MANILA – Malacanang arranged what is now
called a “victory dinner” for Catholic bishops sympathetic to President Gloria
Macapagal Arroyo on July 9 in a restaurant in Paco after the Catholic Bishops
Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) decided to shy away from supporting the
impeachment complaint against the President. The CBCP said it was futile for
the impeachment to prosper in a pro-Arroyo House of Representatives.
The “victory” dinner was reportedly
hosted by Fatima “Nena” Valdes, undersecretary
for religious affairs, who holds office in Malacanang. Earlier, envelops
containing “money for the poor” were distributed to sympathetic bishops
attending the conference. A bishop in Leyte
admitted receiving an envelop and said there was nothing wrong with getting
money for distribution to the poor.
In the pastoral statement issued July 10
after its plenary session, CBCP said it was “not inclined at the present moment
to favor the impeachment process as a means of establishing the truth"
about the Hello Garcia tapes and the rigging of the 2004 elections.
The Philippine Daily Inquirer said it
obtained a copy of the letter signed by Valdes offering cheap rice and low-cost
medicines to some of the poorest Also distributed earlier were envelopes
containing P15,000 to P30,000 (about $600) to dioceses in the country headed by
known anti-Arroyo bishops. Some recipients returned the envelops while others
kept them.
The Inquirer said Valdes had arranged the
dinner on July 9 upon the conclusion of the bishops plenary at a restaurant
near where they had met at the Pope Pius XII Catholic Center
on United Nations Avenue
in Manila.
Various groups, including a Novaliches
bishop, have joined the opposition in filing a series of impeachment complaints
charging that the President stole the 2004 election, condones corruption and
political killings and other charges.
Archbishop Diosdado Talamayan of
Tuguegarao and Bishops Ramon Villena of Bayombong, Sergio Utleg of Ilagan,
Prudencio Andaya Jr. of Tabuk and Rodolfo Beltran of Bontoc-Lagawe said in a
statement they were saddened at “malicious insinuations” meant to impugn the
CBCP’s integrity by people unhappy with the CBCP statement.
The Inquirer said that during the weekend
plenary, a source said Bishop Jose Manguiran of Dipolog received two envelopes
from Malacanang visitors. Upon returning to his room at Pope Pius Center, the prelate was surprised to see
that the two envelopes each contained P15,000.
“He immediately wrote a letter and asked
a priest to return the envelopes to Malacanang right away," the source
told the Inquirer.
The Inquirer said at the Sunday dinner,
Valdes ferried the group of about a dozen bishops to a nearby restaurant on board
at least three white vehicles, including a white Mitsubishi Pajero.
The bishops from northern Luzon blamed politics for what they said were attempts to
smear the Church and government’s pro-poor programs.
Anti-Arroyo Bishop Oscar Cruz said the
dinner and gifts “were unmistakable signs the Palace was out to buy the support
of Church leaders.” “If those recently reported payolas handed to churchmen
were true, if the alleged numerous largesse in cash and in kind given to church
leaders were correct, if the said standing offers of favors of many kinds to
many church people were factual, all these could be rightfully summed up as one
big buying spree of the present administration,” Cruz said.
Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita and
presidential chief of staff Mike Defensor denied such a dinner took place but
Cabinet Secretary Ricardo Saludo confirmed it. Ermita said he had no
personal knowledge of it. He said if there was, it was just one of those
“social dinners” and that stories about it were being “doctored.” Defensor said
all he could only remember about a meeting with the bishops was at the Traders
Hotel three to four months ago over mining concerns.
Saludo said that if money passed, it was
not meant to convince the bishops to side with the administration but as
assistance to their dioceses.
He said it was not a victory dinner but a
“dialogue” which he said was originally scheduled in January but it was only on
July 9 that the prelates found time for it. CBCP president Angel Lagdameo
has assailed Malaca±ang for offering “assistance” through the bishops instead
of channeling it through government institutions. He said there was no
consensus among the bishops whether to accept assistance or not, whether to go
to the dinner or not.
“Each bishop was completely free,” he
said.-In a pastoral letter issued after its meeting, the bishops said it was
futile for the bishops to involve itself in the move to impeach the President
because the House of Representatives is solidly behind the President. The
process, it added, will not be able to elicit the truth about the Hello Garci
tapes and other issues that are hurled against Arroyo.
A proposal by the pro-impeachment bishops
to resort to People Power as an alternative to the impeachment process was also
opposed by the moderate bishops.
The faction led by Bishops Deogracias
Iniguez Jr. of Caloocan City and Antonio Tobias of Novaliches support any
popular revolt against President Arroyo “when thingscome to worst.” But a group
of moderates led by Cebu Archbishop Ricardo Cardinal Vidal are against such
mass action. CBCP officials said the bishops as a body cannot settle the issue
until they meet for the next plenary assembly in January next year.
Malacanang said the CBCP pastoral letter
was “an instrument for healing the wounds of the land” while it accused the
opposition of twisting the collective statement of the bishops to suit their political ends.
Later on, in a speech delivered in Subic, the President said it was up to God to determine
if she did something bad.
“To us, the message is crystal clear,”
Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said. “It comes as a fresh wind to a nation
growing tired and weary of too much politics."