Part 1 – Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III is “autistic”? Here’s the proof

The evidence that Sen. Noynoy is abnormal – and therefore should not be voted president – seemed all there.

And Business Mirror columnist Butch del Castillo recounted it in excruciating detail using unnamed sources who had seen Noynoy acting “autistic.”

Butch wrote:

As a 3-year-old, Noynoy was a hyperactive tot. His boundless energy made him run around here, there and everywhere in their residential compound. For his own safety, he had to be put on a makeshift leash controlled by his yaya or nanny. “Before he was put on a leash, he was running around the yard as usual when the family’s guard dog, a Doberman, somehow escaped from its kennel. It took a courageous Kris Aquino to save her helpless brother from being mangled, but she herself got bitten in the lower leg.

This must be true, I thought in horror. Except for one tiny detail . Let’s see, Noynoy was 3 when this incident happened. And how old was Kris?


Noynoy was born February 8, 1960 and Kris was born February 14, 1971. So when Kris saved Noynoy from the Doberman she was what —- a mote in God’s eye?

eye nebula

You get the picture. But that Doberman scene that Butch retold sure was realistic.


He also wrote:


Another old acquaintance of the family confirms that, notwithstanding former senator Butz Aquino’s vehement protestations about his nephew’s condition, “it’s a fact that Noynoy had to be sent to a special school.” That was when Noynoy was 5 or 6 years old, the family acquaintance says. Trouble is he can’t recall the name of the particular school where Noynoy was supposed to have received specialized guidance.

Hmm. Special school, eh. Let’s look at Noynoy’s school record. Got it. In 1965 or at the age of 5 he did enter a special school. It’s still standing and because it has a strange name let me spell it out for you , Butch.

It’s called    A-T-E-N-E-O   D-E   M-A-N-I-L-A     U-N-I-V-E-R-S-I-T-Y.

I understand First Gentleman Jose Miguel Arroyo and his son, Congressman Juan Miguel Arroyo, as well as the former President Joseph Estrada all had to be sent to the same special school you alluded to.

And President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo once taught there.

It must really be very special.

One other thing, Butch. You wrote:


In the circles that I circulate in, I was taken aback by the little anecdotes about Noynoy, all of which only seem to add credence and depth to suspicions of his actual condition. For example, there is this councilor from Makati who claims to have known Noynoy since he was a boy. This councilor swears he used to see this “quiet” boy whenever politicians and supporters of the late Cory would pay her a call at her residence on Times Street, Philam Village, Quezon City.

“He would just sit in a corner, mouth open but never saying a thing, and drooling, the Makati councilor loudly tells everyone he meets. For all we know he is just making this up, considering that he belongs to a rival political party. But still, it would be very hard to cook up such things.


Wow, Noynoy was just scrunched up in a corner, stupidly quiet, and drooling.


But two paragraphs later, you described a very different kid:


As a 3-year-old, Noynoy was a hyperactive tot. His boundless energy made him run around here, there and everywhere in their residential compound. For his own safety, he had to be put on a makeshift leash controlled by his yaya or nanny.


You sure you’re talking about the same kid? Not yourself maybe or your own kid? [Full disclosure: I knew your wife Julie when she and I were working in Business Day newspaper. I don't know if I ever meet you. I heard then you were spinning in behalf of then dictator Ferdinand Marcos' very best spinmeister – Gregorio Cendana.]

P.S. I’d love to read your next spin on Noynoy. It’s highly entertaining.

(Coming soon - Part 2: Did Sen. Noynoy strike me as autistic when I interviewed him?)

Senator Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III tells why he’s not yet married at the age of 49

It was an ambush interview and therefore the question – “Why are you still a bachelor?” – understandably caught him by surprise.

Noynoy Oct 2009 787

The Philippines has had only one wifeless president – Elpidio Quirino – but he was a widower grieving over his wife Alicia and three of his five children who were murdered by Japanese soldiers during the Battle of Manila in the Second World War.

