Bias for crooks

I beg to disagree with Ombudsman Merceditas Guttierrez that the “independence and objectivity” of the Ombudsman would be “endangered, diminished or destroyed” if they would not impose more restrictions on the public to secure the Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Networth of government officials and employees.

In fact, by making it difficult for taxpayers to get those documents that are important in anti-corruption investigation, the Ombudsman is showing her bias for crooks in the government.

Enshrined in the Constitution’s Bill of Rights is the provision that “The right of the people to information on matters of public concern shall be recognized. Access to official records, and to documents, and papers pertaining to official acts, transactions, or decisions, as well as to government research data used as basis for policy development, shall be afforded the citizen, subject to such limitations as may be provided by the law.”

The filing of the SALN is under Republic Act 6713 which establishes a code of conduct and ethical standards for public officials and employees “to uphold the time-honored principle of public office being a public trust.”

Guttierrez’s June 16 memo revising the guidelines covering access to SALNs filed with the Ombudsman states that the reason of the request for SALN “must be legitimate.”

It states that the reasons they accept as legitimate are a) when the requested SALN is needed in school for study purposes, b) when it is to be disseminated to the general public by news and communication media, or c) upon a court subpoena duly signed by a presiding judge in a pending criminal case, or in a case of another quasi-judicial agency, upon request personally signed by its authorized officer/representative.

What if an ordinary citizen has suspicions that a public official is enriching himself in office and would like to confirm it?

Guttierrez’s memo addresses that saying, “In case the requester has reason to believe that an official or employee’s assets and properties are unreasonably disproportionate to his/her income, instead of requesting for the official or employee’s SALN, the requester may report the matter in writing to the Office of the Ombudsman including the reason for his/her belief. The matter will be acted upon by the Field Investigating Office (FIO) which shall request fro the official of employee’s SALN.”

Given the track record of the Ombudsman of sitting on cases adverse to the Arroyo family and their friends, the provision does not encourage citizens to complain against corrupt officials.

This is another dampener. Even if your request falls under those that the Ombudsman consider “legitimate”, you will be made to accomplish a form “which shall be subscribed and sworn to before any prosecutor in the Office of the Ombudsman.”

There’s also the provision that states: “To protect the right to privacy of the concerned public official or employee whose SALN is being sought,the requesting party’s written request…shall be part of public record, which shall be readily available to the public official or employee who may avail himself of all legal remedies against the requesting party should said official or employee feel that the requesting party has unlawfully encroached on the former’s right to privacy and violated his/her undertaking.”

Guttierrez’s memo diminishes the function of SALN as an anti-corruption tool.

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Enchanted Kingdom sets the stage for the 2nd annual Cosplay event!

After last year’s successful “OtakonEK” at Enchanted Kingdom, the country’s first and only world-class theme park proudly presents “Otaku Kingdom”.

“Otaku” is the Japanese term used to refer to people with obsessive interests, particularly anime, manga and video games.

Otakon EK 00067

Slated on September 27, 2009, “Otaku Kingdom” will gather animé, manga enthusiasts, movie & toy hobbyists and cosplayers with the thrilling rides and attractions of Enchanted Kingdom serving as the colourful backdrop for this spectacular event.

Guests wearing a full otaku costume can enter the park for FREE with a Carousel Special Pass. Tickets can be upgraded to Regular Day Pass for a fee of P250. A registration area will be available at the Park’s Front Gate on September 27 from 10:00AM to 5:00PM. You may also pre-register at www.otakingdom.blogspot.com.

Other events lined up for the day are toy & manga exhibits, film showings, drawing & gaming contests, animé bands, Woodstock, the much-awaited grand cosplay contest and parade in the afternoon.

Enchanted Kingdom is turning 14 this October! Elimination rounds for the Fireworks Competition will be on October 3, 4, 10, 11, 17 and 18 with the astounding Grand Fireworks Wizardry Finals on October 24. The skies of Santa Rosa, Laguna will be all aglow during the Anniversary Night!

Come to Enchanted Kingdom where the magic stays with you! From September 3 up to December 18, we are open from Thursdays to Fridays from 12NN to 7PM. and Saturdays to Sundays from 11AM to 9PM with Fireworks Display at 8PM. Enchanted Kingdom is located at the City of Santa Rosa, Laguna. For more information you may visit www.enchantedkingdom.com.ph or call 843-6074 to 76 or 830-2111 to 16.

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Enchanted Kingdom sets the stage for the 2nd annual Cosplay event!

Noynoy tsunami

It’s a Noynoy tsunami.

