Ping faces his toughest challenge
>> Thursday, December 19, 2013
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
Is anyone surprised
that President Benigno “P-Noy” Aquino III picked former Senator Panfilo “Ping”
Lacson as the “rehabilitation czar” to help the victims of Typhoon
Yolanda/Haiyan? And it probably surprised Lacson, too. Why? Well,
who would take this “rehab czar” job and expect to rebuild more than a million
homes?
The pessimist would probably say, “He’s doomed to fail!” while the optimist might say, “Ping could do it!” The pragmatist would say, “Give Ping a chance.” But the realist hit it right on the head, “Is Ping the right person for the job?” But here’s the thing: they could all be right!
But the
overriding question that comes to mind is: Why did P-Noy appoint Ping and why
didn’t he appoint a loyal family friend, Vice President Jejomar “Jojo” Binay,
who is currently serving as the “housing czar”?
There must be
something that made P-Noy pick the inexperienced Ping Lacson for the job
instead of the experienced “housing czar.” For one thing, Ping did not
use his pork barrel allocations during his 12-year stint in the Senate, which
made him stand out among his peers as “untainted” at a time when three senators
were implicated in the pork barrel scam operated by the notorious “pork barrel
queen,” Janet Lim-Napoles. This is a big plus for Ping because as the
“rehab czar” he’ll manage the funds from the government as well as the huge
foreign aid that doesn’t seem to end. It is a situation that could be
tempting to the hordes of unscrupulous public officials who would prey on the
helpless victims of Typhoon Yolanda. Isn’t that what happened to the
Malampaya funds that were released to help the farmers displaced by Typhoons
Ondoy and Pepeng?
But Ping was
unsure of him doing the job. He asked P-Noy to give him three days to
mull it over. And the day Ping accepted the job, he called for a
press conference and told the media that he accepted the job – which is
estimated to cost P40 billion -- after talking to experts in the field of
reconstruction and rehabilitation of disaster-stricken areas. “I want to
do the job with flying colors. I want to do the best for the job,” he
said.
But flying
colors or not, getting the job done would be a Herculean task that only a
strong-willed person could accomplish. Just imagine the enormity of the
work to be done. According to the latest report from the National
Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, 5,670 people have died, 26,233
injured, and 1,761 missing. More than 11.2 million were affected in 588
municipalities and 57 cities including over 200,000 residents staying inside
evacuation centers. More than four million people were displaced and more
than a million houses were destroyed or damaged. Indeed, Ping has his
work cut out for him.
But Ping is undaunted by these numbers. He’s cautiously optimistic
that completing the rehabilitation before P-Noy’s term ends in June 2016 is
“doable.”
And “doable” means
that Ping has to run his shop with an “iron fist” and use both a “dictatorial”
and “consultative” style – as he described it -- of management. Given his
long professional career in law enforcement, he’d be a natural when it comes to
disciplining erring subordinates.
***
Commissioned in the
Philippine Constabulary (PC) upon graduation from the Philippine Military
Academy (PMA) in 1971, Ping rose through the ranks. In 1992,
then-President Fidel V. Ramos appointed him to the Presidential Anti-Crime
Commission (PACC) -- which was headed by then-Vice President Joseph “Erap”
Estrada -- as Chief of Task Force Habagat. In 1996, he was appointed
project officer of Special Project Alpha.
Lacson reached the
apex of his career in 1999 when then-President Estrada appointed him to head
the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Task Force (PAOCTF) and also to serve as
Director-General of what used to be the PC, now the Philippine National Police
(PNP). During Ping’s stint as the country’s top law enforcer, there was a
considerable reduction of corrupt policemen, gambling syndicates, and drug
cartels.
But his law
enforcement career was fraught with controversy. In 1995, Ping was
implicated in a supposed shootout between police officers under the Task Force
Habagat and members of the KuratongBaleleng crime syndicate. Eleven
members of KuratongBaleleng were killed, which led many to believe that it was
a rubout, not a shootout. Last December 2012, the Supreme Court affirmed
a Quezon City court’s decision dismissing the multiple murder charges against
Lacson and his co-accused.
In another case, Ping
was implicated in the abduction and murder of Bubby Dacer and his driver
Emmanuel Corbito in November 2000. A former police senior superintendent,
CezarMancao, named Ping as the mastermind of the double murder.
***
In 2001, Lacson ran
for senator and won. In 2004, he ran for president against incumbent
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. He lost in that election. He ran for
re-election in 2007 and retained his seat in the Senate.
But all these years,
the Dacer-Corbito case haunted him. On January 5, 2010, Lacson left the
country after it was rumored that an arrest warrant was about to be
issued. True enough, on February 5, 2010, a Manila Regional Trial
Court issued an arrest warrant against Ping. A year later, the Court of
Appeals withdrew the murder charges against him, citing Mancao as “not a
credible and trustworthy witness.” On March 26, 2011, Ping returned to
Manila.
Termed out last June
2013, Lacson kept a low profile as he mulled over what to do next. At 65
years of age, Ping doesn’t seem like he would retire from public service
soon. Indeed, as early as last March, P-Noy admitted that Lacson would be
joining his administration after his term ended. At that time, he didn’t
know where to put him. But rumors were abounding that P-Noy was
considering Ping to be the “anti-corruption czar” or “anti-crime czar.”
He’d fit well into the job since he’s one of only two senators who didn’t use
their pork barrel allocations; therefore, he doesn’t have excess baggage to
carry around in his new job. Well, Yolanda changed all that. Ping
is now joining the Aquino administration as a cabinet-ranked “rehabilitation
czar.”
But no sooner had Ping
accepted the job than rumors started circulating that he’s tuning up his
political vehicle for a potential run for president in 2016. However,
everything hinges on his performance as “rehab czar.” If he does a
mediocre job, then he would be out of the game. But if he succeeds in
finishing at least 60% of the job a year before the 2016 elections, he’d be a
formidable presidential contender. And it might ease party-mate Mar Roxas
out of the presidential derby, who is currently the only presidentiable from
the Liberal Party.
At the end of the day,
the 2016 presidential contest could be between two towering czars: Jojo Binay,
the “housing czar”; and Ping Lacson, the “rehab czar.” But Binay is a
formidable opponent. His popularity rating continues to be “very
good.”
Ping faces the
toughest challenge in his life. He has to overcome the stigma of his
checkered past. But his reputation as a straight shooter is overpowering
and there is one thing going for him: He never gives up. Indeed, he’s a
tough act to follow. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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