By God, its time our government firmly declared itself for our people, and not for the annoying sabre-rattlers, the vested interests capable of hiring high-powered legal shysters attorneys-in-law and attorneys-outlaw and the dakdak variety of false patriots who believe and loudly proclaim they have the monopoly on wisdom and virtue.
For example, take such a simple but valuable matter as the "coconut levy." This should have been settled years ago, for the benefit of its true owners, the coconut farmers. But no. Everytime we hear word that some kind of agreement is being worked out regarding coco levy funds and the sequestered shares in San Miguel Corporation, theres a virtual barrage of flak from the same snarling quarters, trying to shoot down the settlement.
A few weeks ago, when the cheering news came out from Davao that several farmers groups once bitter enemies for the coco levy funds had reached an amicable agreement on what to do with the San Miguel shares, the moth-eaten Presidential Commission on Good Government (whose writ should have expired long ago) went to Congress to declare the coco levy funds public in character a declaration that would surely derail any kind of agreement. The worst part of that silly declaration is that, assuming for the sake of argument, Congress does what the PCGG wishes, the levy will be litigated to high heavens by every lawyer who has a client with an interest in the coco levy. What a rotten situation. Nobody will benefit at all. (Except the lawyers.)
We are nowhere near solving the coco levy problem than we were on February 27, 1986. Even President Cory Aquino, with a revolutionary mandate which merged the powers of both the executive and the legislature in her office, could not work out the legal tangle that is the coco levy and its accompanying sequestration.
The tragedy is that for the last 16 years those funds have lain idle. The only ones who we can say profited from them were the Sorianos who, despite their tiny minority (almost invisible) stake in San Mig, were able to retain management control of the company, plus, of course, the PCGG representatives who were named to sit on the Board of Directors, collecting fat fees, when they had not invested even a single centavo in the firm.
As a matter of fact, a seat on that cushy Board of Directors proved for each successive Administration a convenient way to directly reward political contributors and supporters of the regime in power. In the meantime, lawyers on all sides would endlessly argue the pros and cons, and the sequestration cases would grind to a halt.
The second and most aggrieved group are the coconut farmers. I wont get into the legal niceties of where the levy funds came from, but one thing is super-clear: They were meant to benefit the coco farmers. Can anyone dispute that?
And now we come to the crux of the issue. For more than a century, up to a few decades ago, the coconut industry was a far more important sector of our economy (as your elders can tell you). My father used to call the coconut "The Tree of Life." Alas, the coconut is down. It was vital that a fund be created to rescue that industry, for if the coconut withered, so would eventually our economy. This is demonstrated today when our once upmarket electronics export industry has been devastated, and only a surge in agriculture is sustaining us in this cruel world.
Yet those funds sit worthlessly, when they could have been utilized to develop and improve coconut production and uplift the plight of our farmers! Nothing can be done when the levy funds are the subject of never-ending bickering and stalled, as well, in the courts where things (as the Garchitorena suspension shows) move with glacial slowness?
Shall we wait another 16 years while the coconut industry deteriorates to extinction? The legendary resilience of the coconut is at an ebb. Today, we are faced with the gravest threat of all: Globalization. Our coconut oil exports are under siege from other oils such as palm, soya, corn and canola. This has depressed the price of the end-product, and the ripples of export setback are being felt everywhere in this faltering industry.
But there is still a chance. We can bounce back. We can make coconut oil a competitive product. However, we urgently need marketing and research and development, the three requisites for every successful product. Other countries subsidize these undertakings to elbow us out of the competition our coco levy funds could painlessly accomplish the same results in the dog-eat-dog international marketplace. Why do we hesitate?
The problem, I believe, is that the detractors of the agreement see red when they see that former Governor Eduardo "Danding" Cojuangco apparently can live with it. They hate Cojuangco so much that theyll rather declare the funds public, thus effectively torpedoing the agreement. What selfish bullshit.
Dont these people see it? That here is a happy breakthrough: That money can finally be used to help our growers and resurrect an almost dying industry?
These mean souls see only Cojuangco and for that reason they desperately dont want to see that agreement reach fruition.
In the meantime, what will they say? Sorry for the coconut farmers, but "justice" (they bleat) must be done? Sorry for the coconut industry? Who the hell cares if it collapses to the threat of globalization? Sorry, but it is important for them to get Danding Cojuangco!
To them it is no consequence that 16 years have passed and nothing has come of all the legal maneuverings and pasikot-sikot. Everything can be thrown out of the window as long as they relish the victory of getting Cojuangco.
Over the past two years, he has steered San Miguel to levels of profitability that has earned the respect of both foreign and local stock analysts. He is today a business leader who is the peer, and can meet as such, with the business elite of the world.
Perhaps its time for the government to stop hating Cojuangco. Maybe, then, we can release San Miguel from the grubby hands of some in government and, finally, do something significant for the farmers and coconut production from a levy which will be freed from bondage.
Time is running out. This is not something that can be solved in the courtroom or by torpedoing in the media and other quarters a worthwhile agreement that can be workable and beneficent.
Sometimes, we are our own worst enemies. Full of frets, anger, conceit, amor propio, and the self-indulgence of nurturing hate.
We must not be moored in the past. We have to set aside our faults and weaknesses. Only then can we stride forward to meet the challenges of the present and the future. This is my plea.