Senators May 23, 2007 4:46 pm Batch 29

1 Legarda, Loren 10,708,904
2 Escudero, Chiz 10,447,254 3 Lacson, Ping 9,181,156
4 Villar, Manuel 8,888,061
5 Pangilinan, Kiko* 8,517,069
6 Aquino, Noynoy* 8,368,486
7 Angara, Edgardo 7,509,329 8 Honasan, Gringo 6,897,847
9 Arroyo, Joker 6,824,506
10 Cayetano, Alan Peter** 6,743,200
11 Trillanes, Antonio 6,511,771
12 Pimentel, Koko 6,438,964
13 Zubiri, Juan Miguel 6,398,902
14 Recto, Ralph 6,122,519
15 Defensor, Mike 5,896,293
16 Pichay, Prospero 5,872,461
17 Roco, Sonia 4,899,635
18 Montano, Cesar 4,754,779
19 Osmena, John 4,400,915
20 Sotto, Tito 4,190,716
21 Magsaysay, Vic 3,846,830
22 Coseteng, Nikki 3,040,317
23 Oreta, Tessie 2,531,674
24 Singson, Chavit 2,490,144
25 Gomez, Richard 1,560,837
26 Kiram, Jamalul 1,359,344
27 Chavez, Melchor 554,996
28 Paredes, Zosimo 490,228
29 Bautista, Martin 474,788
30 Cayetano, Joselito*** 342,103
31 Sison, Adrian 274,390
32 Lozano, Oliver 262,962
33 Estrella, Antonio 241,506
34 Wood, Victor 229,049
35 Enciso, Ruben 122,878
36 Orpilla, Ed 115,859
37 Cantal, Felix 102,241

Ranked 1 Legarda, Loren 10,708,904
2 Escudero, Chiz 10,447,254
3 Lacson, Ping 9,181,156
4 Villar, Manuel 8,888,061
5 Pangilinan, Kiko* 8,517,069
6 Aquino, Noynoy* 8,368,486
7 Angara, Edgardo 7,509,329
8 Honasan, Gringo 6,897,847
9 Arroyo, Joker 6,824,506
10 Cayetano, Alan Peter** 6,743,200
11 Trillanes, Antonio 6,511,771
12 Pimentel, Koko 6,438,964
13 Zubiri, Juan Miguel 6,398,902
14 Recto, Ralph 6,122,519
15 Defensor, Mike 5,896,293
16 Pichay, Prospero 5,872,461
17 Roco, Sonia 4,899,635
18 Montano, Cesar 4,754,779
19 Osmena, John 4,400,915
20 Sotto, Tito 4,190,716
21 Magsaysay, Vic 3,846,830
22 Coseteng, Nikki 3,040,317
23 Oreta, Tessie 2,531,674
24 Singson, Chavit 2,490,144
25 Gomez, Richard 1,560,837
26 Kiram, Jamalul 1,359,344
27 Chavez, Melchor 554,996
28 Paredes, Zosimo 490,228
29 Bautista, Martin 474,788
30 Cayetano, Joselito*** 342,103
31 Sison, Adrian 274,390
32 Lozano, Oliver 262,962
33 Estrella, Antonio 241,506
34 Wood, Victor 229,049
35 Enciso, Ruben 122,878
36 Orpilla, Ed 115,859
37 Cantal, Felix 102,241
****
Party List

