Showing posts with label #AlbertitoLopez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #AlbertitoLopez. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2018

Emily Lopez, first victim of gossip, fake news

“There is a fundamental difference between men and women - women need romance, men need intrigue.”
--Sherry Argov

By Alex P. Vidal

NEW YORK CITY
-- The decision of former Guimaras Gov. Emily Relucio-Lopez to stay away from the kitchen when the heat became unbearable in 2006 was a brilliant move.
Her “premature” retirement from politics, as well, was mourned by her admirers, including some members of Iloilo media, but was hailed by friends who wanted to shield her from “dirty world of politics.”
Relucio-Lopez was supposed to get an ambassadorial post to Italy under the Arroyo administration, but merchants of intrigues and gossipers made sure she would be sideswiped from selection process.
As soon as her name surfaced as among those being considered by then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo for the post, green-eyed monsters started to circulate ugly stories about her relationship with husband, former Iloilo second district Rep. Albertito Lopez.
Her detractors tried to flood the mass media with fake news (it’s good social media wasn’t so influential at that time) that Chona Mejia, Rep. Lopez’s estranged wife, was sharpening her knife and was poised to appear in the Commission on Appointments (CA) to “spell the beans” and oppose the former governor’s appointment.
It was actually Sen. Sergio “Serge” Osmeña III who was painting the town red portraying Relucio-Lopez to be “unworthy” of the ambassadorial position.

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Osmeña had ax to grind against Relucio-Lopez because his wife, Betina, was Chona Mejia’s daughter with Rep. Lopez.
According to Osmeña, the marriage between Chona and Rep. Lopez has never been annulled and there was no divorce in the Philippines.
When reached by reporters for comment, Chona Mejia reportedly denied she was planning a CA ambush against Relucio-Lopez.
She admitted though she tried to campaign against Relucio-Lopez when the latter ran for office in Guimaras in the 90’s.
Chona Mejia, too, appeared to have let bygones be bygones and wasn’t interested anymore to dip her fingers into the murky waters of politics.
True or not, Osmeña’s saber rattling was dismissed by Relucio-Lopez’s sympathizers as an “intriga” (intrigue) and a “tsismis” (gossip).
It was also belittled as an “estoppel” since Relucio-Lopez had also previously served as congresswoman in Guimaras aside from governor in the island province; her relationship with Rep. Lopez was never used with extreme necessity by her political enemies to stymie her stint as public servant.
It was tsismis or gossip that toppled Relucio-Lopez from the ambassadorial post to Italy.

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We remember Gov. Relucio-Lopez’s predicament amid the decision of Facebook to lower the boom on fake news websites in the Philippines that contain false information.
The lady governor would have been a victim of cyber or internet bullying if social media was active during her time.
An outstanding public servant, Relucio-Lopez was a big loss in Philippine politics.
The idea of building a bridge between Guimaras and Iloilo had been conceptualized during her term as governor.
She refused to seek reelection for congresswoman at the time when Guimaras was starting to attract foreign investors and when “delicious” Guimaras mango became an international sensation.




Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Lopez's Iloilo property under dispute?

"Property is surely a right of mankind as real as liberty."
--John Adams


By Alex P. Vidal

NEW YORK CITY -- If there is smoke, there is fire.
Alberto "Tito" Relucio-Lopez III or "Tito Lopez," scion of the Lopez clan in Iloilo City, Philippines, bemoaned in a Facebook post on January 7, 2018 that he was "against" any attempt to sell a prime property that belongs to his late uncle, Fernando "Nonoy Junji" Javellana-Lopez, Jr.
"Don't touch something that's not yours," was the strong diatribe Tito Lopez, eldest son of former Iloilo second district Rep. Albertito Lopez and former Guimaras Governor Emily Relucio-Lopez, wanted to send to an unnamed person or persons. "I grew up there."
The post, accompanied by several photos of what looked like a house painted in white with several persons believed to be hired to clean its exterior area, generated many reactions from Tito Lopez's Facebook friends.
Zedrick Delgado Señeres, one of Western Visayas' well-read society columnists, commented that the house was probably only being renovated and decorated for a forthcoming occasion and could not be up for sale.
Tito Lopez's controversial post disappeared after several hours.


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Tito Lopez, who now resides in Makati City, could be referring to a spacious residential house located on the right side of the compound's main structure, "White House" (not the Nelly's Garden in Jaro), from the main gate on Gen. Luna Street, La Paz, Iloilo City.
White House, one of Iloilo's famous landmarks and adjacent to the ABS-CBN Iloilo station, is owned by Tito Lopez's parents.
That house on the right side was owned by the late Junji Lopez Jr., third in six siblings of the late former Philippine Vice President Fernando "Toto Nanding" Hofileña Lopez Sr. (April 13, 1904 -- May 26, 1993).
It's a stone throw away from the controversial "Pink House" owned by Junji's brother, Emmanuele "Nikki" Lopez, which was burned on October 25, 2015.
On the "Pink House's" right is another Iloilo landmark, the "Boat House," owned by the late ABS-CBN Corporation founder Eugenio H. Lopez Sr.
When Junji Lopez, who died in 2005, was alive, he told a group of selected media friends, including this writer, that he wanted to give the house to his favorite niece, Alana Lopez-Montelibano, and his favorite nephew, Tito Lopez, when he's gone.
The house's current ownership couldn't be ascertained.
It wasn't clear if Alana Lopez-Montelibano, now a prominent socialite in the Philippines, was aware of the purported attempt to sell, or just renovate, the house that became the source of Tito Lopez's abrupt Facebook rant.