(more…)

Why Noynoy for President makes better political sense for the Liberal Party

Now that our politics have gone retro – with the son of Joaquin “Chino” Roces vowing to gather more than a million signatures to persuade the son of global democracy icon President Corazon Aquino to run for  president – you might want to read exactly how Cory was drafted.

I am therefore reposting two articles written by veteran journalist-turned-peace advocate Paulynn  “Meiling” Sicam during that amazing period  when ordinary  Filipinos stunned the dictator Ferdinand Marcos and themselves, and planted the seeds of people power. She gave her permission.

Of course circumstances are changed now. But the same dreams remain – a country NOT going to the dogs, a people NOT fleeing in droves to foreign lands.

I am not campaigning for Senator Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III. But it makes better political sense for the Liberal Party to put him up as standard bearer for the following reasons:

1. With Senator Mar Roxas running, it is unlikely any of the non-administration-backed candidates  would give way to him. And so they would split the votes the way Fernando Poe Junior and Sen. Panfilo Lacson split the votes in 2004.

2. Sen. Roxas has not been able to excite voters enough to propel him to the top of the heap. His coming marriage with ABS-CBN broadcaster Korina Sanchez could give him some points. But what makes Ms. Sanchez a good, feisty news commentator may not be necessarily what people are looking for in a First Lady.

3. With Sen. Aquino running for president, ex-Pres.Joseph Estrada may give way to him and back him. That’s a lot of votes from the masses.

Don’t you find it weird that it is Sen. Roxas wearing the yellow shirt while Senator Aquino, who is the most logical person to wear this color is not? Instead he is wearing black, the color of mourning.

Having said all these, Sen. Aquino knows people’s expectations are sky high when it comes to him. It also comes at a great price. He would have to ask his clan to place the family-owned  Hacienda Luisita under land reform.

He might also compromise his health, what with a bullet still lodged in his neck as a result of a coup attempt against his mother.

Unlike his mother, though, he will find it easier dealing with the military since he is likely to have the backing and loyalty of the supporters of detained officers Lt. Col. Ariel Querubin and Brig. Gen. Danilo Lim, thanks to his mother’s support for them.

Below are Meiling’s articles that appeared in 1985.

Drafting a reluctant candidate

Cory, Don Chino and “our last chance to save democracy”

National Midweek November 6, 1985
By Paulynn P. Sicam

The lady has said she isn’t for drafting but Don Chino Roces and company have gone ahead anyway and formed the Draft Cory Aquino for President Movement. Word has it that Cory actually received the old man icily the day before the launching of the movement and asked him not to go through with it. But Don Chino and company, the likes of self-proclaimed Unido and Liberal Party political mechanic Tony Gatmaitan, businessman Victor Sison, recording industry executive Danny Olivares, former Bureau of Fisheries executive Benny Bengzon, angry Air Force wife Lorna Verano Yap, hard-working concerned citizen Imelda Nicolas, and several others, undauntedly proclaimed their intention to gather one million signatures in an attempt to persuade Ninoy Aquino’s widow to run or President.

“Our gathering here this afternoon could be a great moment in our history,” declared Don Chino at the National Press Club last October 15 [1985]. On the other hand, the press seemed to think it could be just another less than great beginning, one of those flights of fancy carried by balloons that burst before they can really take off.

The press sat there cynically questioning every idealistic argument put forth by Don Chino, who that afternoon, looked like Don Quixote de la Mancha fighting windmills. With no guarantee that his candidate for president would accept the draft, he spoke of her as the “healing, inspiring, unifying voice” that our country needs at this time, the sorrowing widow who he hopes “will shed her mother’s garments for the battle tunic of a political warrior.”

“Cory Aquino is our only hope,” said the revered old man of the Parliament of the Streets. Thus, the movement he was launching.

Cory, he elaborated, incarnates the Aquino legacy  “of blood, courage, integrity and martyrdom” bequeathed by Ninoy Aquino on that hot August afternoon in 1983.

