Cervantes was believed to be spreading rumors about a desta-bilization plot against the adminis-tration. Malacañang may laugh off any attempt at destabilization, but the rumors alone are destabilizing enough. In addition to coup plots, real or imagined, there is the very real problem of criminality. From the early days of this administration, concerns have been raised about ransom kidnappings in Metro Manila. In addition to these kidnappings, theres the long-festering scourge of the Abu Sayyaf, which struck again last year, raiding a Palawan resort and taking a fresh batch of hostages to Basilan. The militarys self-imposed Christmas deadline to rescue the captives came and went with the three remaining hostages still in the hands of the Abu Sayyaf.
The kidnappings have scared away investors and tourists and made life miserable for many Filipinos. Some have sent their children abroad; others have shut down their businesses here and moved with their entire family to another country. The administration may crow about "respectable" economic growth, but economic success is useless if the people live in fear and cant enjoy the fruits of growth. In survey after survey, criminality ranks high among the concerns of the business community in this country.
There are sensational crimes waiting to be solved, and bungled attempts at solution hardly inspire confidence in the police. If investigators fail to crack the Cervantes murder, it will merely fan more rumors of a brewing coup something the administration can do without. President Arroyo has been promising to crush the Abu Sayyaf, neutralize kidnappers and keep the people safe. This new year she should mean it.