Pssssssst, Smartmatic, glad you wrote to “Dear Mrs. Ellen” asking to buy her services to push your brand of poll automation

Veteran journalist Ellen Tordesillas found your letter (see below) , hiring her services, “strange” and insulting.

From the tenor of your letter, I’m sure Ellen was NOT the only journalist you wrote to. Which brings me to my point – that the Commission on Elections (Comelec) should deeply delve into your proposal.

Ellen, the woman named Samira Saba is real and she is Smartmatic’s Communications Manager based in Caracas, Venezuela. The press release below from Smartmatic Venezuela quotes Senora Saba:

In your Malaya column, Ellen, you called Smartmatic a “Dutch firm”. This is what Smartmatic has always wanted the Filipino public to believe. But in reality, it remains very much a Venezuelan firm, and merely uses the Netherlands as a convenient address. Here is the link to their board of directors – http://www.smartmatic.com/company/board-of-directors/

Also, if you recall, Smartmatic sent to the Senate inquiry their very handsome, gorgeous-looking telenovela-type company officers and not one of them was Dutch. All spoke with a heavy Latin American accent that makes listeners think they’re romancing the English language.On the face of it, Smartmatic’s proposal to Ellen (and most probably to other Filipino journalists) appears aboveboard. The company needs writers, and therefore they want to hire someone very credible like Ellen.

But there are some insinuations Senora Saba make about you, Ellen. For instance, Senora Saba states: “If you are interested in adding our organization as a regular client for your freelance writer services, we can define the extent and number of articles you could write monthly.”

Senora Saba presumes Ellen’s body of writing is all paid for by regular clients of “your freelance writer services.” Tsk, tsk. She doesn’t seem to know you could make a hell of a lot of money writing the very opposite of what you are publishing right now.

Senora Saba is also very helpful. She wants to hire Ellen to write about “Smartmatic technology in particular” and then adds that if Ellen agrees, “in this case, we would of course furnish appropriate materials to the required depth.”

Smartmatic wants Ellen to do PR work for them. Nothing wrong with PR. Trouble is, Senora Saba should have hired a PR agency, and not gone to Ellen.

Which makes me wonder what Smartmatic KNOWS and DOESN’T KNOW about how an automated election is supposed to work in a democracy. The Philippines, for all its flaws, prides itself as being run NOT IN THE WAY Hugo Chavez runs Venezuela, where Smartmatic has played a significant role legitimizing Chavez’s authoritarian rule.

Over the past several days, I must confess, I have had arguments with certain people over how credible Smartmatic is in conducting a very crucial election for the Philippines next year.. It was impressed upon me very clearly by two people (whom I will not name except to say they are in the know) that Smartmatic would be crazy to smear its name and brand worldwide by conducting a fraudulent election here next year. The two added that if there is any cheating that would be done, it would not come from Smartmatic.

Another person, whom I talked to, said Smartmatic was not doing what it had originally agreed to do – that is, educate the stakeholders about its product. Stakeholders mean – the voters and those who will directly be in charge of the voting machines. The source did not mean PR either. But actual training for these various stakeholders on the ground down to the grassroots level. The source described the Smartmatic machines as “just like a fax machine” that transmits data electronically.

Now, Smartmatic’s letter makes me wonder if the company knows how a democratic election is supposed to work. I mean, it’s very basic. You don’t hire journalists to do PR for you.

I know Filipino politicians do it all the time – hire working journalists to write PR pieces for them disguised as news. That’s what Smartmatic wants Ellen to do.

That’s not how the fourth estate – journalism – is supposed to work if it is to serve the public. Filipino readers have the right to know whether what they are reading as news was really gathered by the writer to the best of his or her ability and fairness of judgement and not because she was secretly hired by a third party.

Tell you what, Smartmatic, hire all the journalists in Manila and the provinces that you want. But publicly release the roster of your hired help. Fair for you, fair for the journalists who want to earn more, and fair for the reading public who read their write-ups.