BAYAN MUNA 231,506
BUHAY 227,452
GABRIELA 171,530
APEC 146,135
CIBAC 141,823
A TEACHER 123,529
AKBAYAN 106,857
ABONO 106,031
AGAP 104,942
COOP-NATCCO 96,831
ARC 92,056
ANAKPAWIS 83,872
ABS 71,157
KAKUSA 68,212
BATAS 67,310
ALAGAD 64,677
FPJPM 55,826
ABA-AKO 54,246
AMIN 53,260
SENIOR CITIZENS 50,678
KABATAAN 50,137
BUTIL 47,876
AN WARAY 43,954
ABAKADA 43,243
VFP 42,615
COCOFED 40,549
ANAD 40,506
BANAT 38,344
ANAK 36,482
TUCP 35,631
UNI-MAD 34,217
ANG KASANGGA 33,988
AVE 33,296
DIWA 32,879
AT 31,920
1-UTAK 31,022
ABANSE! PINAY 30,229
AGHAM 28,569
BANTAY 24,363
SUARA 24,328
YACAP 22,012
PM 21,081
ABC 20,577
AGBIAG! 20,268
ALIF 19,711
SANLAKAS 19,581
AKAPIN 19,350
APOI 19,199
PMAP 18,743
A SMILE 16,445
GRECON 14,901
PEP 14,855
AHON 14,759
AKSA 14,750
SB 14,488
BAGO 14,252
APO 13,965
SPI 13,813
ASAHAN MO 13,107
KALAHI 12,902
HAPI 11,995
ASSALAM 11,978
VENDORS 11,929
BTM 11,485
AAPS 11,356
PBA 11,346
BANDILA 11,284
ASAP 11,196
BP 11,125
ANC 10,716
AMANG 10,597
BIYAYANG BUKID 10,424
BUKLOD FILIPINA 9,890
BABAE KA 9,859
ABA ILONGGO 9,693
NELFFI 9,480
BIGKIS 9,077
AANGAT KA PILIPINO 8,331
ABAY PARAK 8,058
AG 7,853
ADD 7,680
ADD-TRIBAL 7,357
AHONBAYAN 6,892
LYPAD 6,235
AGING PINOY 6,099
BAHANDI 5,957
ALMANA 5,739
KASAPI 5,475
UMDJ 5,446
AAWAS 3,683
AA-KASOSYO 3,345
ATS 3,237
SM 2,726

Prosecutors want psychiatrist for ex-Surigao rep

Government prosecutors have asked the Sandiganbayan First Division to get a psychiatrist who could examine former Surigao del Norte Rep. Constantino Navarro Jr.

The prosecutors requested this from the court after Navarro’s lawyer testified that his client is not mentally fit to face a criminal trial for graft and malversation charges.

Prosecutors led by Bureau I director Raymundo Julio Olaguer said an independent psychiatric test is needed to verify the testimony of Dr Amadeo A. Alinea Jr that Navarro is suffering from mental incapacity.

Dr. Alinea certified that Navarro was “mentally incapacitated to understand the nature of his illness and the outcome of his behaviors as well as decisions.”

He said Navarro is suffering from an ailment caused by ‘a major depressive episode and dementia due to renal failure and diabetes mellitus type II.’

“The sweeping statement given by the witness offered no details regarding the degree or level of incapacity; whether the mental acuity was merely diminished or completely lost,” the prosecution pointed out.

It said Navarro should be committed to a hospital or a mental facility if an independent psychiatric test establish Dr. Alinea’s findings.

“The appointment by the Honorable Court of a psychiatrist to properly examine the accused, and the confinement of the latter in a designated hospital or mental facility, if necessary for the purpose, is indispensable,” government lawyers said.

Navarro was charged with nine counts of graft and a malversation case in May 2003. Another graft case was filed against him in August 2004.

His co-accused included officials of the Department of Education and the Department of Interior and Local Government.

The charges stemmed from alleged anomalies in the disbursement of his P11.83 million Countrywide Development Fund (CDF) more commonly referred to as ‘pork barrel funds’.

A special team of government auditors investigating Navarro’s CDF releases reported that he personally identified items and suppliers for the purchases of medical supplies, shabu-testing kits, rice paddy plows, and school supplies between 1997 and 1998. GMANews.TV

Metro Manila opposition mayors seek release of Erap

 

The eight newly elected opposition mayors in Metro Manila led by Alfredo Lim of Manila sought Wednesday the release from jail of former president Joseph Estrada.

In a speech during the thanksgiving hosted by the Partido ng Masang Pilipino (PMP) for all their winning mayoral candidates in Metro Manila, Lim said that the recently concluded elections, which was dominated by the opposition is the “judgment of people.”

“The result of the election is the judgment of the people. It is time for [Joseph] Estrada to be released from jail,” Lim said.

Lim said the opposition must continue the fight of Estrada and the late movie actor Fernando Poe, Jr., (FPJ), to stop the frame up of opposition leaders on crimes that they did not commit.

“We can stand not to eat, but we will not let them to continuously frame us up on crimes that we did not commit. Our battle cry now is no to injustice, no to oppression, yes to clean, honest and good governance,” Lim said.

