Saturday, January 20, 2007

Arroyo loyalists end Mendiola campout

WITH the tearful singing of the National Anthem, Arroyo loyalists last night ended their four-day campout at the foot of historic Don Chino Roces (Mendiola) Bridge near Malacañang.

Leaders of the People’s Movement Against Poverty, the Katipunan ng Sambayanan and other urban poor groups that were born after the President was impeached packed up, but not before exhorting the dwindling crowd to continue to support the President.

About 50 of them then queued onstage to address the crowd. Their colleagues, however, were no longer listening because they were busy eating.

Three trucks filled with food in styrofoam containers arrived at around 8 p.m. and the people who were about to leave then decided to stay. The food consisted of rice and chicken, pork chops, beef, meatloaf, and hard-boiled eggs.

That morning, the Arroyo supporters went on alert after about 100 students from the University of the East, Adamson University and the Far Eastern University belonging to the League of Filipino Students tried to get near the Roces bridge.

Some media men complained of harassment by the Arroyo loyalists who had accused them of biased and negative reporting.

A police official said they confiscated several clubs and ice picks from the pro-Arroyo crowd.

Reporters and residents of nearby Claro M. Recto Ave. who were aware of what was happening at the EDSA Shrine and Malacañang suggested the police put up loudspeakers tuned to a radio station so the crowd might learn the truth.

But the highest police official at the scene, Sr. Supt. Marcelino Franco, deputy director of the city police, cautioned against the move, saying it might agitate the crowd who might take matters into their own hands.

"I wanted to turn the volume up so they would know the truth, but they threatened to smash my radio," said a magazine vendor at the corner of Recto and Legarda Streets.

"I’m staying here because at least there is free food," one rallier told the Inquirer, admitting that he did not care about what was happening to the country.

One speaker wearing a basketball uniform preached to the crowd and blessed them, sprinkling them with mineral water. This led some to question the sanity of some of those onstage.

At 7 p.m. some 200 loyalists who had remained on the bridge got ready to leave after they tearfully sang the National Anthem.

A few die-hard loyalists opted to stay with about a dozen supporters to keep vigil.

The pro-Arroyo groups said they will follow whatever the President tells them.

They supported the President’s call for snap elections and said the people should let the democratic process determine the fate of the country.

Ronald Lumbao, spokesperson of the People’s Movement Against Poverty, exhorted his fellow loyalists to continue "the fight of the poor," immediately after Philippine National Police Director General Oscar Calderon announced on TV that the police force was withdrawing its support of the President.

Lumbao said the fight would no longer be in the streets but in the snap elections proposed by Mrs. Arroyo in May.

"Let us prepare for this fight so we can again elect a president who shall protect the interests of the poor as President Arroyo has done," Lumbao said in Filipino.

"We are not saying that this is the end," he added, "we are merely taking the fight to a different arena."

In his address to the dissipating loyalists, Lumbao did not inform the crowd that top military, police and Cabinet officials had resigned from the Arroyo administration.

He said merely that "a significant chapter in our life as a nation has come."

"I thank you for your defense of the President here at Mendiola," Lumbao said. "We have lost the propaganda war so I urge you to return to your communities to explain our position to the people."

Lumbao urged the followers of Mrs. Arroyo to prepare for the snap elections to elect a "pro-poor president like Mrs. Arroyo."

Before Lumbao addressed the crowd, news of Calderon’s defection from Arroyo’s side spread like wildfire, eliciting emotions of despair, bitterness and anger from the ralliers. Dozens milled around a TV monitor set up by a camera crew from GMA-7 as Calderon made his announcement.

"Wala na, bumitaw na si Oscar," an elderly man said as he shook his head. ("It’s over, Oscar has resigned.")

By 7 p.m. only about 700 loyalists remained at the foot of the Don Chino Roces bridge.

At 10 p.m. the speakers had not yet finished delivering their spiels.

http://web.archive.org/web/20010124094300/http://www.inquirer.net/issues/jan2001/jan20/news/news_2.htm

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