Hasta luego, Samira.

_______________________________

Ellen’s Malaya column – October 12, 2009

Smartmatic’s insulting proposal

LAST Friday, I got this strange letter from a certain Samira Saba of Smartmatic, the Dutch firm that partnered with the local Total Information Management and won the P7.2 billion contract for the nationwide automation of the 2010 elections.

Here’s the letter:

Dear Mrs. Ellen

“My name is Samira Saba and I work at Smartmatic as the Marketing and Communications Manager (www.smartmatic.com).

“I have checked your blog and I find it quite interesting. I can see the articles published are responsible, and show that you as a rule strive to inform and educate your readers. For instance, the article “Rock the vote!”

“I would like to know if you have the time and the interest of writing some articles regarding the following subjects:

1) Election automation worldwide, and positive experiences in various countries.

2) Election automation in the Philippines, past and present.

3) Different technologies to automate an election. Perspectives and comparisons: shortcomings, advantages, political implications.

4) Smartmatic technology in particular (in this case, we would of course furnish appropriate materials to the required depth).

“If you are interested in adding our organization as a regular client for your freelance writer services, we can define the extent and number of articles you could write monthly. I will be glad to give you more details and answer the questions you may have.

“If your answer to the above is positive, then I would appreciate a quotation for your services, with a target of two articles published per month to begin with.

“I look forward to hearing from you the soonest.”

It was signed by Ms. Saba.

I find the letter insulting. It smacks of bribery. I had to take several deep breaths and reminded myself that I should not write anything when I’m angry.

Saturday, I replied, asking her “What and where in my articles gave you the idea that my services are for sale?”

I’m still waiting for her reply.

Psssst, Mrs. President, where are the doppler radars you promised 5 years ago?

The newspaper I write for in Hong Kong gave me permission to share its editorial and my stories on Typhoon Ondoy International Code Name Ketsana). The pieces remain relevant since horrific typhoons continue to batter the Philippines and the unfulfilled promises recently contributed to needless deaths.

The editorial is entitled “Arroyo must make good on radar systems pledge.” It was written by Peter Kammerer, SCMP’s International Editor. Earlier I asked Ellen Tordesillas to post the editorial in her widely popular blog and she very kindly did it.

Below the editorial are my two stories on the storm -

1. The sidebar -No one warned us,’ says villager searching for her lost children

2. The main piece – Understanding why Manila drowned

My newspaper agreed to have these disseminated on my blog and Facebook, in the hope they will help do some good. Thank you for finding the time to read them – Raissa Robles, SCMP senior Manila correspondent

Arroyo must make good on radar systems pledge

Editorial of South China Morning Post
Oct. 5, 2009

A government’s priority is to protect the well-being of its people.

There is no better test of its commitment than when disaster strikes.
Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s administration has, in
this regard, failed time and again. It did so spectacularly with
Tropical Storm Ketsana, again revealing how little it cares for its
constituents.

The Philippines is pounded by as many as 20 typhoons a year. Dozens,
sometimes hundreds, of people are killed and many millions of dollars
of damage is caused. Nature cannot be tamed, but in the case of severe weather events, technology means its wrath can be anticipated. Arroyo for the past five years has repeatedly promised to have advanced forecasting radar systems installed; politicking, corruption and government waste means they remain a pledge.

What happens when such systems are absent was demonstrated by Ketsana. (Ondoy)

Manila has not experienced as violent a downpour in 40 years. But in
the hours before the storm struck on the morning of September 26,
state weather forecasters were predicting only moderate to heavy rain.
No alert was issued and the city of 10 million was caught off-guard;
about 300 people were drowned by floodwaters and 300,000 made
homeless. Some parts of the city are still flooded.

The government’s failure extends beyond forecasting. Disaster response
mechanisms broke down. Emergency phones went unanswered. Rescue teams
had insufficient equipment and numbers. Citizens were forced to fend
for themselves.