For his part, PMP secretary general Horacio Morales said the eight mayors of the PMP will pursue the call for Estrada to be released from jail, which they dubbed as “Freedom for Erap.”

“That freedom for Estrada was one of the proposals that is now under consideration after it was brought up by Manila Mayor, Alfredo Lim” Morales said.

Lim also asked the PMP members to invite Fr. Ed Panlilio, who won against the two administration candidates in Pampanga, namely Mark Lapid and Lilia Pineda, for governor, to join the PMP.

“Something happened in Pampanga. A priest who have no political experience and is hesitant to throw his hat in the political arena, won against two giants. Yung anak ng jueteng at yung anak ng Quarry. I hope we can ask Father Panlilio to join us in PMP to be our light in our path” Lim said.

Morales said the PMP approved a resolution to adopt Panlilio as its member.

“We will adopt him (Panlilio). We would support his program. Eventually, we will ask him through a resolution if he wants to join us, then we will welcome him” Morales said. - GMANews.TV

16 groups ‘winning’ in party-list polls

Sixteen party-list groups are on track to getting into Congress, led by Buhay and Bayan Muna that could each get the maximum three seats, based on the Commission on Elections’ partial official tally as of 6:15 p.m, Wednesday.

Buhay (845,540 votes), backed by Mike Velarde of the Catholic evangelical group El Shaddai, was on top with 8.4 percent of 10,070,691 party-list votes counted. The militant Bayan Muna (691,011) followed with 6.86 percent. Both party-list groups could each get three seats in the House of Representatives.

Cibac (493,923) took 4.9 percent, which would give it two seats.

On track to winning a seat each are 13 party-list groups: Gabriela (399,921), 3.97 percent; APEC (389,547), 3.87 percent; A Teacher (345,235), 3.43 percent; Alagad (333,264), 3.31 percent; Abono (324,631), 3.22 percent; Butil (313,840), 3.12 percent; Akbayan (288,829), 2.87 percent; AGAP (278,779), 2.77 percent; Anakpawis (258,810), 2.57 percent; Batas (258,804), 2.57 percent; ARC (255,023), 2.53 percent; Coop-Natco (250,178), 2.48 percent; and An Waray (203,745), 2.02 percent.

A group that receives 6 percent or more of party-list votes gets three seats in the House of Representatives. A group with at least 4 percent gets two seats, and one with at least 2 percent gets one seat.

The Comelec partial tally also showed that 77 other accredited groups have not received the minimum 2 percent of party-list votes.

In addition to more than 200 Representatives voted at the district level, there can be a maximum of 50 party-list seats in the House, although only close to half are typically filled following elections. -Amita Legaspi, GMANews.TV

Metro Manila opposition mayors seek release of Erap

The eight newly elected opposition mayors in Metro Manila led by Alfredo Lim of Manila sought Wednesday the release from jail of former president Joseph Estrada.

In a speech during the thanksgiving hosted by the Partido ng Masang Pilipino (PMP) for all their winning mayoral candidates in Metro Manila, Lim said that the recently concluded elections, which was dominated by the opposition is the “judgment of people.”

“The result of the election is the judgment of the people. It is time for [Joseph] Estrada to be released from jail,” Lim said.

Lim said the opposition must continue the fight of Estrada and the late movie actor Fernando Poe, Jr., (FPJ), to stop the frame up of opposition leaders on crimes that they did not commit.

“We can stand not to eat, but we will not let them to continuously frame us up on crimes that we did not commit. Our battle cry now is no to injustice, no to oppression, yes to clean, honest and good governance,” Lim said.

For his part, PMP secretary general Horacio Morales said the eight mayors of the PMP will pursue the call for Estrada to be released from jail, which they dubbed as “Freedom for Erap.”

“That freedom for Estrada was one of the proposals that is now under consideration after it was brought up by Manila Mayor, Alfredo Lim” Morales said.

Lim also asked the PMP members to invite Fr. Ed Panlilio, who won against the two administration candidates in Pampanga, namely Mark Lapid and Lilia Pineda, for governor, to join the PMP.

“Something happened in Pampanga. A priest who have no political experience and is hesitant to throw his hat in the political arena, won against two giants. Yung anak ng jueteng at yung anak ng Quarry. I hope we can ask Father Panlilio to join us in PMP to be our light in our path” Lim said.

