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His companion (Ltsg). Ricardo Gatchillar was also killed when the police assaulted their position in the tower.
It would not be a bad idea to name the NAIA control tower after Villaruel. After all, he was the one who built it when he was ATO head with rank of assistant secretary. In fact, there is a commemorative brass tablet on the tower saying so.
Villaruel gave his life to call attention to problems dragging down the country but which officials continue to ignore. Reminds us of the Vietnamese monks who burned themselves in the 1960s to call attention to the corruption of the Ngo Ding Diem regime.
Villaruel and his companion forcibly took over a strategic public installation whose unhampered operation is crucial to ensuring safe and efficient air traffic.
In effect, they held the nation hostage. If the takeover dragged on till the arrival of the earlier flights of the day, there could have been confusion, if not disaster, with the Philippines again crashing into the news reports of the world press.
It was essential that there be a speedy solution, using force against force if necessary, before the problem deteriorated and resulted in loss of lives, destruction of property, and the damage to the reputation of the Philippines as regards its stability.
The cries of surrender from the tower came too late as by that time everybody was already caught in the confusion of the assault.
Villaruel did the bidding of his conviction, for which we respect him. And the lawmen did their ordained job, for which we commend them. Whether or not the police used excessive force is debatable.
It was not a bad dream that we can forget in the morning. It was a throbbing piece of reality, etched with gunfire and the moaning of dying men, that will keep haunting us, including President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
However the episode is officially recorded, Villaruels supreme sacrifice should not be in vain.
Reader Violie S. Venturanza reports, for example: "A brother-in-law whos a senior partner in a law firm together with his nurse wife will be leaving for the US early next year. Another lawyer brother-in-law whos a Senior Vice President in one of the major banks will be migrating soon to join his accountant wife and children in Canada. Another sister-in-law who is a dentist is studying, again, to become a nurse and later to migrate to the US or Canada. All my sisters have migrated to Canada in 1994-95.
"My husband and I still choose to stay despite the very frustrating things that have been happening since Eraps time: the 1997 crisis, Iraq war, SARS, the Magdalo mutiny and now the Davide impeachment. Our very greedy, power-hungry politicians who only think of themselves are the biggest contributor to our economic mess."
The group painted a doomsday scenario: thousands of factory and farm jobs lost and less tax collections if their company shuts down once the higher levy is imposed. It could have been a poignant picture laborers fighting for the right to livelihood if it were premised on legally and ethically-defensible grounds.
The government has been running after La Suerte for billions of pesos in taxes it should have paid for new brands introduced after a Congress-imposed cut-off in 1996.
Nonetheless, Congress anticipating the entry of new brands provided that manufacturers introducing new products could declare first their suggested retail price for taxation purposes. The law mandated that regular price surveys shall be done later to determine the actual retail price of the new brands upon which to base the applicable tax.
Following this procedure, La Suerte introduced Astro and Memphis in 1999 with a "suggested" retail price below P5, for which it has been paying an excise tax of P1.12 per pack of 20s.
Four years later, government realized it was not capturing additional revenue from these brands because of its failure to conduct the price survey required for tax reclassification.