Arroyo has promised, as she did after devastating storm-caused
landslides in 2004 and 2006, that there will not be a repeat. The
first two of up to 10 new weather radar systems could be in place by
the end of the year. Filipinos have learned not to hold their breath:
they have watched millions of dollars that could have bought such
systems several times over frittered away and Congressional debate
focused on seemingly more pressing matters like constitutional change.
But this time has to be different. Too many lives and livelihoods have
been needlessly lost and remain at risk.

No one warned us, says villager searching for her lost children

Raissa Robles
Updated on Oct 05, 2009

Victoria Tutor was beyond tears. She had just seen the body of her 16-year-old daughter, Vinaflor, and signed for the release of her remains.

That was Wednesday. Yesterday, there was still no sign of three of her other children who, like she and Vinaflor, had been swept away by rampaging waters caused by Tropical Storm Ketsana a week ago.
Her village, Bagong Silangan in Quezon City, was one of the hardest hit by the storm. Thirty-one bodies have been found, but a further 90, mostly children, are listed as missing.

Staff at Tajuna Funeral Home told Tutor they could only wrap Vinaflor’s body in cloth since they had run out of coffins. She said village officials, not just the incessant rain, were to blame for the tragedy. They had received no warning.

“There was none,” she said. “I only knew there was rain but had not heard news about a coming storm.”

Villagers were used to annual flooding brought by the rainy season, and normally just moved to higher ground when the water started flowing through, she said.

But on September 26, the floods came without warning. “We were inside the house and suddenly there was water. We went to the highest point in the village, and then the rushing waters met and we were forced to clamber onto rooftops.”

The water rose higher than the roofs and at 11am she and her six children were swept away. Two were saved. The others – Via, 11, Biancaflor, five, and Jonren, three – have yet to be found. Tutor managed to remain afloat by holding onto a piece of wood for three hours before being pulled to safety. “I bumped into a bridge and people on the bridge threw me a rope,” she said.

Her rescuers said Tutor was in Marikina City. Dazed and without money, she rested then started the long walk back to Bagong Silangan. Abandoned cars, buses and jeepneys jammed the roads. She arrived after an eight-hour trek in the dark.

Tutor sadly described her missing children in the desperate hope that someone would remember seeing them among the countless hordes of Manila.

Via was wearing a blouse with spaghetti straps and white pyjamas. Biancaflor was wearing a big white T-shirt, while Jonren was wearing a blue shirt and  and has a scar above his right eyebrow. “Please help me find them,” she said.

Filipinos received little warning and almost no official help

Raissa Robles, Updated on Oct 05, 2009</span>

When the typhoons and catastrophic rain they carried hit the Philippines, many of the impoverished residents received little warning. Hundreds died, and in the grief-filled aftermath, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo pledged “never again”, ordering the deployment of advanced Doppler radars capable of detecting the scale of potential rainfall.

That was 2004.

About five years after the devastation in Quezon that claimed 1,800 lives, the Doppler radars have yet to be constructed. Their continued absence is just one link in a tragic chain of events that culminated in the deaths of about 300 people in the Philippines just over a week ago and paralysed Manila, as 80 per cent of the capital city went under water. Rescue services seemed at a loss, incapable of dealing with an emergency that, at its peak, left tens of thousands of people stranded, waiting in vain for rescuers who never came.

It is a sequence of events that began with the failure to detect the huge amount of rain being carried by then Tropical Storm Ketsana. But as the situation worsened, warnings failed to reach those most in need, who were then forced to fend for themselves as the muddy waters rose, and the chain of command began to break down.

Dr Prisco Nilo, the head of the Philippine weather bureau (known as Pagasa), acknowledges that Doppler radars would have given forecasters a much better idea of what to expect before Ketsana dumped about 40cm of rain on Manila in nine hours on September 26.