If elections were held today, in a five-cornered presidential contest, Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino, will win hands down with 50 per cent of the votes, according to a survey conducted by the Social Weather Station last Sept. 5 and 6 in the vote-rich province of Pangasinan and the regions of Metro Manila, Central Luzon and the Calabarzon.

Click below for the survey:

Sept 5 to 6 SWS Survey

The survey, done after Sen. Mar Roxas withdrew from the presidential race and before Aquino declared his presidential bid showed Aquino getting 50 percent of the votes followed by Sen. Manuel Villar with 14 per cent, former President Estrada with 13 per cent, Sen. Francis Escudero with 12 per cent and Vice President Noli de Castro with 7 per cent.

If the contest were minus Escudero, Aquino would get 55 per cent; Villar, 17 per cent; Estrada, 15 per cent, and De Castro, 8 per cent. Two percent said, “None” and one percent said “Don’t know.”

If it were a three-cornered fight, Aquino would get 63 per cent; Villar 21 per cent; and De Castro 9 per cent. Two per cent volunteered the name of Estrada. Thre percent said “None” and undecided, one per cent.

As to running mate to Aquino, the team up with Roxas got the highest vote with 51 per cent; Aquino-Escudero with 49 per cent; Aquino- (Loren) Legarda with 46 per cent; Aquino- (Francis) Pangilinan with 43 per cent and Aquino- (Jinggoy) Estrada with 33 per cent.

The survey was conducted among 1,200 respondents in the Luzon regions which consists of 40 per cent of the country’s voting population. Margin of error of plus and minus three per cent.

Pangasinan belongs to Region One (Ilocos Region).

The National Capital Region consists of the cities of Caloocan, Las Piñas, Makati, Malabon,Mandaluyong, Manila, Marikina, Muntinlupa, Navotas, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Pateros,Quezon City, San Juan, Taguig City, and Valenzuela.

Central Luzon (Region III) consists San fernando City, Angeles City, Aurora, Bataan, Bulacan,Nueva Ecija, Olongapo City, Pampanga,Tarlac, and Zambales.

Calabarzon (Reg. IV-A) consists of Calamba City, Batangas, Cavite, Laguna, Lucena City, Quezon, and Rizal.

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Tim Garcia: under arrest in designers’ garb

This is another world!

Fashion’s night on probation
by Peter Davis

tim garcia 2Timothy Mark Depakakibo Garcia, a 25-year-old publicist for Marc by Marc Jacobs, has a court-ordered Fashion Week curfew.

Perched on a sleek white Armani Casa chair in his apartment in the modern, gilded Trump Plaza at 502 Park Avenue, Garcia is decked in head-to-toe designer: a supple caramel leather Alessandro dell’Acqua jacket, Alexander McQueen jeans, a thin white LnA tee shirt and YSL boots. His wrists are adorned with a big Cartier gold and silver Tank watch, a Cartier Love bracelet, a white enamel Hermes bangle and a $1000 dollar large gold plated spiked Hermes cuff called the Collier de Chien.

Then Garcia daintily rolls up his jeans to reveal one accessory he’d rather not be wearing: an electronic monitoring house arrest ankle bracelet, code number “HGM94472.” The thick plastic black box, the size of a pack of cigarettes, is snug up against his tiny ankle. Garcia’s movements are recorded by Homeguard 200, a big black machine connected to his angular, futuristic Bang and Olufsen phone.

Tim_Garcia in his electonic anklet2

“I’m sorry it’s so messy,” he frets. His good friend, the outrageously outré Manila based fashion blogger Bryan Boy is staying with him. Near the kitchen in the cozy, all-white one-bedroom apartment, Bryan Boy’s massive Louis Vuitton steamer trunk explodes open with designer duds. A white mohair Gucci dog bed, for Garcia’s five-year-old Yorkshire Terrier “Cartier,” rests under a an enormous flat-screen TV. On the kitchen table, two laptops are open and towers of fashion magazines, costume jewelry and beauty products are everywhere.

On March 6, 2009, ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) barged into Garcia’s apartment—purchased with his mother Clarita D. Garcia, in 2004 for $765,000—and handcuffed him “right in this chair I’m sitting in,” he says. Garcia couldn’t stop crying. He was taken to the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center, and then moved from a special housing unit to the general population. The only thing he could see from his cell window was a cemetery.

