After
sitting through hours of meetings in Malacañang, President Benigno Aquino III
laughed off a tweet that he and constant date and television host Grace Lee
were seen taking a stroll in a mall around the time he was discussing the
affairs of state with his economic managers Thursday.
The
President, criticized and even parodied for his alleged inaction on the spate
of oil price increases, said—ironically—that those who spread the rumor had
nothing better to do.
“Medyo
nakakatawa rin nang konti (It’s a bit funny). Earlier, somebody posted a tweet.
I supposedly spent the whole day in Greenhills with a date,” Mr. Aquino told
Palace employees on the occasion of the 115th anniversary of the Office of the
President.
Malacañang
officials said the President spent the day attending meetings with the National
Economic and Development Authority board and with Foreign Secretary Albert del
Rosario. Mr. Aquino himself said one discussion was on extending Line 1 of the
Light Railway Transit from Manila all the way to Bacoor town in Cavite.
Over
the past days, the Palace has been releasing pictures showing the President at
work in the wake of “Noynoying” protests being staged by militants. The
protests have already drawn the attention of even the foreign media, including
the online Wikipedia.
“Noynoying
(pronounced noy-noy-YING) is a protest gimmick in the form of neologism which
critics of President Benigno Aquino III have used to call attention to what
they claim is the “do-nothing” work ethic and inaction of Aquino over emergency
response and rising oil prices,” the Wikipedia entry read.
“The
term is in reference to Aquino’s nickname, Noynoy … [It] also taps into old
Philippine folk tales about Juan Tamad, who tries to get by doing the least
amount of work to get by,” Wikipedia said.
It
said: “Since its first documented usage in October 2011, the term was used as a
form of protest against Aquino, wherein protesters performed ‘Noynoying’ poses
such as sitting idly while resting their heads on one hand and doing nothing.”
“The
act had since gone viral on the Internet, while Malacañang was confident it will
not catch on with the public,” it said.
Nothing better to do
Reacting
to the tweet posted under the account name RealEduManzano, the President said:
“Meron talagang walang magawa (There are really those who have nothing better
to do). We have to find jobs for these people because they invent stories about
anything. But let’s just laugh that off.”
Such
rumors, Mr. Aquino acknowledged, were part of “our society.”
RealEduManzano
later retracted and apologized for the tweet. “Sorry for the confusion
everyone. In local parlance, nakuryente ako, and I was foolish to tweet
unconfirmed tsismis,” it said.
“And to
those who have posted personal attacks against me, I sincerely understand. Lord
knows I’ve given you a lot of material to work with,” it added.
Nun defender
While
lauding the youth militants for being active again in politics through their
“Noynoying” antics, a respected activist nun yesterday defended Mr. Aquino from
accusations that he was a “do nothing” president.
Sr.
Mary John Mananzan, chair of the Association of Major Religious Superiors in
the Philippines (AMRSP), said she appreciated the youth’s creativity in coming
up with new forms of protests but insisted that the President was doing his
job.
“For
me, they have the right to do that. The young people have the right to express
whatever their sentiments are. Well, they are using new forms of protest to
call the attention of the President to what they consider as issues that are
being addressed,” Mananzan said on the sidelines of the World Council of
Churches gathering at Traders Hotel in Manila.
“Of
course, I also understand that P-Noy (Aquino) will be a little bit hurt by it
because it’s also not true that he’s doing nothing. For me, his work management
is just different,” she said.
“It’s
better to have this than have someone who’s working all the time but is not
doing it for good. Isn’t that the case? Maybe, we shouldn’t evaluate just
through the volume of work. For me, we should be truthful,” she added.
Corona trial
Mananzan
said the young activists should acknowledge in particular Mr. Aquino’s zeal and
persistence in going after graft and corruption and impeached Chief Justice
Renato Corona.
“For
me, his pursuit against corruption is something that we should acknowledge. Of
all our presidents, it’s only now that we see something like the arrest warrant
against GMA (former President and now Pampanga Representative Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo),” she said.
“I
welcome P-Noy’s persistence (in going after Corona) but that does not mean that
the other issues would remain unaddressed,” she added.
“For
me, impeaching Corona is a big thing. That’s not just one issue among others.
That is a big issue. And if you really succeed in impeaching Corona, then
you’ll have this message that crime does not pay.”
Working
with militants
Malacañang
said it was fine with the party-list group Bayan Muna being part of the
administration coalition in Congress even with the role of allied militant
groups in Noynoying protests.
“Obviously,
there are certain advocacies that we are in agreement with and some don’t agree
with us, for instance, the legislated wage hike. That’s something that they are
pushing for,” the President’s spokesperson, Edwin Lacierda, said in Thursday’s
news briefing.
“We
have no problem working with Neri Colmenares. He’s part of the impeachment
team. So we will have issues that we will have to disagree and issues that we
can agree on,” Lacierda said. He was referring to the Bayan Muna congressman
who is serving as a prosecutor in the impeachment trial.
He said
the administration would not be wary of Bayan Muna following the rash of
protests.
“I
mean, it’s all part of the legislative mill so they debate whatever they would
like to advocate. It’s subject to the legislative process. And, as you know, in
the legislative process it’s the majority that gives the action,” he said.
‘Passing fancy’
Noynoying
is just “a passing fancy,” Lacierda said.
“The
vast majority knows what this administration is doing,” Lacierda said in
apparent reference to the most recent survey by Pulse Asia.
He said
the economic indicators could prove the President’s detractors wrong.
Norman
Bordadora
Philippine
Daily Inquirer
With a
report from Philip C. Tubeza
Business & Investment Opportunities
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