Doppler radars – which have been installed by Hong Kong, Thailand and Taiwan, among other places – give real-time data on rainfall intensity in highly specific areas, said Nilo’s deputy, Nathaniel Cruz. He said the Philippines’ first Doppler would go online by year’s end, in Zambales province, “to guard Metro Manila against future Ondoys”, the local name for Ketsana.

But Nilo conceded that the radar’s US-based manufacturer, Enterprise Electronics Corporation, “only said they’ll try”. In fact, he said, the 100 million peso (HK$16.5 million) contract states a delivery date in the middle of next year for two Dopplers – just before the typhoon season.

In all, eight Doppler radars are to be built, five of them taxpayer-funded and three paid for by the Japan International Co-operation Agency (Jica). In addition, two existing radars will be upgraded, which it is hoped will give the country 10 Dopplers by 2013.

Nilo said the failure to have Dopplers in place so long after the Quezon disaster was because “the budget process in the Philippines takes long and we also have to go through a bidding process”. Critics of Arroyo have blamed the slow process on the government’s skewed sense of priorities.

The weather bureau chief doesn’t share such sentiments. Nilo said bureau staff referred to the new equipment as the “PGMA Dopplers” – after President Arroyo’s initials – to give her credit for the initiative of purchasing the gear.

Yet even with sophisticated new radar in place, Cruz was reluctant to predict that a repeat of last week’s disaster couldn’t occur in the country. “Even if we say, `Manila should get ready’, if `Pedro’ does not listen to the news or the village leaders don’t tell residents or residents refuse to leave, deaths will still happen,” he said.

The suggestion that Manila residents themselves bore part of the blame for the extent of Ketsana’s impact was first raised by Cruz’sboss. “Instead of just watching soap operas on TV, they should also watch the news,” Nilo said on September 27, a day after the deluge.

Yet judging by Pagasa’s weather bulletin issued on the eve of the storm, Ketsana would be a typical tropical storm, of which about 20 visit the Philippines each year.

Nilo was quoted by the Philippine Star newspaper on the day Ketsana struck saying “the storm will not cross Metro Manila … [but the metropolis would experience] moderate to heavy rains”. He said later that the forecast changed overnight – too late for the Star to change.

By September 26, Ketsana was drawing huge amounts of moisture from the southwest monsoon, causing the deluge over Metro Manila, he said. Pagasa would try to devise flood intensity warnings, he said, but added that this might not work all the time because “sometimes people respond only when they see the actual floodwaters, but then it might be too late”.

In any event, none of the warnings reached Bagong Silangan village. Residents could not tune in to the news on the night of September 25 because of a power blackout, not uncommon in the Quezon City squatter village. Nor was there any newscast the next morning, even as the rain fell. And so Metro Manila – a city of 10 million residents crammed into 636 sq km – went about its usual business. Office and factory workers began their half-day at work, while families stayed home, or went shopping

In impoverished Bagong Silangan – the name of the official settlement camp for slum dwellers means “new birth” – residents were well aware of the dangers of flash flooding. Nine years ago, 300 residents were buried alive when an enormous mound of rubbish next to the settlement collapsed in heavy rain.

But with no warning of what was on the way, residents like Victoria Tutor and her six children simply decided to sit out the rain at home. They were all swept away in the torrent that surged through Bagong Silangan. Tutor and two of the children were rescued; of the other four, only the body of 16-year-old Vinaflor has been recovered.

As it became increasingly clear on September 26 that a major disaster was unfolding, the seeming lack of official action infuriated many locals.

Trapped residents cowering in the upper floors of their homes tried phoning the lead disaster agency, the National Disaster Co-ordinating Council, at the height of the storm. Most (including this reporter) were met with engaged signals or phones that rang unanswered.

By late on September 26, tens of thousands cowered on high points and awaited rescuers. Rescue boats were notable by their absence. Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro admitted that only one inflatable dinghy out of 13 he ordered made it to Marikina City – one of the worst-hit districts, where thousands awaited rescue.