Garcia was arrested as part of a criminal investigation into the business dealings of his father, Major General Carlos F. Garcia, a former comptroller of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. The elder Garcia stands accused of racking up more than 303 million pesos ($6.2 million) of ill-gotten gains, in the form of cash, real estate and other property. General Garcia is not an American citizen and is in jail in the Philippines where the scandal has taken on Imelda Marcos-like proportions in the local press. General Garcia’s wife and their three children (all American citizens), Timothy Mark, Ian Karl, 30, and Juan Paulo, 27 are all facing plunder charges in the Philippines, which carries a penalty of 30 years to life. They are all also subjects to extradition.

Tim Garcia remained in lock-up for 95 days. “It was the doorway to hell,” he remembers, in his soft voice. “I was in with trannies who needed hormone treatments,” he goes on, spinning the Hermes cuff like a toy. “Pete Gotti, the brother of John Gotti, was there…organized crime families. It was a long time, a chunk of my life.” His friends tell him he is resilient. And for someone being threatened with extradition and losing everything, he seems somewhat calm. “It’s life altering. Imagine yourself being secluded and out of sight and out of mind and being trapped. Imagine living a comfortable lifestyle and than all of a sudden you’re forced to coexist with armed robbers, organized crime people and people who sell drugs. The cream of the criminal crop. They put me with pedophiles. I was trying not to get raped every day. It was scary.” At the same time, Clarita, Garcia’s mother, was also in prison. “That hurt me the most. She’s 60 and to put her in prison in conditions like that is difficult for a son. She was in prison longer than me.”

In April, Garcia says he was asked to hand over his “apartment and bank accounts.” He protested. “I knew that it was all bullshit. I was like, ‘No! I will never waver in the conviction of my father’s innocence and doing that would just hurt my father’s case.” The government still contends that some of that $6.2 million dollars went into purchasing the Trump Plaza apartment. The government also says the Garcias transferred $2 million from the Philippines to the United States.

On June 8, Garcia was released from prison on a million-dollar bail. He was despondent and in shock. Then, in a strange twist of fate, he was offered the coveted job as a publicist for Marc Jacobs. He didn’t dare tell the fashion house about his court ordeal, but then Page Six broke the news for him. His bosses at Marc Jacobs didn’t blink. “I didn’t tell them about my situation. I don’t have a criminal record. They arrested me to put pressure on my family. I’m just fortunate that no one [at Marc Jacobs] cares and if anything, they are very, very compassionate to my situation.”

“My father is a government official in the Philippines,” Garcia explains carefully, his small voice growing deeper. “Basically they are accusing my father of stealing millions and misuse of public funds and me being his son, they locked up his entire family. The picture the Philippines press paints of my family is that we were dirt poor and with my father in this position for two years, we rose to astronomical riches. We are third generation despots in the Philippines.” Garcia pauses and checks his Blackberry, which makes a ping noise every few minutes. He silences his phone. “I can’t actually talk about the legalities of it all because it’s still pending.”

Garcia shows me his bedroom, equipped with two flat-screen TVs and a wall of DVDs. By his computer are two vintage Cher dolls. Piled on the floor are a half-dozen orange Hermes boxes. At the bottom of the closet, three gigantic Louis Vuitton suitcases are filled with clothes. By the bathroom door, a rolling rack sags under the weight of a giant pile of couture. Garcia has been a fashion fiend since he was a kid. He counts YSL by Stefano Pilati, Dior Homme by Kris Van Assche and Marc Jacobs as his favorite labels. When a student, first at the University of the Asian Pacific (run by the Opus Dei) in Manila and later at Parsons in New York, he was always dressed to impress. “I’m lacking in closet space,” he says with a groan, waving his small hand at six stuffed YSL garment bags hung from doors. Garcia cherry-picks a new, fitted black Gucci leather jacket, which he mentions Madonna wore. It’s his statement piece for fall.

“Imagine living a comfortable lifestyle and than all of a sudden you’re forced to coexist with armed robbers, organized crime people and people who sell drugs. The cream of the criminal crop.”

House arrest definitely dampers Garcia’s glamorous life. He’s accustomed to being a regular at store parties and nightclubs like The Rose Bar in the Gramercy Park Hotel. But now, Garcia has a curfew of 9am to 9pm and is not allowed to leave his apartment on the weekends, except to go to church for two hours on Sunday (a Catholic, he attends the service at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral nearby). “For Fashion Week, since I am a publicist, they extended my hours. I am allowed to come back at 1 a.m. this week,” he smiles widely. “There is a 30-minute grace period for lateness.” But after that, the Homeguard 200 alerts the authorities and Garcia could end up back in the slammer.

