HELSINKI, Finland — President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo arrived here Sept. 9 to attend Finland’s largest gathering of world leaders and further deepen the 50-year-old bilateral ties with the home country of cellphone maker Nokia as well as forge a historic trade partnership agreement with Japan.
The Philippine ambassador to Sweden and the rest of the Nordic countries Victoria Bataclan said the resident's three-day official visit to Finland would be centered on energy, environment, and economy.
HONOLULU — President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
plans a brief visit Hawaii
on September 16 to attend a ceremony for the unveiling of a marker
commemorating the islands’ first Filipino immigrants.
The Associated Press said the Philippine
Consul General’s Office told The Honolulu Advertiser that Arroyo will arrive on
September 16 and is expected to stay less than 24 hours.
She will also place a memorial marker at
the National Memorial Cemetery
of the Pacific in honor of Filipino-American soldiers who fought during World
War II.
Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle invited
Arroyo to visit the state when the governor traveled to the Philippines in
January, the newspaper reported.
The president will be stopping in Hawaii on her return from Finland, where she will attend a
meeting of European and Asian leaders.
MANILA - President Arroyo will travel
around the world in 12 days next month and Malacañang is counting on opposition
groups “to behave” while the Chief Executive is away. The President is
scheduled to visit Finland, Belgium, United
Kingdom, Cuba,
and Hawaii, United States of America to bolster
the country’s economic and security relations early next month.
Presidential chief of staff Michael
Defensor appealed for a moratorium on political bickering when the President
embarks on a five-nation working trip for a series of meetings with her foreign
counterparts, businessmen, and the Filipino community.
Defensor said the opposition should learn
“to rally behind the flag” while the President travels abroad, the same
attitude he and other former opposition congressmen did during the Estrada
administration.
“When we were the opposition, when
President Estrada went to the United
States, we kept our silence and rallied
behind the flag because that’s the protocol if the head of state is out of the
country,” he said last Monday in a media forum at the Sulo Hotel.
“We rallied behind the Republic not
because of President Estrada but because he represented the Republic,” Defensor
added.
In Helsinki,
Finland, the
President would attend the 6th Asia Europe Summit on September 10 and 11 for
dialogue on trade, terrorism, environment protection, and energy security.
Afterwards, Mrs. Arroyo would fly to nearby Brussels, Belgium to enhance Manila
relations with the European Union, a group composed of 25 independent states in
the region. She is also slated to visit London, which recently discovered a plot to
bomb US-bound airplanes that triggered a worldwide security alert in airports,
to attract businessmen to invest in the country’s energy sector. From
Europe, the President will cross the Atlantic and travel to Havana, Cuba
to attend the 14th summit of the Non-Aligned Movement of developing countries.
Mrs. Arroyo will join leaders of 116 countries from Africa, Asia, Latin
America, and the Caribbean to tackle proposals
for cooperation, including assistance for combating illiteracy and training
health personnel, and the efficient use of energy. The President will
then travel to Hawaii, USA to attend the centennial celebration of the
first Filipino migration to the 50th American state before returning to Manila. Arroyo
earlier signed Proclamation 954 declaring 2006 as Hawaii-Filipino Centennial
Year in the Philippines.
On Dec. 20, 1906, around 15 Filipino sacadas arrived in Hawaii
to work as sugar plantation workers in Ola’a Island, setting off the waves of
Filipino migration to Hawaii and to the
mainland USA.
The upcoming foreign travel of the
President comes less than a month after she survived a second impeachment
attempt at the House of Representatives.
The allies of the President in the House
junked the complaint on charges of election fraud, human rights violations, and
corruption due to lack of substance. Opposition and pro-impeachment
groups, however, have threatened to bring their case in the streets to force
the President to answer the charges leveled against her.
In Cuba,
she will sit as one of the vice chairmen of the 14th Summit
of the Non-Aligned Movement in Cuba
from Sept. 11 to 16.
The Philippines
was unanimously endorsed by the Coordinating Bureau of NAM during its meeting
at the United Nations Headquarters in New
York over the weekend.
In a statement, the country’s permanent
representative to the UN Ambassador Lauro Baja Jr. confirmed that Mrs. Arroyo,
as vice chairman, will help oversee the summit.