There is some confusion about how many boats were pressed into action. Military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Romeo Brawner said that contrary to Teodoro’s comments, 17 inflatable boats had been sent into action. But he conceded that not  all were immediately put to their  best use.

“These boats could not penetrate right away due to the strong currents,” Brawner said. Ironically, traffic gridlock caused by flooded streets prevented the navy from sending more inflatable boats.

Brawner said that as a result of the experience, Teodoro had ordered the purchase of 50 more rubber boats.

Regardless of exactly how many boats were used, Marikina’s mayor, Marides Fernando, maintains that by that Sunday morning, not a single boat had reached her inundated city.

While state agencies were paralysed, it fell on Manila’s residents to take action themselves. Thousands simply waded, swam or paddled to higher ground.

The Manila Dragons dragon boat team used their traditional vessels and inflatable boats to pluck many people to safety. Team manager Romulo Valientes said the team, which has competed in Hong Kong and mainland China, had great difficulty paddling in waters filled with trash, dead rats, snakes, grease and diesel fuel.

Quezon City Judge Ralph Lee mounted his jet ski and rescued no fewer than 100 citizens. “I was so carried away by the very sad situation,” he said.

On Tuesday, Arroyo met her cabinet for the first time since the rain began. Many people were still stranded. Two senior ministers complained that local and village executives simply disappeared during the disaster. “The city and municipal disaster centres are not functioning now,” Public Works Secretary Hermogenes Ebdane told her.

Arroyo herself noted that the mayors of Cainta and Pasig cities were not answering her calls. And a senior executive from a private firm helping out in rescue efforts told the South China Morning Post that one colonel “nearly wept” at the height of the disaster because he had no one to co-ordinate with.

Armed Forces deputy chief of staff Lieutenant General Rodrigo Maclang reported to Arroyo that nearly 20,000 residents had been rescued by 2,000 soldiers and a thousand police officers. But in reality, many swam or walked out themselves, albeit guided by the rescuers. And the numbers represent a drop in a very muddy ocean – by mid-week, there were more than 300,000 people taking refuge in shelters across Manila.

Few doubt that another major storm will one day hit Manila and trigger flooding again, although perhaps not on such a grand scale as in Ketsana’s case.

To avert a similar outcome, Teodoro has said he will position rescue equipment in advance and enforce the mandatory evacuations for children next time.

Lawmakers also promised to enact a long-pending comprehensive law on reducing disaster risk that includes a controversial proposal to regulate land use. Metro Manila Development Authority chairman Bayani Fernando has blamed the flooding on unregulated growth of gated communities that filled in natural waterways so that floodwaters had nowhere to drain.

But such pledges come too late for people such as Muelmar Magallanes, a heroic 18-year-old who saved 30 people in Bagong Silangan before he himself was engulfed and drowned. The greatest tragedy is that the efforts of people like Magallanes were required at all.

Psssssssst again Mikey, do share how your assets grew from P50,000 to P156 million in just 16 years -

Do tell, so fellow Filipinos can copy your technique. After all, you started with a modest investment base of only P50,000 which you declared as the total sum of your worldly goods back in 1993.

And also because I do so love your home in sunny California. As Ellen Tordesillas, Avigail Olarte , Yvonne Chua and Luz Rimban wrote in Vera Files, I could take a virtual tour of your home at 1655 Beach Park Boulevard, Foster City, California, which you listed in your 2008 Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth (SALN) under “Business Interest and Other Financial Connections.” You did not declare it as part of your “Personal and Other Properties”.

Hmmmm, what’s the diff?

Take the virtual tour of Mikey’s lovely Beach Park home
I’m sad it’s now on sale once more.

I took the virtual tour and the accompanying music almost lulled me to gentle sleep. You, too, can take the tour by going to: http://www.ewalk.com/tour.cgi?id=1655

Take a peek at Mikey’s lovely bathroom, master bedroom, kitchen, living room. Take the virtual tour by clicking on the words “360 Scenes”, and then the words “Front View”, “Backyard”, “Living Room”, “Family Room and Kitchen” and “Master Bedroom” – and be transported to his world.