Morales said the PMP approved a resolution to adopt Panlilio as its member.

“We will adopt him (Panlilio). We would support his program. Eventually, we will ask him through a resolution if he wants to join us, then we will welcome him” Morales said. - GMANews.TV

12 bombings highlight Comelec report on poll violence

A total of 12 bomb attacks before and after the May 14 balloting highlighted the official report on poll-related violent incidents recorded by the Commission on Elections.

The report released Wednesday said seven bombings took place on May 14 and four ahead of the balloting and one a day after the polls.

It said explosions happened at a waiting shed in Barangay (village) Dalumangcob, Sultan Kudarat, Shariff Kabunsuan; in front of polling centers in Barangay Galakit, Pagalungan, Maguindanao; at 2131 Nuestra Señora Street, in Guadalupe Nuevo, Makati City; outside Dalican Pilot Elementary School in Datu Odin Sinsuat, Shariff Kabunsuan; at the municipal plaza of Sultan Kudarat; in two villages in Bongabong, Nueva Ecija and at the Vicinity of South Cotabato Electric Cooperative.

Although no one was killed in all of the attacks, the Comelec said five were rushed to hospitals due to injuries.

The report noted that in six incidents, improvised explosive devices were used and hand grenades in three attacks. The Comelec has no report on which type of explosives were used in the attacks on the Dalican Pilot Elementary School and on the Sultan Kudarat municipal plaza.

The Comelec report also noted the ambush in Barangay Pulot Lagayan, Abra, which killed PO3 Lauro Robino, PO1 Edgar Bolante, board of election inspectors Margie Labanan and Candida Sutian while injuring Namfrel volunteer Ronabel Alindery.

A total of eight encounters were reported from May 13 to May 14 in which 12 people were injured while three incidents of abductions were recorded on election day.

Harassments of supporters were also prevalent on election day and a day after the polls as the Comelec report showed incidents of intimidation took place in Barangay Balite Surigao del Norte; Dacutan, Esperanza, Agusan del Sur; Gabi village, Cordova, Cebu and at the Jagupit Elementary School in Jagupit village, Santiago, Agusan del Norte.

The Comelec said incidents of ballot snatching were reported in Poblacion, Dolores, Abra during the counting of votes at the Heart of Mary High School, in Cangayonan, Tinambac, Camarines Sur and Batasan village in Arayat, Pampanga. - GMANews.TV

Gabriela is No. 1 in OAV Comelec canvass

The official tally of the Commission on Elections, sitting as the National Board of Canvassers, of the Certificates of Canvass of the overseas absentee votes showed five progressive groups critical of the Arroyo administration bagging more than 2% of the votes cast by Filipinos abroad.

Gabriela Women’s Party, a militant party-list organization that has an international network of migrant workers in most countries, topped the list with 9, 768, or 18. 79% of the total votes cast for party-list between April 14 and May 14.

Citizens’ Battle Against Corruption (Cibac), a group associated with the Jesus Is Lord (JIL) charismatic movement led by preacher Eddie Villanueva was a far second, obtaining 5, 316 votes, or 10. 23% of the votes cast by qualified Filipinos abroad. JIL and Cibac have overseas networks, too.

Akbay Pinoy OFW-National, Inc. , a little known group in the Philippines, placed third with 4, 825 votes, or 9. 28% of the overseas absentee votes cast. APO! is an organization perceived to be a ‘front’ of Malacanang in a bid to ensure control of the House of Representatives and foil an impeachment process against President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in the 14th Congress.

Progressive groups Bayan Muna and Akbayan captured the 4th and 5th place, with 2, 732, or 5.26%, and 2, 337 or 4.7% of the votes, respectively.

Buhay Hayaang Yumabong (Buhay), a group identified with the El Shaddai charismatic movement of Mike Velarde, ranked 6th with 1, 807 votes, or 3.48%.

On the 7th place is Anakpawis, another militant group allied with activist labor organization Kilusang Mayo Uno, garnering 1, 561 votes, or 3%, while the ethnic ABA Ilonggo (Abante Ilonggo, Inc) ranked 8th with 1, 183 votes, or 2. 28%.

