish to undertake. Through this fund, legislators are given the power to prioritize, to choose whether a bridge or a strip of road should be constructed and where. In reality, the representative's constituency is lucky if the bridge or road is ever built. As we see now, the projects can be faked, and the implementing bodies - often fake NGOs - can be merely papers in a cabinet.

In the first place, congressmen should not even be given projects for development, much less the power to prioritize which projects to undertake. We were taught that the job of legislators is to legislate, not to build roads a few months before elections. In fact, such a wide opportunity to execute programs is not just open to abuse but is asking for it, as the abuse clearly shows.

Thus, the pork barrel has created a vicious cycle: The congressman magically summons fake NGOs for his first two years, takes home two years' worth of pork at P200 million or P70 million per year, and then builds roads on an election year only to take home two more years. In the end, the Filipino loses: While prioritized projects are implemented every three years, it took thousands of maternal deaths to legislate an RH law and, when they were criticized online, they criminalized cyber libel. 

The links of patronage does not stop there. Being a lump sum fund in the national budget, the pork barrel is released upon the decision of the executive. The fund has therefore become a carrot and stick that can be used by the President to reward loyal congressmen and senators and to punish the opposition. Indeed, the PDAF is nothing but a euphemism for a legalized corruption.

Yet the pervasive problem of our government goes beyond pork: It is the systemic evasion of the public eye. After nearly 30 years since the Constitution enshrined the State's policy of full public disclosure and after more than a decade of calling for its passage into law, the Freedom of Information (FOI) bill which seeks simply to provide procedures for the enforcement of every citizen's right to know where his/her taxes go has never even reached the session halls. This bill was a campaign promise from President Benigno Aquino III and his slate in 2010, but it has been suppressed by both the majority and the minority in Congress. Their resistance stems from fear - fear of exposés, fear of media scandals like JLN. Who wouldn't be afraid?

What the congressmen do not understand is, by their own arguments, they have admitted their wrongs. Who stands to lose with freedom of information? No one but those who need to hide. Do these congressmen think that government is a private corporation, the dealings of which can rightfully be kept secret from the public? If so, then it is time to teach them a lesson: Public office is a public trust. Without granting the public the right to know, how are we expected to trust?

The opportunity has come to end the system of patronage and the culture of impunity in our country. We want no more pork; we want no more secret deals; we want no more Napoles.

We demand from Congress and President Benigno Aquino III, our mere representatives, our mere agents, to completely abolish pork and pass the FOI bill. Cut the P27 billion pork allocation for 2014 and re-channel the funds to education, health, and other social services. Prioritize the People's FOI Bill and certify its urgency; every day that passes is equivalent to millions of pesos lost.

It is not a time for pride. It is a time for justice.


Iskolar para sa Bayan, ating pagtagumpayan ang isang pamahalaang walang kawatan at walang tinatago!

No more Napoles! Abolish the pork barrel system! Pass the People's FOI Bill now!

Friday, September 28, 2012

Ipasa na ang Freedom of Information Bill!

Isa ang UP ALYANSA sa mga pangunahing pormasyon ng mga kabataan na tumutulak sa agarang pagpasa ng Freedom of Information Billl at ngayong International Right to Know Day, nakikibuklod ang UP ALYANSA sa panawagang mas palakasin ang ating kampanya para sa bukas at malinis na pamahalaan.

Karapatan natin magkaroon ng gobyernong responsable sa pamamahala, sa pamamagitan ng pagsasaalang alang sa ating karapatan sa mahahalgang impormasyon. Ipasa ang ang FREEDOM OF INFORMATION BILL!



Wednesday, May 30, 2012

UP ALYANSA on the Corona conviction




UP ALYANSA is one with the country in celebrating our successful pursuit of the truth, all for transparency and accountability. 

Iskolar para sa Bayan, kasama ka sa pagbabago!

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

CONVICT CORONA!


Public office is public trust. Our experiences as nation pushed us to enshrine what we hold essential in the fundamental law of our land. We stand firm in our resolve that corruption and the politics of patronage should never have a place in our government. We know that while it may be long before we completely cleanse leadership of selfish interests, we have to act now.

At this crucial point in our history, we say enough. UP ALYANSA calls for the conviction of Chief Justice Renato Corona.

Monday, May 21, 2012

UP ALYANSA's #CoronaWatch (beginning May 22, 2012)




This coming Tuesday, Chief Justice Corona will appear in front of the senator-judges to answer the points raised against him. 

As vigilant Scholars for the Nation, let's take part in this historic impeachment proceeding by being one with civil society in making sure that he is accountable for his actions as chief magistrate of the land. 


ALL FOR TRANSPARENCY. WE ARE WATCHING YOU. 
#CoronaWatch on Tuesday!

Monday, April 16, 2012

For Transparency and Accountability: UP ALYANSA continues with its USC WATCH


UP ALYANSA's USC WATCH letter addressed to the USC Chairperson, Heart Diño:

"The USC Watch is a project initiated by UP ALYANSA in the hopes of making the USC more reachable to the UP populace. It provides a blow-by-blow account of the ongoing USC Committee Deliberations and updates on different USC initiated projects. As the USC General Assembly is open to everyone, this endeavor is a way to inform the students about the pertinent issues discussed in the general assembly. Moreover, this can provide an avenue for higher student participation in the USC campaigns, services, and activities. The USC Watch serves as an independent body covering the USC and as a leadership and service formation; it is incumbent upon us to monitor the highest representative body of the students so as we can provide check and balances with integrity."




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