The dilemmas of a coup

One would think that in a world where dictatorships are being toppled one after the other, a military coup is the last thing a nation needs. But a coup is what took place in Pakistan last Oct. 12.  And what a coup it has been. The public welcomed it almost with a sigh of relief.  … Read more

Indonesia: Can the center hold?

“Things fall apart,” Yeats famous poem goes, “the center cannot hold.” It is an apt description of Indonesia today, a graphic portrayal of the bleak future of this beleaguered nation.  The world’s eyes are on East Timor, but larger questions of national survival frame the Timor question. The Indonesian economy remains the shakiest in the … Read more

Birdlife, wild and caged

Mention Australia’s Northern Territory, and people will think of Darwin, its capital city.  Mention Darwin today, and people can only think of Dili, the ravaged Timorese capital just across the narrow Timor sea. In the wake of the mass killings in Dili, Darwin has become the jumpoff point for foreign journalists, peacekeeping forces, and humanitarian … Read more

Death’s practicalities

I think we all knew he would go anytime.  But when Renato Constantino — husband, father, grandfather, loved one – did go on September 15, his departure still came as a jolt.  Through the night he battled against a relentless heart attack, whose ferocity was neatly detailed by the indifferent machines monitoring his body.  At … Read more

The UP law deanship issue

I would usually hesitate to write a column on an issue in which I am a direct protagonist.  But I am setting aside such reluctance in order to counter disinformation being peddled on the recent appointment of Prof. Raul Pangalangan as dean of the University of the Philippines College of Law. This decision, in which … Read more

Things numinous

When my friend Pierre told me he was coming to visit but mainly to birdwatch, I thought he had flipped.  In the literal sense, he had.  His previous visits had been thoroughly political: to let us know what European solidarity groups were doing to support the struggle against the Marcos dictatorship.  He was active in … Read more

Religion and the Constitution

Does the Catholic Church, represented by its bishops, have a right to criticize the government or to influence the political views and conduct of its members?  Does the Catholic Church have a right to criticize Brother Mike Velarde, or to call him to task for supporting charter change in defiance of the Catholic bishops? From … Read more

The conversation of rallies

It was a day of spectacular contrasts, a virtual feast for a visual anthropologist. From the richest side of the city, walled in by the country’s tallest buildings, the “pro-democracy” rally raised the specter of a new Marcos and warned against reversing the gains of the 1986 People Power Revolution.  Clad in signature yellow, with … Read more

The August 20 issues

On the anniversary of his assassination, it is well to remember what Ninoy Aquino stood for, but to hold a demonstration against amending the Constitution on this day seems an odd way to mark his political martyrdom. A constitution belongs to the living.  It is meant to express a generation’s fluid relationship to the world … Read more

The Sandiganbayan’s defining moment

In denying the release of $150 million from the $590 million disputed Marcos funds to compensate the Marcos regime’s human rights victims, Sandiganbayan Presiding Justice Francis Garchitorena took the risk of being called an enemy of human rights.  All that he wants is to prevent corrupt people from getting away with their crime. “Does he … Read more