View at EasyCaptures.com

What a peaceful, restful home. So far from Manila’s maddening media demanding to know how you could afford a million dollar home on a half a million peso yearly income as congressman.

And mainly because back in 1993, your declared assets were only worth P50,000 or the equivalent of US$1,024.59 (at current forex rate of P48.80 per US$1). Even that was a handsome sum for a young buck of 24 just out of college.

But hey, your mom had just won her first ever elective post as senator of the Philippine Republic in 1992. Rather than earn oodles of money growing your own company, you opted to serve the people by joining your mom’s Senate staff.

You were therefore required by law to submit your first ever SALN. I’m sure you took the filing seriously. Hence in 1993 you declared you had P50,000 pesos which you listed under the item – “cash on hand/cash in bank”.

Life was beautiful. You had no liabilities (utang).

Now let’s jump to last year when your total assets (based on your December 2008 SALN) was listed at a whopping P150,253,644.95 (or US$3,078,968.13).

You’re a dollar millionaire now. Wow. Gosh. How’d you do that?

Let’s see now -
1993 – you worked with mom – P50,000 assets. Net worth same due to zero liabilities.

1994 – still worked with mom – P320,000 assets (of which P120,000 was cash and P200,000 personal effects,). Net worth also P320,000 because of zero liabilities.

Then your assets paper trail disappeared. You must have taken some time off. From 1996 to 1997, you studied Business Administration at the University of California in Berkeley, you once told me in a 2005 one-on-one interview.

The next time your SALN surfaced was in 2001 when you got elected provincial vice-governor of Pampanga.

You also tried breaking into the movie business, appearing in mostly bit or supporting roles and a few leading roles. By 2001, your P320,000 assets had grown to P5,721,787.29, broken down as follows:

P3,327,686.12 in cash
P2,144,101.17 in shares of stock
P250,000 worth of personal effects
With zero liabilities, your net worth was the same as your assets.

It took you only four years (excluding time off for Berkeley) for you to earn P5 million. Cool.

Now let’s do a quick rundown of your total assets’ amazing growth, all based on your available SALN:

1993 – P50,000 – zero liabilities
1994 – P320,000 – zero liabilities
2001 – P5,721,787.29 – zero liabilities
2002 – P5.003 million – zero liabilities
2004 – P76,531,403.96 – zero liabilities
2005 – P138,751,403.96 – P61.8 million liabilities
2006 – P167,971,403.96 – P78.4 million liabilities
2007 – P154,972,409.95 – P58,224,476.29 liabilities
2008 – P156,122,409.90 – P56,874,476.20 liabilities

The biggest jump in your assets (by roughly P71 million) was between 2002 and 2004 when you were Pampanga vice-governor.

Could it have been due to your budding movie career? But it wasn’t that great, according to well-known entertainment columnist Ricky Lo who interviewed you in July 2003. He wrote afterwards: “As an actor, he’s tagged as a “TH” (as in Trying Hard) and critics of GMA (your mom) and her administration had a field day poking fun at Mikey and his mom (poor GMA!) when his starrer called Di Kita Ma-Reach finished at the tail end of the Metro Manila Film Festival three years ago.”

In 2002, you married your second cousin, Maria Angela. Perhaps she brought in the fortune?

Last year you listed her as board director in five companies owned and run by her family years before you two got married. These are:

H.M. Montenegro Co. Inc
Pacific Activated Carbon Co. Inc
Pacific Activated Carbon Co. Intl.
Titan Megatiles Industrial Corp
Titan Mega Bags Industrial Corp. .

A quick check with the Securities and Exchange Commission shows most of these companies are in bad shape.

H.M. Montenegro Co. Inc, also listed as H.M. Montenegro and Asso. Inc., is the holding company for eight family-owned firms.

