Posts Tagged ‘BGen Danny Lim’

LP eyes Magdalo as poll ally

Malaya
August 28, 2009

THE Liberal Party yesterday said it is proposing a political alliance with Samahan Magdalo which staged the Oakwood mutiny and may draft detained Brig. Gen. Danilo Lim as one of its senatorial candidates in next year’s elections.

The Magdalo group was “very receptive” to the proposal considering the two groups “share a common reform agenda to bring about dynamic and effective governance,” said former Senate president Frank Drilon, now LP national chairman.

“We also noted that we share a common aversion against graft and corruption in government,” he said.

Drilon said he and Cavite Rep. Joseph Emilio Abaya, LP secretary general, met with Lim and Samahan Magdalo titular head Sen. Antonio Trillanes in Camp Crame yesterday morning and discussed the possible partnership between LP and Magdalo for the May elections.

Drilon, also a senatorial candidate of the LP next year, said the Magdalo group has registered itself as a political party.

He said Lim’s possible inclusion in the senatorial line-up will be a big boost to the party because of the general’s reputation as a “staunch reform advocate” in society.

Drilon said Trillanes and Lim informed him they would decide on the LP proposal during the Samahan Magdalo convention in October.

Lim gave his consent that his name be included in the list of possible LP senatorial candidates, he said.

Trillanes is detained for the 2003 Oakwood mutiny. Lim, former head of the Army’s Scout Rangers, is detained for an alleged attempt to overthrow the Arroyo government in February 2006.

The LP earlier entered into a political alliance with Akbayan and agreed on the inclusion of Akbayan party-list Rep. Risa Hontiveros in the 12-man LP senatorial lineup.

Sen. Francis Pangilinan, an independent member of Liberal Party (LP) and a declared vice presidential aspirant, yesterday endorsed Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III as LP standard bearer in next year’s elections.

But Pangilinan added he may even support a presidential bid by Isabela Governor Grace Padaca in the interest of true reforms.

Pangilinan also issued a veiled swipe at the LP leadership saying the party must observe a democratic process of selecting the 2010 standard bearer.

“Democratic processes should be upheld, and the widest participation of all party members should be observed in the nomination of the party’s standard bearers. The party processes involving the membership, and not a few personalities, should decide on major issues such as the party’s standard bearers,” he said.

BGen Danilo Lim Statement on the Con-Ass Resolution

To the Officers and Men of the Armed Forces of the Philippines:

Last Tuesday’s brazen railroading of the Con-Ass Resolution has erased whatever doubts we have about GMA’s true intention of holding on to power beyond 2010. This is not the first time she has trampled upon the Constitution we have all sworn to follow and respect. The EDSA Dos in 2001 was a coup d’etat that we, as an organization, took part in to oust a duly elected president. The 2004 election cheating, as exposed by the ‘Hello Garci’ tapes, was partly an AFP operation masterminded by the former Chief-of-Staff, Gen. Hermogenes Esperon. Countless other offenses have followed since.

GMA is determined and she will keep on ramming through every perceived obstacle there is, until she attains her much-coveted goal.

Now, only the collective will of the people with the support of the AFP can stop her.

I, therefore, call on every officer and enlisted man to follow your conscience and do what is right – PROTECT THE PEOPLE AND THE STATE!

God bless us all.

June 4, 2009

AFP opposition presents alternative leader, program

ANALYSIS
By Alejandro Lichauco

02/26/2009

In its issue of Feb. 23, the Philippine Daily Inquirer (PDI) carried a full page statement of 10 military organizations and 30 individual signatories declaring that they have “formally united under the leadership of Brig. Gen. Danilo ‘Danny’ Lim.” They enumerated their reasons for their decision to unite. One is that they “aspire for the collective vision of a country of peace, progress and prosperity;” second, that they are fully aware that the country is “slowly being engulfed by the fires of poverty, war and corruption;” third, that they “concede the need to strengthen our ranks in the face of a ruthless enemy;” and fourth, “that they recognize our people’s longing for change and their desire for a new breed of leader.”