Secondly, “only Cory can bind the factional wounds of the opposition, persuade them to close ranks, bestir them to march for the country, and rouse the Filipino people to feats of dignity, honor and courage.” Third, Cory’s “moral stature” which, his group thinks, would make even “men of valor in the armed forces…recoil from desecrating and brutalizing the elections if she were a candidate.” Finally, Cory Aquino can bring to government “the best minds that the nation can offer in terms of  dedication, sincerity and integrity, talent and patriotism.”

This, declared Roces gravely,  “could be our last chance to save democracy in the Philippines. The darkness thickens and we have to move.”

Providing the counterpoint to Don Chino’s emotional approach was Tony Gatmaitan who confessed that he sees in this Draft Cory Aquino for President Movement an “exciting opportunity” to measure the depth of the ordinary citizen’s desire to have her as president. He and his group feel that it is there, an emotional conviction in many people’s hearts that this quiet, unassuming widow is the only one among the oppositionists who has the moral leadership to unite the opposition and defeat Marcos in an election.

Should they succeed in generating one million signatures, and enough enthusiasm from the ordinary unorganized Filipinos to persuade Cory to run, Gatmaitan intends to represent the numbers to the political parties. This should be interesting, he said, his eyes twinkling at the idea: “people power” versus the machine. Indeed, for a political mechanic, it is an exciting proposition.

The idea of a Draft Cory Movement, observed a member of the foreign press, seems to stem from a feeling of frustration at the inability of the opposition to get its act together and present a unified stand versus the Marcos dictatorship.

True, in Don Chino’s opening remarks, he referred to the disarray among traditional political parties, the bickering among the oppositionists, and the cacophony of voices wasted on trivial issues.

The movement is not only for the purpose of drafting Cory Aquino as a candidate for president, explained Secretary General Victor Sison, a soft-spoken heretofore non-political former Atenean. It is also to achieve unity among the opposition groups. And, he maintained, Cory is the person who can do this.

But what if the National Unification Council, of which Cory is a major force, selects another candidate other than Cory? What will CAPM and its one million signatories do?

Why, support that one candidate, said Chino Roces. There is no one person or party we are trying to put down, assured Sison. We are trying to get them to get  their act together. And we believe only Cory can do this.

It was beginning to sound like  a mantra. Only Cory can do it. Cory is our only hope. If only Cory would run. If only she were willing.

Tony Gatmaitan, chairman of the movement’s finance committee said he thinks he can get P30 million in pledges before the end of the year for the idea of Cory as candidate. “If Cory is to be really the people’s candidate, then the people should put their money where their mouth is.,” he said.

So far, after one month of quiet work, the CAPM people have gathered 18,000 signatures. What started as a small force in Quezon City now has chapters in the whole of Metro Manila and Rizal, Cavite, Laguna, Sorsogon, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Iloilo, Capiz, Davao Oriental and Quezon Province.

More chapters are expected to be set up as the movement snowballs and the grandest hopes of the organizers about Cory’s acceptability to the Filipino people are confirmed.

Thus, concluded the CAPM, Cory will not possibly be able to turn down the draft. Meanwhile, expect to read and hear that urgent mantra for the next few months as Don Chino and company make good their promise to give all they’ve got to what they perceive is the last chance to save democracy in this land. (Paulynn P. Sicam has just come back from Stanford University where she was a journalism fellow.)

<span style=”font-weight:bold;”>Cory Joins the Race </span>
<span style=”font-weight:bold;”>December 18, 1985 </span>
<span style=”font-weight:bold;”>National Midweek</span>
<span style=”font-weight:bold;”>By Paulynn P. Sicam
</span>
When Cory Aquino announced her candidacy for the presidency last December 3, the audience inside the auditorium of the Mondragon Building in Makati broke into prolonged applause. Not a few wept tears of joy and relief. The waiting was finally over. Now her prodders could finally be called her followers. They could finally buckle down to work and get the show on the road.

The tension had been building up for more than a month. It began when Don Chino Roces, former publisher and everyone’s favorite street parliamentarian , decided to form a citizen’s movement that would urge Cory Aquino to run for president via one million signatures. Roces and his gang of idealists (who at the time seemed destined for failure) called Cory “our last hope for democracy.” investing her with a mantle of moral righteousness.

