Trillanes, Comrades Holed Up At Makati Hotel
Update News on Trillanes, Lim Walked Out of the Criminal Court of Makati City on or about 10:00 AM 29 November 2007 and walked to Manila Peninsula Hotel to issue statement against President Glorias Macapagal-Arroyo.
(UPDATE 4) Trillanes, comrades holed up at Makati hotel
INQUIRER.net
Last updated 01:48pm (Mla time) 11/29/2007MANILA, Philippines — Detained Senator Antonio Trillanes IV and other officers accused of leading the July 2003 rebellion walked out of their trial Thursday and marched through the streets of Makati calling for the ouster of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.As of posting time, Trillanes and his comrades are at the Manila Peninsula where they are scheduled to hold a press conference.The soldiers, numbering around 30, were accompanied by armed guards as they broke down a door of the hotel, overwhelmed security guards and read out a statement against Arroyo with a full list of their demands.Heavily-armed government troops quickly surrounded the hotel in Manila’s Makati financial district — the same location of a failed 2003 coup against Arroyo allegedly led by many of the same soldiers.The renegades urged Arroyo to resign and called on the military, a central power in this vast Southeast Asian island nation with the power to make and break its leaders, to turn against her.People were going in and out of the Peninsula Hotel freely but a guest said he had been stopped by men with machine guns from going up to the second floor, where Brigadier General Danilo Lim, a co-accused, and others were said to be planning their next move.The surprise events appeared to have been well orchestrated.A detailed website immediately appeared on the Internet, announcing Lim and Trillanes as the leaders of the uprising. The site called on the Filipino people to mass in the financial district.All the soldiers were sporting red armbands with what appeared to be the letter “I” emblazoned in the middle of a white sun.The walkout began shortly after the trial resumed after a brief recess. Lim, who himself is detained and facing coup d’etat charges following an alleged failed coup attempt in February 2006, was pulled away by several soldiers from the witness stand.Trillanes and Lim said they were calling on the Filipinos to withdraw support from the government because the President has corrupted its institutions.“We are joining the people… because the President continues to violate the Constitution of the Philippines repeatedly,” Lim told DZMM’s Teleradyo program, adding they were “calling for the removal of an illegitimate President.”Trillanes, Lim and the other accused soldiers were joined by civilians, including a group of militant farmers and opposition figures led by former vice president Teofisto Guingona.It was not clear if the prisoners’ guards had joined the protest, but they marched along with the accused.Reports culled by INQUIRER.net reporters and staff said police have barricaded the streets leading to Ayala Avenue and that two military trucks had crossed Paseo de Roxas.Four Army trucks and anti-riot police have barricaded the hotel, according to reports.Meanwhile, Bayan Muna Representative Teodoro Casiño said Trillanes and Lim spoke rightly.“This government does not deserve the support of the armed forces and the people. We express solidarity with their cause and likewise call on President Arroyo to heed the people’s clamor,” he said.Leah Navarro, a convenor of the civil society group, Black and White Movement, said she was shocked when radio reports said that her group was part of the protest march although she added that they would assess the situation.“I am shocked. I have nothing to do with it. In fact I am in Southwoods Alabang in a golf tournament playing golf since 8 a.m. and which will be finished at 3 p.m.,” Navarro told INQUIRER.net in a phone interview.But Navarro also said that former social welfare secretary Corazon “Dinky” Soliman will be going to Makati “to see what’s going on.”“We have to assess the situation. Our main concern is that those marching are safe. We don’t want violence here. We know that this thing is spontaneous,” Navarro said.There have been at least seven coup attempts in the Philippines since 1986 as the armed forces have maintained a central role in the nation’s political life since the ouster of dictator Ferdinand Marcos that year.But Arroyo has been under particular pressure since a tape recording emerged of her allegedly conniving with an election commission official to help orchestrate her 2004 re-election.She admitted it was a mistake to have called the official while the vote count had not yet been finished, but denied any wrongdoing.Since then she has fought off impeachment attempts — while being regularly accused of having improperly won the election — as well as actual and alleged coups.Thursday’s dramatic events came just a month after Arroyo gave her predecessor and nemesis, popular ex-film star Joseph Estrada, a presidential pardon on charges of corruption.The government said the pardon was granted after the 70-year-old Estrada agreed not to pursue any elective office.He has always insisted his 2001 ouster from the presidential palace was a coup organized by the military, the powerful Catholic church and the country’s political elites.