Then the statement proceeds to enumerate the reasons they chose General Lim. One is that “he has the essential leadership qualities to steer us toward our vision; second, that “he has the impeccable character to lead with moral authority; and third, that “he has consistently displayed uncommon valor and patriotism in the face of extremely difficult situation.”

The organizations behind the statement are the Bagong Katipunan the Nationalist Army of the Philippines; Soldiers of the Filipino People; Magdalo; Yes, Arms: YOU; Samahang Magdalo; Reblusionaryong Alyansang Makabayan and Guardians.

The statement carried a photo-sketch of Lim.

Needless to say, the statement was an open declaration presenting an alternative political leadership to the Filipino people. In and by itself it was open challenge to the regime and an answer to those who seek an alternative to this government.

The organizations behind the declaration are familiar enough names long associated with a movement within the military — which actually started way back in 1986 — for fundamental changes in political governance. And the individual signatories, too many to enumerate here for reasons of space constraint, are as prominent as they are familiar in the military.

Without question, the statement is fraught with explosive political significance. Never, to the knowledge of this writer, has a group of well known military figures and military protest organization banded together behind one military figure and proclaimed him as the alternative political leader of their choice. In this they have certainly outdone the political opposition which to this day hasn’t proclaimed their leader of choice.

To say that the statement was an open challenge to the incumbent regime is an understatement. It is actually a statement withdrawing their support to the chain of command and although the individual signatories are retired, the signatory organizations are known to harbor within their ranks elements still on active duty.

In openly rallying behind General Lim, who technically remains in active status, the sponsors of the statement have simultaneously rallied behind the ideology which Lim represents and which he articulated only some months ago in a statement read for him by, if memory serves, Bishop Tobias at a formal press conference. The statement, dated Nov. 16, 2008, was in Lim’s handwriting and titled “Not only to listen but to march.”

The statement was literally a call to arms against the regime. But more than a call to arms, it was a declaration of nationalist aspiration and a call for nationalist political leadership.

In that, the declaration differed radically from other statements issued by protesting military organizations against the government. It was, to be specific, more than the common place denunciation against corruption. It went far beyond the issue of corruption and called for a government that would actively promote the nation’s genuine independence from “colonial economic masters.” More particularly, it called for the abandonment of “obscene foreign debt payment policies.” It also called for a program of industrialization as well as a program of food independence. Above all, Lim called for a policy declaration and economic strategy anchored on what he said the principle that “this country’s patrimony and all of our abundant resources are solely for the Filipinos to develop and benefit from.”

The Lim statement was nothing less than a call for revolutionary nationalism. That is what makes the choice of Lim immeasurably significant. In rallying behind Lim, the statement sponsors were automatically endorsing Lim’s call for revolutionary nationalism. And that, you must admit, is without precedent in the history of the AFP, long reputed to be nothing more but the slavish annex of the Pentagon.

At the very least, the PDI-published declaration of the military opposition puts to shame, and renders irrelevant and even absurd, the political opposition, or whatever passes for a political opposition.

Are we seeing a military-led nationalist revolution?


  • JB: alam nyo kc.. NORMAL NA ANG NAKAWAN SA PONDO NG GOBYERNO. SUSMARYUSEP NAMAN.. CNU BA ANG MAKAPAG BABAGO...
  • emmanuel badoy,jr.: gud day sir, how could i avail of your i.d. & tshirt? i sent thru email my picture last week.
  • macario: Sir, I will support you in all way’s possible need be financially I will be behind you all the way
  • victor: gud pm sir, baka pwede magdesign kayo ng isang bill para maging operational ang honor system sa officer corp....
  • Peter Mantilla: I dont believe any word coming from this woman’s (Mrs Arroyo) mouth or heart or soul. Shes a...

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