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Rise
and Fall of Joseph Estrada
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February 2001. President Joseph Estrada assumed
the presidency on July 1, 1998 with a promise to improve the lives of
the poor Filipinos. Two and a half years later, he left Malacanang and
the people who elected him a lot poorer than before.
Enjoying an entertainment-based popularity and a chauvinistic charisma,
Estrada easily won the 1998 presidential elections over traditional
politicians and became the 13th president. While his English did not
come in handy, the former movie actor always had candid Filipino rebuttals
to every criticism by his political rivals.
"Huwag ninyo akong subukan!" and "Walang kai-kaibigan!"
were just among his quotable phrases, which received the cheers of the
Filipino masses. When he organized his government and began business
with the old Marcos cronies, it became apparent that he meant the opposite.
The brief Estrada administration saw the meteoric rise to power of Lucio
Tan and Danding Cojuangco, arguably the richest men in the country today.
Tan won his P25-billion tax evasion case against the government, wrested
control of the Philippine Airlines, and acquired the Philippine National
Bank (PNB). Cojuangco, on the other hand, obtained the majority share
in San Miguel Corporation, the country's richest company.
Estrada was born Joseph Ejercito in San Juan on April 19, 1937. Contrary
to the popular notion that he tasted poverty, Estrada, a son of a government
contractor, lived relatively well-off. After being expelled from the
Ateneo de Manila in his younger years, he enrolled in an Engineering
course at the Mapua Institute of Technology, eventually dropping out
to pursue an acting carreer.
He starred in about 100 films, the most popular of which was "Asiong
Salonga", a movie about a modern day Robin Hood born in Tondo.
From then, Estrada embraced the image of a tough hero who was ready
to fight the rich and powerful for the sake of the poor. But he had
a contender in this role, Fernando Poe Jr. who became his friend and
gave him the nickname "Erap", the inverted pronunciation of
the word "Pare" (loosely: "Friend").
As a movie celebrity, Estrada had himself surrounded by many beautiful
women, aside from her wife Loi Ejercito. Among these women were Nora
Aunor, Guia Gomez, Joy Melendrez and Laarni Enriquez. There were more
who claimed they had a relationship with him.
In 1968, Estrada entered politics as mayor of San Juan, a position he
held until 1986. In 1987, he became a senator and, five years later,
vice-president. In 1998, he was mainly responsible for carrying a unified
opposition party (LAMP) to victory with the support of movie celebrities
like Fernando Poe Jr. and Nora Aunor and the trust and loyalty of then
Supt. Panfilo Lacson, whom he later appointed as the police chief.
As president, Estrada blamed the Ramos administration for the weak economy
he inherited. So, he tapped the expertise and managerial skills of experienced
economists to pump up the economy, but to no avail. Businessmen and
foreign investors began to lose their trust in the new administration,
with the entry of the president's friends, mostly big Chinese tycoons.
The problems of the Estrada administration reached a crescendo in 2000.
Bugged by the intensifying insurgency in Mindanao and a series of natural
and man-made calamities nationwide, the new administration poorly restored
hope of a bright future. Then came the BW Resources anomaly, which Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Perfecto Yasay blamed on the
president.
In October, Ilocos Sur Governor Luis "Chavit" Singson, a former
friend and close ally of the president, exposed that the president received
about P500 million from jueteng kickbacks and excise tax from the Ilocos
region. Corruption charges against the president ensued which spawned
the dramatic passage of the Articles of Impeachment by the House of
Representatives led by Speaker Manuel Villar on November 13.
The Senate then convened itself as an Impeachment tribunal and began
the process on December 7. The House prosecutors presented more than
30 witnesses, mostly women, who testified that the president was involved
in several irregular transactions. One witness, Clarissa Ocampo, a senior
vice-president of Equitable-PCI Bank, claimed he saw the president affix
a different signature, Jose Velarde, on a multi-million Peso bank transaction.
The defense panel, composed of the brightest lawyers in the country,
and the majority party senator-judges, questioned the materiality and
relevance of Ocampo's testimony. Supreme Court Chief Justice Hilario
Davide ruled that Ocampo's testimony would only be considered if the
prosecution panel could prove that the multi-million bank account came
from irregular transactions.
On January 16, the House prosecutors were about to establish the missing
link by opening an envelope, which they claimed would prove that the
president had amassed P3.3 billion in ill-gotten wealth, when 11 senator-judges
voted not to open the envelope. This prodded Senate President Aquilino
Pimentel to resign, the House prosecutors and complainants to walk out,
and the viewing public to storm to the historic intersection of EDSA
and Ortigas in Mandaluyong City - the start of the 5-day People Power
2 at EDSA, that would force President Joseph Estrada to leave office.
Former Presidents Fidel Ramos and Corazon Aquino, Manila Archbishop
Jaime Cardinal Sin, students, office workers, activists, lay people,
laborers, politicians and celebrities joined the furious crowd in asking
for the resignation of the president. On January 18, Nora Aunor stunned
everyone when she joined the rally, publicly admitting her previous
relationship with the president, and called him a woman-beater. The
following day, Defense Secretary Orlando Mercado, Interior and Local
Government Secretary Alfredo Lim, the military generals, and the police
officers withdrew their support from the president, as foretold by former
President Ramos.
In the morning of January 19, the president was guided out of Malacanang
by Armed Forces Chief of Staff General Angelo Reyes to give way to a
new president, a woman. Vice-President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo took
his oath as the 14th president before Chief Justice Davide at noontime.
She formally began her term in office on January 22, the same day the
new US President George Bush was inaugurated at the White House.
At present, Estrada is back to the arms of his legitimate wife. One
of his mistresses, Laarni Enriquez, flew to Hong Kong during the heat
of the Impeachment trial. His friends like Lacson, Charlie Ang, Jaime
Dichaves, and Nora Aunor also abandoned him. Much worse, one of his
alleged illegitimate daughters, Josephine Rose Ejercito, said his father
deserved what he got.
The Arroyo administration is preparing criminal charges against Estrada.
The president said he was ready to face the music and prove his innocence.
Ironically, he claimed that the controversial second envelope, which
triggered the People Power 2, should have been opened in the first place.
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