Despite all the drama, Garcia claims he’s adjusted to the curfew. He orders in food from Serafina and Freds, the restaurant at Barneys. Friends visit constantly.

The worst part is the actual ankle bracelet. “It’s uncomfortable,” he moans, tugging at the plastic strap. “It hurts when I run at the gym. We have to pay for it too, the whole thing. My lawyer is taking care of it though.” The ankle bracelet limits Garcia’s fashion choices. “I can’t even wear my knee high croc boots by Sergio Rossi for the fall,” he laments. “I had to make adjustments with my wardrobe. When it was hot in the summer, I didn’t want to go to Marc Jacobs wearing shorts. I just felt it was in bad taste.”

The forfeiture case against Garcia and his mother was stayed on March 10 to allow the Philippine prosecution and investigation to proceed – and possibly seize the Park Avenue pied-a-terre. While Garcia waits to see whether he will lose his apartment, his bank accounts and be extradited back to the Philippines, he continues to work hard at Marc by Marc Jacobs. On his bedside table, under a fashion book by the street style photographer “The Sartorialist” sits “You Don’t Have to Be Famous: How to Write Your Own Life Story.” Garcia plans to pen a book about his family’s whole ordeal. But for the time being, he goes on with his normal life. He saunters into the bathroom and sprays on his favorite scent, Armani Mania. It’s hard to imagine Garcia, now decked out in couture, in the prison garb he wore last spring. “I was in an orange jumpsuit and then after a month, they change it to khaki,” he tells me, hanging up the “Madonna” Gucci jacket. “I will never wear a jumpsuit in my life.” His slight shoulders shiver. “The thought of that jumpsuit just makes me cringe.”

Photo credits:

1. Peter Davies’ The Daily Beast

2. Guest of guest

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Archipelago’s Debut Album “Travel Advisory”

UPDATED

Archipelago’s most awaited debut album, “Travel Advisory”, launched last Friday in Mag:net Bonifacio High Street. The band’s setup last Friday is not usually done. Usually, I see them with just the four of them, no keyboards and guest vocalists. “Travel Advisory” features the two singles: “MRI” and “May 1″, plus the carrier single, “Black Box”.

The album contains 14 tracks with two bonus tracks. The two bonus tracks are: Travel Advisory featuring Pauline Diaz (TOI’s vocalist) in acapella and MRI in quiet version.

“Travel Advisory” starts with the song “Black Box”. The mention of “I was crashing in the sea of blue” makes me remember how the black box of the airplane retrieves the information on what have happened prior to the plane crashing. According to Yan Yuzon, the song is about a plane crash, an unexpected death of someone who have left his/her someone special behind.

The next song is “Travel Advisory”. A very apt title because of the lyrics “Code red, code yellow, so your government tells you where to go”.

“Lumapit” is the first Filipino track that you’ll hear in the album. This is actually a gospel song. It’s like God is speaking in the song to you “Lumapit ka sa akin”. Yan also added that, the meaning of the song can be about someone who’s calling out to his/her ideal self.

I like the play of words in the song “Meteor” which contains these lyrics “a hundred thousand years in the speed of light”.

“May 1″ is another Filipino track in the album. This song is their second single and its music video was already released prior to their album launch. It’s entitled as such probably because of the mentions of “May isang” in the lyrics. Yan added some trivia about the song, Pat Tirano’s girlfriend is Mei, and Wendell’s son is Rafa who used to be called as Isa.

I like the sound of the engine (this is actually a toy chainsaw sampler according to Yan) which has been incorporated in some parts of the song “Engine Breaker”. Amongst all the tracks in the album, this is the heaviest-sounding. I also like the play of words in this song which has references to “rear view mirror”, “diesel”, etc.

Chad Rialp sang “One of Three”. The song is probably has the most unique sound because it’s blues rock. With the lyrics “but the sex and drugs don’t come cheap” makes me think of Ian Dury, because of the song “Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll”. By the way, there will be a biopic on Ian Dury.

“MRI”, Archipelago’s first single, is an acronym that means “Magnetic Resonance Imaging”. Well, yes it has to do with MRI according to Yan. He mentioned that the song was written in the afternoon after Yan had an MRI of his broken right knee in the morning.

In this album, the next songs that might be released as a single are “Travel Advisory” and “Lumapit”. However, Archipelago may prioritize to release songs in English as a priority since people overseas would not understand what the song is about. With their first album, Archipelago is amongst the bands that you should watch out for. Archipelago is Yan Yuzon (Vox/Guitars), Pat Tirano (Guitars), Chad Rialp (Bass) and Wendell Garcia (Drums).