Rounding up were the group Yacap (You Against Corruption and Poverty) with 1, 176 votes, or 2. 26%, and Agbiag! (Agbiag Timpuyog Ilocano, Inc. getting 1, 165 votes, or 2. 24% of the overseas absentee votes cast.

CoCs canvassed

The poll body completed the canvassing of the votes from Filipinos abroad on Monday morning, but the final tabulation was released only early evening on Wednesday. On Tuesday morning, the Certificate of Canvass from Samoa, an island group in the South Pacific Ocean, was opened, but the lone registered voter there was not able to exercise his right to suffrage.

The last batch of overseas absentee votes canvassed on Monday morning came from London and Ireland.

On Sunday, the CoCs tallied came from East Timor, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Lithuania, United States, Antigua, Barbados, Bermudas, Micronesia, Marshall Islands, and the Bahamas.

This year’s turnout for the Philippine mid-term elections was only at 15 percent of the 504, 122 registered absentee voters across the globe. From reports abroad, most Filipinos voters were reluctant to participate in the elections because of strong doubts on the credibility of the election process and amid heavy suspicions that election results would be rigged anyway.

The canvassers tabulated the absentee votes on Saturday from Myanmar, Kuwait, Kenya, Aruba, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, and Saudi Arabia.

On Friday, the canvassers tabulated CoCs from Pakistan, Afghanistan, Germany, Russia, Kazakhstan, Canada, Brunei, Rome and Milan (Italy), Cuba, Chile, Brazil, Singapore, Qatar, Oman, Egypt, Israel, Argentina, Sudan, Abu Dhabi, Jordan, Iraq, Greece, South Africa, Lesotho.

On the first two days of canvassing on Wednesday and Thursday, the COCs tabulated came from Laos, Papua New Guinea, Cambodia, South Korea, Austria, Slovenia, Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Palau, the Netherlands, Japan, India, Thailand, Bahrain, Switzerland, New Zealand, Cook Island, Fiji, Australia, Vietnam, Belgium, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Mexico, Iran, China, Romania, France, Monaco, Portugal, Taiwan, Hong Kong/Macau, Yemen, Cyprus, Ankara, Spain, Morocco, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Libya, Lebanon and Nigeria, with Hong Kong giving the biggest number of votes of close to 20, 000.

No vote was cast in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, Monaco, Mali, Algeria, Chad, Malta, Mauritania, Tunisia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Togo, Senegal and Samoa.

Senate’s Magic 12

In the senatorial race, the final tally of votes from overseas Filipinos showed eight candidates from the Genuine Opposition, three from the administration Team Unity and one independent making it to the winning circle of 12.

The Top 12 choices included six re-electionist senators ( Francis Pangilinan, Manuel Villar, Ralph Recto, Panfilo Lacson, Edgardo Angara and Joker Arroyo), three outgoing congressmen (Benigno Aquino III, Francis Escudero, and Alan Peter Cayetano), two first-term politicians (Aquilino Pimentel III and Sonia Roco), and one returning senator (Loren Legarda) to the 14th Congress.

Overseas Filipino voters gave Legarda 59, 151 votes, placing her on top of the list, followed by Pangilinan with 58, 854, and Aquino III with 48, 714 votes.

The official OAV tally showed Villar Jr. of GO on the fourth slot with 48, 628 votes; (5) Recto (TU) – 47, 692; (6) Lacson (GO) – 42, 011; (7) Escudero (GO) – 41, 645; (8) Cayetano (GO) – 37, 924; (9) Angara (TU) – 37, 810; (10) Pimentel III (GO) – 37, 093; (11) Arroyo (TU) – 36, 615; and, (12) Roco (GO) – 30, 670.

The first two days of the OAV canvassing had APO! on top of the party-list organizations obtaining the highest number of votes, but on the third day when votes from countries with the presence of progressive migrant workers came in, Gabriela, which has been supposed by Migrante International, consistently topped the tally.

Nominees

Gabriela’s top three nominees to the 14th Congress are incumbent Rep. Liza Maza, Luzviminda Ilagan and former Hong Kong overseas contract worker Flora Belinan. The group is an active participant in anti-government protests.

