While Udong appeared mostly collected, courteous and well-coached in his testimony, Arroyo had a hard time parrying searching questions and feigning amnesia. The First Gentleman thus impressed us as not telling the whole truth.
Arroyo gained points with his emotional plea for Sen. Panfilo Lacson not to drag his family into the fray, but he lost some while dodging questions of Sen. Edgardo Angara on the extraneous subject of family apartments in San Francisco (US).
But grazed by Arroyos reference to the former policemans alleged heavy hand and his "skirt" of parliamentary immunity, Lacson returned oblique fire by calling Udong aside to examine pictures supposedly not fit for public showing thereby teasing the imagination that he had some saucy pictures as reserve ammo.
To us, the worse performers were two lady senators, Tessie Oreta and Loi Estrada, who spat venom while grilling Udong. In a formal deliberations of the august Senate, vicious partisanship and ill-temper are out of place.
The line of questioning of a few other senators showed partisan direction, but they were not as obnoxious.
Some senators chose not to speak because, according to them, they could not pose intelligent questions as no documentary evidence of Lacsons charges were given them beforehand.
While there is no guarantee that Udong was now telling the truth, his turn-around left Lacson groping for shreds of evidence of money laundering by the First Gentleman. The hearing might just turn into a fishing expedition to prop up a weak case.
If, as Jaworski admonished his colleagues, the Senate should punish false witnesses, the venerable body should also do something about members invoking parliamentary immunity while violating with impunity peoples rights Kuratong-Baleleng-style.
Also, like Sen. Aquilino Pimentel who earlier turned down Udongs offer of derogatory information on Arroyo senators should have enough discernment to know a bum steer when they see one.
Many politicians are encouraged to spout inanities and malicious statements because media give them time and space without much thoughtful evaluation. As a result, print and broadcast media teem with false reports.
Sometimes we print politicians statements that they never made but which were just manufactured by their press agents. To keep the charade going, we go to the other party for reaction and the latter gladly obliges.
We are taught in journalism school that one element of news is conflict. For lack of anything better to do, some of us prod antagonistic politicians to engage each other in endless debate. Its no different from a cockfight.
This is one of the reasons why we now have a divided society.
We think that our elders in the profession publishers and editors in the case of print media should get together and agree on internal guidelines and sanctions for everybody down the line.
For instance, we should discourage stories that say "So and so official said yesterday . . . " So what if he said it (assuming he really said it)? Its all laway (saliva).
We have noticed that around seven out every 10 promised action never gets done after the publication of the press release on what the official "said". Why dont we wait till he does it?
If we apply just this one rule, well have media less cluttered with non-news. Well have a more quiet, less stressful atmosphere, one more conducive to improving our quality of life.
The detractors of Ebdane are riding on the drift apparently set by the recent resignation of Gen. Victor Corpuz as AFP intelligence service chief, and that of Defense Secretary Angelo Reyes.
Part of the demolition campaign is the repeated reference to the escape last July of Indonesian terrorist Fathur Rohman al-Ghozi. This despite findings of an independent fact-finding committee that there was no collusion but negligence on the part of the jailers.
Precisely, Ebdane should be kept and pressed to recapture Al-Ghozi. Police sources said the terrorists general location has been determined. They added that it was just a matter of time and negotiation with a group holding him before he is brought back.
Some senior officers lusting after Ebdanes post reportedly have linked up with some politicians who want a replacement PNP chief beholden to them.