Cory reacted to the draft with something akin to hostility. She pleaded with the group to desist from what they were planning, and when her plea fell on Don Chino’s deaf ears, she declared that she was not interested in the presidency and would have nothing to do with the Cory Aquino for President Movement (CAPM).

Finally, after some lonely days in the doghouse, Don Chino’s persistence began to pay off. At a luncheon with the Sigma Delta Phi Sorority late in October, Cory gave two conditions that would make her decide to run if Don Chino and company could get one million signatures, and if the election was a snap election.

Meanwhile, she said, she would be praying and reflecting and seeking advice, both human and divine. She asked everyone to pray for her too and help her make the right decision. Every inquiry, every request for an interview was turned down as Cory went into partial seclusion searching her mind and her heart for answers.

The high premium she put on prayer and trust in God made Cory’s quest for an answer, in the minds of many, seem as noble and as difficult as the search for the Holy Grail. It also created the impression that every act of many that met her conditions was really an act of divine intervention, telling Cory what to do next.

First came Marcos’ announcement on American television last November 3  that he was calling a snap election. It did not matter that Marcos was succumbing to American pressure to hold early elections. It did not even matter that Marcos’ rules were dubious. The call for snap elections fulfilled Cory’s second condition. After that, the Cory Aquino for President Movement was unstoppable. Volunteers set up tables on street corners and in marketplaces, went into towns and barrios, seeking signatures who wanted Cory to run. From Aparri to Jolo, Chino Roces said, the signatures came in bunches – from three names to thousands sent via special air freight, or hand carried to the office by concerned citizens. By November 26, Chino Roces was borne on the shoulders of his fellow-volunteers as they counted the one millionth authentic signature of the nationwide campaign.

For people who have been used to the instant groundswells of support that the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan is so adept at producing when the need arises, 41 days seemed an awfully long time to gather one million signatures. So, six volunteers did nothing but go through sign-up sheets, eliminating questionable entries, (such as the names of Ferdinand Marcos, Imelda Marcos, Bongbong Marcos, Imee Marcos Manotoc, Tommy Manotoc and Irene Marcos Araneta), or a series of signatures seemingly done by one hand, and other such anomalies.

On November 27, Ninoy’s birthday, Cory attended a rally in Tarlac where politicians and friends took turns extolling her virtues, and giving every reason why she should be the next president of  the Philippines. Cory shook her head with every praise, every campaign pitch. But when her turn to speak came, she quoted Ninoy: “I will never be able to forgive myself if I have to live with the knowledge that I could have done something and I did not do anything.”

That was good enough for Cory-ites who clung to her every deliberate phrase. They knew her to be a careful speaker, not one to waste her words. She measured the weight and meaning of everything she said.

On December 1, one million two hundred thousand signatures were presented to Cory by a crowd of 15,000 at the Santo Domingo church after evening mass. Th sheets of paper, fastened in fat bulging folders tied with yellow ribbons, were blessed by a priest and received by Cory.

Cory was no longer cryptic at Santo Domingo Church. “I will announce my decision after Mr. Marcos signs Cabinet Bill No. 7,” she promised.”but I assure you, you will hear what you want to hear.”

And then the seemingly insecure non-politician came to the fore once again: “If I were a traditional politician, I would be very happy standing before you tonight. But I am not a traditional politician and so I am very nervous when I think of the difficult days that lie ahead.”

The following morning, Monday, December 2, the Sandiganbayan’s verdict on the Aquino-Galman murder case was handed down. Innocent, said the three-man court of General Fabian Ver and 24 other officers and enlisted men of the Armed Forces, and one civilian. Debunking the findings of the Agrava Board that Aquino and Galman were both victims of a military conspiracy, the Sandiganbayan ruled that all 26 were not guilty of any crime because the military team that killed Galman did so in the performance of their duty. And, of course, Ninoy Aquino was killed by Galman.
Within an hour, Cory was facing the press and reiterating her stand holding Marcos responsible for the murder of her husband. “He is my number one suspect,” she declared, as she has always said since August 21, 1983.

