Sometimes such traffic bullies remove their license plates to hide their identity. But yesterday, I got one plate number: ZCG 441. The arrogant display of power and privilege was at around 2 p.m. in the Greenhills portion of southbound EDSA.
If he did not want to be late for something, all he had to do was move out earlier so he would not have to push everybody aside as he rushed to his appointment. And why the bodyguards? Why is he so afraid for his life?
This is a sample of daily abuse of privilege that generates resentment among ordinary folk. This builds up and manifests itself later in civil disobedience and open defiance of authority.
If the President cannot stop such a basic abuse by her subordinates, how can she manage bigger problems of state?
The issues involved in the P1.3-billion contract between the Commission on Elections and the supplier of automatic counting machines (ACMs) are so simple that it is strange, if not suspicious, that Gutierrez failed to comprehend them.
Even to us non-lawyers, the contract is clearly illegal as the Supreme Court has ruled and then affirmed with finality in 2004.
One is tempted to ask who or what prompted the newly installed Ombudsman (she was presidential chief legal counsel and a classmate of First Gentleman Jose Miguel Arroyo) to absolve all the parties to a patently illegal contract.
1. The Comelec awarded the contract for 1,973 ACMs to a firm that did not even bid! The deal was given to Mega Pacific eSolutions Inc., which is different from the Mega Pacific Consortium that won the bid.
(Mega Pacific eSolutions has no track record in computerized elections and was organized only 11 days before the bidding. Its key officials are reportedly close friends of Comelec Chairman Benjamin Abalos and are suki paper suppliers of the Comelec.)
2. The Supreme Court voided the contract for having been signed in violation of law and the bidding rules of the Comelec itself. This means that there is no contact to serve as legal basis for the transaction, the delivery of the ACMs and the payment of close to P1 billion.
3. Not only was the contract illegal. The ACMs delivered had been found to be not according to the specifications announced before the bidding. They were susceptible to poll fraud and did not have the promised software that would make them work. The trial software that was belatedly submitted was still subject to testing.
4. Yet the supplier, probably sensing the legal tsunami coming, rushed delivery of the machines. The Comelec, its partner in the foul deal, rushed initial payments of at least P850 million.
No wonder there are charges of collusion and manifest bad faith in that apparent bid to consummate the deal and thereby frustrate any return of merchandise and refund of payment. But all that rushing was of no legal value because the basic contract was void.
The Comelec defied the high court, and seems to be getting away with it.
In fact, the poll body explored several opportunities to use the ACMs such as in the last elections in the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao presumably to "perfect" their delivery and render their return more difficult. At one time, it wanted to "rent" them.
Meantime, the Comelec is paying some P3 million annually from taxpayers money for the warehousing of the equipment that it, or the government, does not own. That questionable disbursement of public funds for rent could be another case coming up.
Talking of new charges, divide the P1-billion contract price by the number (1,973) of computers delivered and you get a unit price of P500,000!
As somebody who assembles computers, I can say that this is a gross overprice, unless the parts are made of solid gold. Okay, I know there is the dedicated software to pay for also. But even with that, the overprice is appalling.
Btw, all this time, WHERE WAS THE AUDITOR who was supposed to inspect the goods and approve delivery and payment? How come the auditor has managed, so far, to hide from the legal tempest?
The records show clearly who approved the Comelec resolution and who signed the contract and who signed on the part of the supplier. By affixing their signatures did they not become party to, and co-responsible for, the illegal transaction?
Yet the Ombudsman absolved the two parties (the consenting officials of the Comelec and Mega Pacific) of any administrative, civil or criminal liability. In short, nobody is to blame for the sordid crime?
Even Commissioner Resurreccion Borra, who was earlier singled out by the Ombudsman as probably liable for prosecution, was cleared in the sweeping absolution.
It is so incredible! What kind of guardians of the law has President Gloria Arroyo installed at the Office of the Ombudsman? (And elsewhere in the bureaucracy, you might add.)
If Ms Gutierrez, new as she is on the job, could not stand the pressures brought to bear on her as Ombudsman, she should have resigned rather than sully her good name and the reputation of government lawyers in general.
A bill he has sponsored seeks to amend the Intellectual Property Code to allow local production of patented drugs before their patent expires. The objective must be to reduce expenses associated with drugs and improve delivery of public health services.
To balance the discussion, Roxas may want to listen to and maybe react to some of the papers prepared for the symposium arguing that cheaper medicines do not necessarily redound to better health care.
Some of the speakers are AIM Prof. Emmanuel Leyco, Philip Stevens, director for health program of International Policy Network, and Barun Mitra, founder and director of the Liberty Institute.
Statistics show that 90 percent of medicines in India are produced locally; that it accounts for eight percent of the worlds medicine production by volume and 1.5 percent by value, that India is among the top five pharmaceutical producers worldwide, and exports to around 175 countries.
Yet, according to Mitras paper, despite affordability of medicines, the health care situation in India is no better than in other countries. His paper set for delivery has it that only 30 percent of the Indian population has access to modern medicines.
Indian government outlay for health care is merely 0.9 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP). Doctor-patient ratio is still low, and there is acute lack of hospitals.
Mitra is expected to stress that there is a health crisis in India whose population had crept past the one-billion mark way back in March 2001.
That populous country lists 80 million cardiac patients, 80 million afflicted with mental illness, 60 million diabetics, 50 million asthmatics, and 50 million Hepatitis B cases. One in three Indians is a latent carrier of tuberculosis, and it is estimated that by 2015, about half of all AIDS cases in the world are going to be Indians.