Second placer Cibac’s first three nominees are Joel Emmanuel Villanueva, Luis Lokin Jr. and lawyer Cinchona Gonzales. Joel Villanueva, son of the JIL leader, is on his third term as party-list congressman representing the anti-corruption group. He has been a staunch critic of the Arroyo administration.

The participation of APO! in this year’s party-list elections has become controversial following its inclusion in what progressive groups billed as the “Dirty Dozen” organizations allegedly fielded or supported financially by the administration to ensure that the opposition would not be able to corner at least one-third of the House of Representatives and foil yet another impeachment process against Mrs. Arroyo.

The top nominee of APO! is retired general Melchor P. Rosales, an appointee of Mrs. Arroyo as undersecretary of the Department of Interior and Local Government. It’s other nominees are Floyd Feraren, Adelaida Lazaro, Alexander Galura and Zenaida Toledo.

Bayan Muna will have two incumbent Reps. Satur Ocampo and Teodoro Casino for the first two seats and lawyer Neri Colmenares of the Counsel for the Defense of Liberties (Codal) if it garners at least six percent of the total votes cast for party-list organizations.

For Akbayan it’s top nominee is incumbent Rep. Risa Theresia Hontiveros-Baraquel, followed by Walden Bello, Enrico Dayanghirang, Byron Bocar and Vicente Fabe.

Buhay has two sets of five nominees each submitted to the Comelec. The first set has incumbent Rep. Hans Christian Seneres, Hermenegildo Dumlao, Antonio Bautista, Victor Pablo Trinidad and Eduardo Solangon Jr. The second set includes incumbent Rep. Rene M. Velarde (son of the El Shaddai leader), Ma. Carissa Coscolluela, William Irwin Tieng, Melchor Monsod, and Teresita Villarama.

Militant Anakpawis would have incumbent Reps. Crispin Beltran and Rafael Mariano on top of a list of 14 nominees submitted to the Comelec that also includes jeepney drivers’ federation leader Medardo Roda and government employees’ leader Ferdinand Gaite.

ABA Ilonggo has Aguinaldo Miravalles, Arturo Mejorada, Robert Doromal, Anecito Magbato and Rogelio Setubal.

Yacap’s nominees are Carol Jayne Lopez, Haron Omar, Ernesto Moya, Arnel Zapatos and Alexis Wayne Valdivia.

Agbiag will be represented by Marcelo Farinas, Samuel Tomas, Rogelio Mendoza, Ruth Joy Guinid and Alex Manalo.

A party-list group will have to get at least 2 percent of the votes cast in the party-list elections to be entitled to one seat at the House of Representatives. A group can have a maximum of three seats for at least 6% of the votes cast in the party-list elections.

Proposals in Congress to increase the number of seats for a party-list group at the House have not prospered.

Back-door entry

The party-list election is hotly contested among sectoral, or marginalized groups in civil society because it is a “back-door” entry to the House of Representatives.

Progressive party-list groups have accused the administration of fielding “Malacañang-organized groups” to ensure a hold on power in the House should these win, bastardizing the real spirit of the Party-list Law, but possibly foiling a third impeachment process against President Arroyo.

The militant Akbayan party-list group has claimed that there is a clear and present danger that the party-list elections will be sabotaged. It said that among the 93 party-list groups currently accredited by the Comelec are “fake” because and that these are Malacañang “fronts.”

For one, the Akbayan cited the Biyaheng Pinoy party-list group as having questionable integrity, having a brother of the Comelec chairman as one of its nominees.

Akbayan had asked the Comelec earlier to disqualify what it called as “Dirty Dozen” party-list groups for their questionable nature and links with the government, saying these groups must be subjected to a serious inquiry and scrutiny.

‘Dirty Dozen’

Apart from APO!, the 11 other party-list groups belonging to what had been tagged as Malacanang’s “dirty dozen” were: AKSA (Aksyon Sambayanan), Babae Ka (Babae Para sa Kaunlaran), Kasangga (Kasangga sa Kaunlaran, Inc), Kalahi (Advocates for Overseas Filipinos) which were considered as adjuncts of, or entities funded or assisted by, the government.

Bantay (True Marcos Loyalists) which had been disqualified by the Supreme Court’s Bagong Bayani OFW vs Comelec ruling is also sought to be stricken off the party-list voting list because it is allegedly a front organization of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

Retired Army general Jovito Palparan is Bantay’s top nominee.