But, speaking with tact and diplomacy, with an eye on being the future commander-in-chief, Cory wooed the military establishment. She said it was misguided elements who had a direct hand in the assassination of her husband; she was not prepared to condemn all 13,000 officers and the enlisted men of the AFP. In a direct message to the “decent elements” in the military she asked for help to get to the truth behind her husband’s savage killing.

On Monday evening, the Batasang Pambansa passed Cabinet Bill No. 7 during its last session for 1985, paving the way for snap elections. Later that night, President Marcos signed the bill into law.

Tuesday morning, true to her word, Cory announced her intention to run for president of the Philippines.

“How Ninoy must be laughing!” was how Butz Aquino spoke of Cory’s dilemma some weeks back when she prayed and sought advice on what to do about the snowballing draft. The position Ninoy had sought so avidly in 1972 was now being given to his wife on a silver platter. His wife, whom he had kept at home because that was where he believed a woman ought to stay. His wife, who had accepted Ninoy’s chauvinist attitude toward women because she did not want to frustrate the kind of life her husband found fulfilling.

“Talk of poetic justice! Marcos wanted Ninoy out of the way, but Ninoy’s spirit lives to haunt him forever,” said an ecstatic Makati matron.

It was a very difficult decision, said Justice Cecilia Munoz-Palma of Cory’s announcement. “I could not have made that decision for her. She made it all by herself.” the justice confided that ever since she advised Ninoy to come home, she swore she would never again be part of other decisions in th future.

If Ninoy could only see Cory Now! The shy housewife who kept herself busy reading light fiction and doing bonsai in the year before martial law was now holding her own in discussions on US bases in the Philippines (out by 1991, if the global situation allows it); on the insurgency (home-grown, with no external help and therefore no external threat to the country); on General Ver’s immediate reinstatement as Chief of Staff (if General Ver could not provide adequate security for one man, how can he secure 54 million Filipinos?) With candor and confidence, Cory revealed that she had been having daily talks with Doy laurel and that she had offered him the vice-presidency.

Was this the inexperienced political neophyte whom people feared would buckle under pressure and intimidation – this woman who was married to the ultimate politician for 28 years, who endured eight years as a political detainee’s wife under th most difficult years of martial rule, who upon the killing of her husband stood up to the most awesome powers in the land and accused them of the murder of her husband, and who, today, against almost insurmountable odds, would pit herself against Marcos’ machinery, machinations and resources, knowing full well the might of her opponent? Was this the woman whom some solicitous souls in the Opposition wanted to protect by keeping her out of the snap election?

“I can be very stubborn,” Cory has said of herself. And though she may seek advice from all and sundry, in the final analysis, she makes her own decisions. Yes, including this tremendous decision to run, preempting Doy Laurel with her early announcement , and leaving him little room to maneuver except around her

The Quezon City government should buy Corazon Aquino’s house and turn it into a museum

The Quezon City government should buy Corazon Aquino’s house and turn it into a museum which I believe would become a famous tourist spot, as world-famous as Anne Frank’s house in the Netherlands.

I felt sad when I read today that President Corazon Aquino’s house at No. 25  Times Street would be renovated by her family because, as the eldest son Senator Benigno Aquino III said, “it has many defects now” and renovation would help the family to move on.

I wish the QC government could come to an arrangement with the family to buy the house now, with  perhaps an agreement that the family would continue to occupy it but preserve its basic elements. Instead of renaming Times Street to President Corazon Aquino Street. Please retain the name because it is also historically signifant – being named after the Manila Times, the newspaper which gave Senator Benigno Aquino Junior the break, which boosted his political career.

The purchase by the QC government headed by Mayor Feliciano Belmonte would have a special resonance.  His wife, Betty Go-Belmonte, and  President Aquino had a rare friendship that asked each other nothing except prayers.  I know because Mrs Belmonte was once my boss at Philippine Star and I reported directly to her as a roving investigative reporter.  She used to talk a lot about Mrs Aquino.

