In
a show of force amid perceived tension with their once staunch ally President
Benigno Aquino III, some 600,000 members of the politically influential Iglesia
ni Cristo (INC) gathered for a prayer rally Tuesday at Rizal Park in Manila.
Tens of thousands of INC members also
assembled in the provinces.
The 1.8-million-strong sect, based on a 2000
government census, is one of a handful of religious groups courted by
politicians of all stripes during election campaigns for its massive block vote
that gives it huge political clout.
"The INC leadership and most of our
members are displeased with how the [administration] is treating some of our
brethren,” said the source, who asked not to be named because he was not
authorised to speak on behalf of the sect.
"It seems that this [administration] is
only interested in exacting revenge against its political opponents [instead
of] bringing meaningful reforms for the good of the Filipino people,” he said.
Asked if the INC hierarchy would issue a
statement against Aquino, he said: “Do we really have to say the words? The
number of INC members who trooped to the event is enough indication of our
position.”
Aquino’s previously strong ties with the sect
appear to have soured since Chief Justice Renato Corona—who has indirect links
to INC—was impeached in December, stirring condemnation from the group.
But the President said the sect had assured
him the rallies were purely religious events leading up to the 100th
anniversary of its founding next year.
"There are others who are saying that
there is a political dimension here,” he told reporters.
In an interview on national television,
Bienvenido Santiago, INC general evangelist and official spokesperson, said the
activities were purely religious.
Corona
invited
But an INC insider told the Philippine Daily
Inquirer that the gathering was a “show of force to deliver a strong message”
to the Aquino administration.
Although he was invited, Corona decided not to
attend the prayer rally so as not to “politicise” the gathering, according to
Supreme Court spokesperson Midas Marquez.
Midas said Corona and the other justices of
the Supreme Court were invited to the rally but the Chief Justice decided to
skip the gathering on the advice of his close associates.
"We’ve been receiving a number of
comments that he might use [the rally] for political purposes,” Marquez said.
“Just the same, he extends his congratulations to the Iglesia ni Cristo. I
think all the justices were invited.”
Marquez said the Chief Justice decided to just
watch the rally on television.
Support
for judiciary
He said the invitation was a show of support
for the entire judiciary.
"More than the Chief Justice, it’s the
institution which is being supported,” Marquez told reporters before the start
of the “Grand Evangelical Mission”.
Led by Eduardo Manalo, grandson of the INC’s
late founder Felix Manalo, the sect exerts huge political influence in the
Philippines, home to more than 75 million Catholics.
While Aquino cannot stand for a second
six-year term, the sect’s block vote can have an impact on the electoral
success of his political allies in next year’s midterm congressional polls.
INC members had been leading rallies backing
Corona, who could lose his job if convicted in an ongoing Senate impeachment
trial on charges of graft and illegally favouring former President and now
Pampanga Representative Gloria Arroyo. Arroyo is detained in a government
hospital on a charge of electoral sabotage.
Aquino also fired an INC member, Magtanggol
Gatdula, as National Bureau of Investigation chief last month after the
official was accused of covering up the abduction of a Japanese woman by his
aides.
Marquez
at rally
Accompanied by fellow court personnel, Marquez
arrived at Manila Hotel more than an hour before the start of the 5 p.m. prayer
rally at nearby Quirino Grandstand.
He and his group were met by prominent INC
members, among them Gatdula and Ferdinand Topacio, lawyer of former First Gentleman Jose Miguel “Mike”
Arroyo.
Also in the group were Abraham Espejo,
Gatdula’s lawyer and the law school dean of INC-owned New Era University,
former Quezon City Representative Annie Susano and Navotas Representative Toby
Tiangco.
Marquez said he went to the event in deference
to the personal invitation he received from the INC a few days ago.
Gatdula said his presence at the prayer rally
was part of his commitment as a longtime INC member. Asked if he enjoyed the
support of INC, Gatdula said: “Yes. I think so.”
Tiangco, who bolted the House majority after
he refused to sign the impeachment complaint against Corona, also downplayed
allegations that the INC event had a political dimension.
Spin
Except for a 20-year-old man, who allegedly
tried to politicise the INC gathering, the sect stuck to its promise of
avoiding political discussions.
A few minutes before the rally began, INC
spokesperson Santiago told reporters in an interview that “the spin,” if
anything, had helped the sect draw people to attend its “grand evangelical
mission.”
Santiago himself did not mention Corona’s name
or anything politically related during the interview. He said the event was
part of the church’s 2012 mission to extensively spread God’s words.
Jeannette I. Andrade, Jocelyn R. Uy and Marlon
Ramos
Philippine Daily Inquirer
With reports from Philip C. Tubeza, Nathaniel
R. Melican and Miko Morelos in Manila; Maricar Cinco, Inquirer Southern Luzon,
and AFP
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