Banat (Barangay Association for National Advancement of Transparency) organized by Charter change advocate Raul Lambino was labeled as a recycled party-list which had already been disqualified by Comelec but was surprisingly allowed to apply for a new accreditation. Banat lost in two previous elections and did not participate in the 2001 elections, technically disqualifying it from this year’s race.

Lypad (Youth League for Peace Advancement) allegedly failed to submit its list of nominees to the Comelec and should therefore be barred from participating in the party-list elections. Lypad’s officers work for the Office of External Affairs in Malacanang.

Other groups the progressive Akbayan party-list wanted disqualified are Agbiag ((Agbiag! Timbuyog Ilocano, Inc.) whose top nominee, Marcelo T. Farinas II, is a presidential adviser; Aging Pinoy (Aging Filipino Organization, Inc.) , Biyaheng Pinoy (BP) whose second nominee, Arsenio Abalos, is a doctor-brother of Comelec chairman Benjamin Abalos, and UNI-MAD (United Movement Against Drugs) that allegedly has questionable links with government that merit serious inquiry.

From the local absentee voters comprising soldiers, teachers, policemen and election officers on poll duty on election day, bulk of the votes went to the anti-drug UNI-MAD and BANTAY, garnering 19, 684 and 10, 853 votes, or 58.15% and 32.06%, respectively, of the 36, 361 votes cast for party-list.

Aside from Palparan, Bantay’s other nominees are Ramon Y. Garcia, Benjamin Angeles, Alan Guevara and Agnes Reano while UNI-MAD has Teodoro Lim, Alphonsus Crucero, Enrique B. Galang, Antonio Rom III and Manuel Mendoza.

The only other party that obtained more than a thousand votes from the local absentee voters was ANAD ((Alliance for Nationalist and Democracy) that listed Pastor M. Alcover Jr., Ruben Platon, David Odilao Jr., Provo Antipasado and Domingo Balang as nominees- GMANews.TV

Surigao town mayoral bet defeats rival by slim margin

The come-backing Ramon Mondano was proclaimed Wednesday mayor of the municipality of Mainit, Surigao del Norte defeating incumbent Mayor Roger Gatpolintan by a margin of 26 votes.

Senior Supt. Rodolfo Mascariñas, Surigao del Norte Police Election Supervising team head, said the proclamation of Mondano was held in solemn ceremony at the Surigao City Hall Function Room around 10 a.m.

He said supporters of the winning candidates and backers from the opposing side were barred from attending the ceremony due to the tense situation.

After the canvassing of the last 13 polling precincts in Mainit town, Mondano got 6,232 votes in the final official tally while Gatpolintan garnered 6,206 votes.

The town had a total of 16,099 registered voters.

In the vice mayoral contest, new comer Jessnar Mosende was proclaimed winner after getting 6,774 votes.

Meanwhile, the proclamation of the winning candidates for the first and second congressional districts of Surigao del Norte including the gubernatorial, vice gubernatorial and members of the provincial board were put on hold due to the petition of Gov. Lyndon Barbers.

Barbers, who is running for the congressional post for second district, lagged behind rival Tubod Mayor Guillermo Romarate, Jr with 5,858 votes.

Barbers had petitioned the Comelec last May 18 to stop canvassing and proclamation of the candidates due to alleged fraud, harassment and vote-buying during the balloting in the province.

On that same day, Comelec Chairman Benjamin Abalos stopped the canvassing and ordered the immediate hearing of the petition.

But in the Namfrel Surigao del Norte quick count final unofficial tally, Romarate’s margin of votes against Barbers had widened by 7,128 votes. - GMANews.TV

9 days after E-Day: End is near, but noise just beginning

The Commission on Elections said Wednesday it might proclaim on Friday the top nine senatorial candidates and the National Movement for Free Elections announced would wrap up its quick count on Sunday.

Comelec and Namfrel’s improvement in the tallying of the votes was a welcome relief for most Filipinos who want would to see an end to the election frenzy.

The counting may be nearing its end, but the noise whipped up by charges of poll fraud is just beginning.

Zeroing in on zero vote

The National Board of Canvassers on Wednesday deferred the canvassing of votes from Sulu due to erasures in the certificate of canvass, the same COC which showed that two Genuine Opposition senatorial candidates got zero when the votes from the town of Luuk were counted.