I hope the family would preserve President Aquino’s room as it is now, not for sentimental reasons but to show the Filipino nation and the world – this is how a president lives and should live – simply and  modestly. Her very lifestyle is an indictment of the nation’s political class but sets an example for future generations.

I know this is asking a lot from the Aquino family. But how many Filipino families have produced two heroes and would be remembered a century from now?

I don’t want the nation to move on from the example set by Mrs Aquino. And one way to do that is to preserve her room and her home for the generations to come .

Noynoy, do the President’s shoes fit or are they too big?

Yesterday as soon as I got up I flicked on the radio to find out whether, as Philippine Star columnist Wilson Lee Flores had predicted to me, his former macroeconomics teacher Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo would  drop by Cory Aquino’s wake.

She did and as I listened to the radio commentator describe the awkward event as “civil” with Cory Aquino’s son even shaking the President’s hand, something clicked in my mind.

I can’t describe it, but while I don’t have an internal compass for street directions I seem to have one for political news. When I heard that, I felt some kind of invisible power had passed from Mrs Arroyo to Senator Aquino in that brief handshake – like magic.

Mr Aquino had risen beyond his bitter feelings and made a statesman-like gesture, and had become bigger because of it.

I must confess it was the first time I seriously considered him as a possible contender for the 2010 presidency.  Before, when I met him during a Liberal Party convention he seemed to melt into the hotel furniture. From what other reporters told me, he was a laid-back sort of fellow and was not at all hungry for political power, like his departed mother.

Considering the senator for the highest post seems to be a natural reaction after such a political death. Soon after his father Senator Benigno Aquino Junior was assassinated in 1983, people had flocked to   the slain senator’s younger brother, Agapito “Butz” Aquino. But Butz quickly begged off saying, “his shoes are too big to fill,” little realizing they would be remoulded two years later to fit his sister-in-law.

If I were a newbie reporter and Edsa People Power never happened I might even join the Noynoy bandwagon. What a romantic notion.

But I am no longer one. Whereas I used to go all goo-goo and gaga-eyed whenever I met someone who declared he or she would like to become President of the Philippines, not anymore.

I’ve met and talked to far too many men and women with that presidential twinkle in their eye:  Jovito Salonga, Imelda Marcos, Raul Manglapus (+), Raul Roco (+), Eduardo Cojuangco, Juan Ponce Enrile, Eddie Villanueva, Heherson Alvarez,  Ernesto Maceda, Edgardo Angara, Eli Pamatong, Aquilino Pimentel, Salvador Laurel (+) and a couple more whose names I don’t now remember. And I’ve covered five presidential elections.

Through it all I’ve come to realize we Filipinos tend to regard elections like a race where the candidates are like the horses to bet on.

Perhaps our elections can be viewed another way – like a long and exhausting job interview with we, the people, as the employer, the decider.

When I first got my baby a yaya (caregiver), I drew up a list of qualities I wanted and weighed the applicants against this list.  A president of a nation is equally important to me and so, permit me to  share with you the qualities I’m looking for in the next president.

  1. He/she must be a basically decent person, not necessarily always praying but not amoral.
  2. He/She doesn’t have to be a Harvard University graduate or very young or from a  political clan.
  3. He/She must be a reformist president with a decided bias for uplifting the plight of the majority of the people who are poor, but with the ability to convince the wealthy that this will widen the consumer base for their products.  It cannot be business as usual. It cannot be trickle down.
  4. He/She must have a profound ingratitude to his powerful and wealthy donors and his own class.
  5. He/She must have a definite plan of concrete action from day one on the following – poverty, corruption, insurgency and Muslim unrest. When a candidate is asked for his to-do list and he answers,  “Watch me” or “Trust me,” that’s crap. Scratch him out.
  6. At the same time, he/she must have the cunning of a dove, able to navigate his way through the  political snake pit.

  7. He/She must be skilled in conflict resolution.
  8. He/she must be a leader, not just a manager. And must inspire the citizenry to initiate action on their own.

    So far, I haven’t seen a candidate who has these qualities. Do you, Noynoy?