When no one blushes
What sets people apart from swine is the capacity to blush. “I will go wash,” writes Shakespeare in Coriolanus. “And when my face is fair, you shall perceive / Whether I blush or no.”
Did Imelda Marcos blush when she insisted: Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr. is ideal for president, come 2016. He’d “continue the legacy of the former president. The “New Society,” she insists, was the brightest period in Philippine history.” That ignores 3,257 persons “salvaged,” 737 desaparecidos, plus thousands detained without trial, under the “New Society.”
Bongbong played coy: “When I was young, I really didn’t want to be involved in politics.” And now that’s he’s older? “We shall see,” Junior said, despite festering accusations of family sleaze the US Court of Appeals (9th circuit) slammed Ferdinand Jr. and mother with a $353.6 million contempt judgment a year ago. Why? They tried to smuggle paintings and other artworks subject to court decision. “Contumacious conduct,” the judge said in imposing a daily fine of $100,000. Did Marcos Jr blush? “Innocence is not accustomed to blush,” writer Jean Molière points out.
That’s peanuts in a 14-year kleptocracy. Ferdinand Sr. and Imelda Marcos used aliases “William Saunders” and “Jane Ryan” to open their first Swiss bank account. They plunked $950,000 in March 1968, reported Mark Fineman in Los Angeles Times (Oct 2) Marcos’ salary then, as president, was $5,600… The former first lady also used the alias of John Lewis,the Honolulu hearing heard.
“Crying and clutching a rosary, Imelda took the Fifth Amendment more than 200 times.” Lawyers questioned her on allegations she and her husband stole billions. “The hearing came just 24 hours after her husband, deposed President Ferdinand E. Marcos, invoked his Fifth Amendment right 197 times during a similar deposition.”
The Presidential Commission on Good Government stole her jewels, Imelda complained in 2012. These are three batches of confiscated gems. One is the Malacañang Collection found by People Power demonstrators; the “Honolulu Batch” was surrendered to the US government after racketeering charges were dropped.
Article continues after this advertisementThe third, now in Central Bank vaults, is the “Roumeliotes Set”– 60 gems confiscated from Greek national Demetriou Roumeliotes. A 37 carat diamond crafted by Bulgari is the centerpiece. “They were inside a package addressed to Imelda when seized,” Arab News reported. Roumeliotes denied ownership and later said they were fakes.
Article continues after this advertisementNo, reputable auction houses Sotheby’s and Christie’s snapped. Imelda agreed. “The jewelry was taken out of Malacañang without knowledge, much less ( with my ) consent, between Feb. 26 and Feb. 27, 1986,” she said in a court petition.
“They are my jewels. The Aquino government should return them instead of auctioning them off.” Did Imelda blush? “Girls blush, sometimes, because they are alive,/ Half wishing they were dead to save the shame,” Elizabeth Barrett Browning once wrote.
In between, there has been theft on a grand scale. Take the unanimous Supreme Court decision of July 2003. G.R. No. 152154 directed that Marcos secret Swiss deposits of US$658,175,373 be “forfeited” to government.
The Swiss government earlier returned the loot, mainly through efforts of the late Haydee Yorac of PCGG. Until that decision, Philippine National Bank, held the boodle in escrow. Imelda, Imee Marcos-Manotoc, Irene Marcos-Araneta and Bongbong tried – but failed – to add that to their fortunes.
The International Consortium of Investigative Journalism pinpointed three Filipinos who hold secret offshore trusts in the Virgin Islands: Ilocos Norte governor “Imee” Marcos- Manotoc, Rep. Joseph Victor ‘JV’ Ejercito and Sen. Manuel Villar Jr. In the People Power uproar, Imee left behind a notebook that contained her father’s dummies. Does she blush over the Marcos record? ‘Tis not on youth’s smooth cheek the blush alone, which fades so fast,” Lord Byron wrote, “But the tender bloom of heart is gone, ere youth itself be past.”
Ferdinand Sr. as president and Imelda as Minister of Human Settlements – were of modest means. At least, that was what their income tax reports claimed, the Supreme Court noted. In Dec. 1965, Marcos Sr.’s net worth was P120,000.00. Between 1965 to 1984, the Marcoses reported a joint income of P16,408,442. Official salaries accounted for 16 percent, farm income 9 percent, others 15 percent. Legal practice crested at a whooping 68 percent.
“There is nothing on record (of) any known Marcos client as he had no known law office. He was barred by law from practicing his law profession during his entire presidency. Incredibly, he was still receiving payments almost 20 years after. There are no withholding tax certificates. The joint income tax returns of FM and Imelda cannot, therefore, conceal the skeletons of their kleptocracy.”
Then, came Xandy-Wintrop, followed by Charis-Scolari, Valamo, Spinus Avertina, etc, etc. They hid wealth “under layers of foundations.” The Marcos spouses were the main beneficiaries. Imee, Ferdinand, Jr. and Irene are equal third beneficiaries.
A day before Ferdinand Jr.’s name emerged in the pork barrel scam, Imelda unveiled presidential hopes for 2016. At the Senate Blue Ribbon committee hearing, whistle-blower Benhur Luy said lawmakers would receive 50 percent kickback from pork barrel funds.
So, was a this a preemptive strike? If so, Oliver Cromwell’s 1653 stinging rebuke to England’s “Rump Parliament” is apt. “We griev’d, we sigh’d, We wept, We never blushed before.”