The questioned COC had revealed opposition candidates Benigno Simeon Aquino III and Alan Peter Cayetano getting zero.

At the same time, Commission on Elections chairman Benjamin Abalos summoned members of the Provincial Board of Canvassers in Sulu to appear before the board to authenticate the corrections they made on the COC.

The decision came after lawyer Leila de Lima questioned Vidzfar Amil Julie, provincial election supervisor of Sulu, on the “noted unauthenticated superimpositions on figures” in the COC.

She was referring to erasures made on the COC which did not bear any initials from the officials who made the erasures.

The lawyer also said that it was highly improbable for Aquino and Alan Peter Cayetano to get zero while Joselito Pepito Cayetano, who was earlier disqualified by the Comelec, got 187 votes in the municipality.

She also asked the board to allow them access to the statement of votes by precinct to check the votes for the two candidates.

Abalos granted her request provided that she will file a formal petition for it within 24 hours.

The COC from Sulu also has incomplete data on the number of registered voters who actually voted.

Comelec data shows that Luuk has 23,357 voters.

The number of voters in the municipality had increased by 35.95 percent for the 2007 elections.

This meant an increase of 6,178 voters over the 2004 figures of 17,179.

Int’l watchdogs had taste of 2Gs

Foreigner observers can’t be faulted if they are spreading around that May 14 elections had been marred by massive vote buying and intimidation because some of them have even experienced such irregularities personally in Mindanao, particularly in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

Lawyer Nasser Marohomsalic, executive committee member of the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting- Legal Network for Truthful Elections, made the claim Wednesday.

He told reporters covering the quick count of the National Movement for Free Election (Namfrel) at La Salle Greenhills, San Juan, that one of the foreign observers from Indonesia, named Marini, was offered P300 to vote in Ditsaan-Ramain, Lanao del Sur.

“Siguro akala Pinoy dahil kamukha natin Malay race yan, nilapitan siya tapos inalok ng P300 para bumoto (He was mistaken for a Filipino. He was offered P300 to vote for a certain candidate),” he said.

Another observer, Musaraf, a Pakistani national, was allegedly threatened with harm when he took a video footage of a political watcher accompanying voters inside the polling precincts in Tamparan also in Lanao Sur.

“Nagtanong siya kung allowed ba yun, ang sagot ng pinagtanungan niya, ‘gusto mo patayin kita’ (He asked if that was allowed and the man answered-‘you want me to kill you?’),” Marohomsalic added.

He said the administration candidates in Lanao del Sur outnumbered the opposition’s. - GMANews.TV

Zero vote for Aquino, Cayetano in Luuk, Sulu; canvass reset

By AMITA LEGASPI, GMANews.TV

05/23/2007 | 12:41 PM

The National Board of Canvassers on Wednesday deferred the canvassing of votes from Sulu due to erasures in the certificate of canvass, the same COC which showed that two Genuine Opposition senatorial candidates got zero when the votes from the town of Luuk were counted.

The questioned COC had revealed opposition candidates Benigno Simeon Aquino III and Alan Peter Cayetano getting zero.

At the same time, Commission on Elections chairman Benjamin Abalos summoned members of the Provincial Board of Canvassers in Sulu to appear before the board to authenticate the corrections they made on the COC.

The decision came after lawyer Leila de Lima questioned Vidzfar Amil Julie, provincial election supervisor of Sulu, on the “noted unauthenticated superimpositions on figures” in the COC.

She was referring to erasures made on the COC which did not bear any initials from the officials who made the erasures.

The lawyer also said that it was highly improbable for Aquino and Alan Peter Cayetano to get zero while Joselito Pepito Cayetano, who was earlier disqualified by the Comelec, got 187 votes in the municipality.

She also asked the board to allow them access to the statement of votes by precinct to check the votes for the two candidates.

Abalos granted her request provided that she will file a formal petition for it within 24 hours.

The COC from Sulu also has incomplete data on the number of registered voters who actually voted.

Comelec data shows that Luuk has 23,357 voters.

The number of voters in the municipality had increased by 35.95 percent for the 2007 elections.

This meant an increase of 6,178 voters over the 2004 figures of 17,179. – GMANews.TV