The taipan who owned the countrys leading steel manufacturing firm died at the Makati Medical Center after a lingering illness since December 2001, and will be buried tomorrow, May 9. Flowers and condolences poured, and his wake was attended by President Arroyo, Trade Secretary Mar Roxas, Cabinet officials, business and other leaders. Tributes were paid by an unprecedented 478 Chinese community civic, cultural, educational, sports, business and religious organizations.
Chua led the federation in many socio-civic projects, one of which was Operation Barrio Schools. This is the biggest private sector project of its kind supporting public education, with many small to medium Filipino Chinese entrepreneurs joining the big taipans in donating over 2,800 public school buildings to the poorest barrios nationwide.
Ben Chua once told The Philippine Star that Operation Barrio Schools was initiated due to the Chinese communitys belief that free enterprise and democracy can only thrive if a nation has social justice, a bigger middle-class, lower levels of mass poverty and democratic access to education.
Chua is expected to be succeeded as federation president by the next most senior official, who is coincidentally his business partner and high school classmate, 63-year-old John K. C. Ng. Transport entrepreneur Robin Sy is also expected to move up as executive vice president. Coincidentally, Ngs daughter is married to Lucio Tans son Michael "Mike" Tan of Asia Brewery, while the popular Robin Sy is also a trusted best friend and former high school classmate of Tan.
Chua was saddened "when our politicians recklessly made the Philippines a founding member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) without adequately preparing our local industries in the same manner that China or Malaysia did." As president of Cathay Pacific Steel Corp., the countrys leading steel manufacturer, he knew how the industries would be affected.
The Federation of Filipino-Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FFCCCII) is the vigorous proponent of the Buy Pinoy campaign led by one of Chuas directors, industrialist Francis Chua. A favorite Federation project is the hybrid rice program by one of Chuas young directors, industrialist Henry Lim Bon Liong.
Sources told The Philippine Star that with the expected election of John Ng as federation president, and Robin Sy as executive vice president, one vacant position for vice president will be a toss-up between Henry Lim and Francis Chua, both of whom are highly-educated in Chinese, English and Filipino, also graduates of UP.
Ben Chua served as director of the University of the East (UE) and generously supported projects in his alma mater, UP. He believed that young generations of Filipinos of Chinese heritage should learn the Chinese language and traditional Confucian values.
He was a former chairman of the board of trustees of Manilas Chiang Kai-Shek College. In 1993, he also donated a building to Xiamen University, which was founded in Fujian province, south China in 1921 by his hero, Singaporean "Rubber King" Tan Kah Kee.
Chua said, "It is a great honor for me to be able to leave a footprint on this beautiful university built by the great philanthropist Tan Kah Kee."
Then Vice President Gloria Arroyo was principal sponsor during the wedding of David, eldest son of Ben Chua, and ex-chairman of Anvil Executive Club, which is an organization of young Filipino-Chinese entrepreneurs and professionals committed to promote traditional Confucian values and civic consciousness. Other past Anvil leaders include the late Tan Yus daughter Elena Tanyu Coyiuto as founding chairman, the late Ramon Siy Lais eldest son George Siy of Jag Jeans and now president of the Confederation of Garment Exporters of the Phil. (Congep), Lucio Tans son Mike Tan of Asia Brewery, steel tycoon John Ngs eldest son Jeffrey Ng, and others.
It is interesting to note that Ben Chuas daughter last year married the eldest son of banker George Go, former Chairman of Equitable PCIBank who was said to have facilitated some bank transactions for ex-President Estrada.
Although Chua supported the call for political change in January 2001, he said the Federation is a business organization, not a political one, that its members have diverse political opinions. Ben Chua was optimistic about the ethnic Chinese minority continuing philanthropy work and entrepreneurial ventures to support national development. He said local Chinese are exemplary Filipino citizens helping national progress without forsaking the ancestral Chinese culture, ethnic identity and Confucian values. Ben Chua expressed high hopes that the Chinese business sector will remain resilient, continue to reinvest and help as catalyst of Philippine economic recovery in 2002.