Two of the companies earned modest amounts:
Titan Mega Bags Industrial Corporation’s last financial statement was for the year 2000: listing P576 million in assets. But its net operating income before tax that year was a negative P5.55 million. “Other income” raised this to P24.3 million.

The last financial statement filed by Titan Megatiles Industrial Corp was for 2002 when it declared operational losses of P7.988 million. But earnings outside operations gave it a P6.48 million net income.

Pacific Activated Carbon Co., Inc earned a net income of P30.6 million in 2002.
Again between 2004 and 2005, your assets grew by some P62 million or from P76.5 million to P138.75 million.

In 2004 you got elected Pampanga congressman for the first time.

In 2005, according to Vera Files, you sold a condominium in California for US$900,000 – something that wasn’t disclosed in your 2004 SALN.

The following year, California land records showed you transferring THE lovely Beach Park property in your wife’s name. Lucky wife.

Below is a copy of the real estate details of Beach Front, courtesy of Manolo Quezon:


View at EasyCaptures.com


View at EasyCaptures.com
And so your conjugal assets kept growing
Let’s assume this jump in assets was due to borrowings and not to kickbacks from the illegal gambling game jueteng – which you were accused of in 2005. Which you told me was a lie.

You said then: “When you are the incumbent president’s son, many sectors want to see you fail rather than succeed. Oppositors to my mom, if they can’t hit her they hit me.”

This week you attributed malice, ignorance and recklessness to Ellen, Yvonne,Avigail and Luz of Vera Files. You said they never called you but they said you refused to answer their mobile text messages and calls.

I’ve covered beats with Ellen and Yvonne and I know how they can be very persistent in nailing stories. In fact your mom, President Arroyo, held the same opinion back in October 2000 when she was being asked if she would pursue criminal charges against then President Joseph Estrada if he resigned.

She replied: “Right now I’m already hearing many suggestions about that. Neal Cruz has his suggestions. Ellen Tordesillas keeps asking me about that with very suggestive questions….So I’m listening to the consensus that’s being formulated.”

Last year you declared debts worth P56,874,476.20
Let’s just do some mental exercise. If we assume you had to pay 8% yearly interest on that, you would have to shell out P4.55 million in interest payments alone for that year. No problem. You had P51.6 million in cash.

Never mind if as a legislator you only earn P420,000 a year. Do tell how you managed to generate all that cash that has enabled you to afford your debt, build a mansion in La Vista, Quezon City, buy a million dollar property in California and still maintain a wealthy lifestyle.

I even heard one of your government-paid bodyguards has the job of making sure your Phillipe Patek watch isn’t snatched from your wrist. I haven’t verified that. Perhaps you could.

Is it like this one below?
But here’s the thing, your parents declared in 2008 assets worth P171.843 million pesos after nearly a lifetime of working.

How did you manage to nearly equal their worth in just 15 years without ever being a corporate CEO? Yeah, you are the president of Mikey’s Horseman Bar and Grill Inc starting 2006. That must be a lot of barbecue you grilled.

You’ve beaten all the odds. And so I wanna know. Please, please, I wanna know.

____________________

Brief bio of Congressman Juan Miguel Arroyo
Born: April 26, 1969
Education – Ateneo de Manila University all the way
1993-1995 mom’s aide at her Senate office
1995 – starts showbiz career doing bit parts. By 1998, racked up 5 movies as second lead and one starring role
1996-1997 - studied Business Administration at University of California in Berkeley
2001-2004 – elected Vice Governor, Pampanga; sudden asset jump by P71 million
2002 – married Maria Angela Montenegro
2003 – Philippine Star entertainment columnist Ricky Lo said Mikey was “trying hard” as an actor
2004- to present – elected Congressman
2005 - accused of receiving jueteng payoffs but denies it; another asset jump
2006 – registered California Beach Boulevard property under wife’s name
2008 – declared beach property as holdings of a California company where he claimed to own shares but didn’t say how much