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

Thursday, September 30, 2021

Will ‘Richard the Lionheart’ deliver?

 

“We shall never change our political leaders until we change the people who elect them.”

Mark Skousen

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

EVERY political pundit will now be watching with awe and avidity if “Richard the Lionheart” will be able to sustain and rev up the dominant political empire his late father Oca had built in the first district of Iloilo possibly “on the brink” of being shredded like ribbons now that the grand old man is gone.

Being the only male in the Garin political lineup, much is expected of “Richard the Lionheart” especially now that the May 9, 2022 election is fast approaching.

Will he be able to protect through his own charm and direction, as what his late father Oca had done, the seven municipalities—Guimbal, Oton, Tigbauan, Tubungan, Miag-ao, Igbaras, San Joaquin—from the challenges to be mounted by those who think now is the right time to storm the Bastille?

For sure, the clan’s political rivals are now sharpening their knives for possible attempt to take over some of the aforementioned municipalities in the belief that there’s a gnawing leadership vacuum following father Oca’s sudden demise on September 26 due to reportedly Covid-19.

Some of the clan’s political rivals who dreaded standing toe to toe against the late patriarch might now be emboldened to file their Certificates of Candidacy (COC) and convince themselves they can hack out a major upset in the coming election, a dream many of them had longed for in the past 30 years.

 

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Before his death, there were fears from the clan’s political adversaries all over the province the late father Oca’s influence and machineries had branched out beyond the first district of Iloilo.

If given more latitude and additional time and resources, some of the political opponents think the Garin clan’s fortresses could expand and grow and they would find it more daunting to wage a battle against the clan during and beyond election 2022.

With father Oca’s unexpected death eight months before the forthcoming poll, the clan’s political rivals may have found the perfect opportunity to regroup, reenergize and frenziedly marshal their forces like they are about to be deployed in the Punic Wars, a series of wars fought between the Roman Republic and Ancient Carthage.

In this case, “Richard the Lionheart’s” hands and leadership will be put to acid test.

 

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WE are glad that New York hospitals on September 27 began firing or suspending healthcare workers who defied state order to get the COVID-19 vaccine, even as resulting staff shortages prompted some hospitals to postpone elective surgeries or curtail services.

It’s long overdue. It should have been done earlier, or when Covid-19 deaths and cases did not reach alarming stage.

With the pandemic already more than a year and millions have perished worldwide, what more do these anti-vaccine characters want to hear and learn from health experts in particular and medical science in general?

The news came out after New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the city's hospitals were not yet seeing a major impact from the mandate, adding he worried about other areas of the state where vaccination rates are lower.

According to Reuters, a spokeswoman for Catholic Health, one of the largest healthcare providers in Western New York, said it had reached full compliance, counting staff members who had been vaccinated, those with exemptions and some who had been suspended without pay.

New York's state health department reportedly issued an order last month mandating that all healthcare workers receive at least their first COVID-19 shot by Sept. 27, triggering a rush by hospitals to get their employees inoculated.

Of the 43,000 employees at the New York City's 11 public hospitals, about 5,000 were not vaccinated, Dr. Mitchell Katz, head of NYC Health + Hospitals, said at the news conference with de Blasio.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two dailies in Iloilo)

 

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Abusive Garin father and son

“I believe the root of all evil is abuse of power.”
--Patricia Cornwell

By Alex P. Vidal

NEW YORK CITY
-- I salute Regional Police Office 6 (RPO-6) Director John Bulalacao for throwing his support behind Police Officer 3 Federico Macaya Jr. of the Guimbal Police Station in Guimbal, Iloilo in the Philippines.
I also laud Philippine National Police’s (PNP) Director General Oscar Albayalde for ordering Bulalacao to recall the police escorts of lloilo First District Rep. Oscar “Richard” Garin Jr. and to file criminal cases against Garin and his father, Guimbal Mayor Oscar “Oca” Sr.
The decision came after Rep. Richard reportedly mauled Macaya after placing a cuff on the cop’s hands before dawn December 26, 2018 near the town hall while the father Garin was reportedly holding a .45 caliber.
The PNP, Bulalacao said, felt insulted that one of the organization’s men was attacked by the politician while in uniform.
The Garins were reportedly mad at Macaya for the non-filing of charges against one of the two protagonists in a town plaza rumble on December 22, 2018 involving Virgil Gegato and Noel Gicana.
Gegato, son of a town councilor, reportedly hit Gicana with an empty bottle during the melee.
Macaya insisted “he did not interfere” when Gegato and Gicana “agreed” to settle the feud. Gegato allegedly paid Gicana P1,500 for the hospital bills.

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It was not the first time that Rep. Garin mauled a cop.
Several years back when he was the mayor of Guimbal, he also kicked and manhandled a lowly cop who failed to immediately respond to a police call.
The only difference is, father Oca, who was the congressman at that time, did not agree with his then mayor son’s sadistic method.
Because the Garins were (and are still until today) so powerful and influential, the case has been forgotten after the victim cop did not press charges against then Mayor Richard.
Between the father and son, it’s the father who was known reportedly to easily lose his cool and bark at people he didn’t like when he was mad.
It’s not a joke to tangle with the father and son Garin physically, especially when they are surrounded by bodyguards--and are carrying firearms.
Both are tall and heavyweights and most of their victims were lightweights.
Father and son could easily turn any tough guy into a marshmallow if he made a mistake of fighting back in a physical confrontation with the lords of Guimbal.

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As editor of a daily newspaper in the 90’s, I always criticized the Garins but I didn’t lower my guard when I was in front of any of them in various occasions or in press conferences.
I also wrote some favorable articles about them in the past, but most of my articles were something narcissistic politicians like the patriarch Oca would never dare retain in the memory.
Rep. Richard actually is a friend.
He regularly tagged me with interesting topics on Facebook, and I find him to be soft-spoken and someone who loves to converse with any ordinary person.
I greeted and approached him evening on March 12, 2010 in the lobby of the Gaylord Texan Hotel in Arlington, Texas where he was waiting for someone to give his pass in the Pacquiao vs Clottey WBO welterweight fight the following day.

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My friend, Dr. Allan Recto, a Texas-based pediatrician, speaks highly of Rep. Richard.
When President Estrada visited Bacolod City in Octobr 1999, then Guimbal Mayor Richard invited me to stay with him in a hotel overnight.
His wife, former Health Secretary Janette Loreto-Garin, used to call me “my good friend” when she spotted me in the audience in the conferences where she was the invited speaker.
I have no bad blood with the Garins; I even support Rep. Richard’s quest to help clear Secretary Janette’s name in the Dengvaxia imbroglio--until now.
But what he did to Macaya really disturbed me as a journalist.

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I don’t know Macaya from Adam, but I feel it’s a moral obligation as a journalist to ferret out the truth and remind public officials like the Garins that power is not a privilege; that no matter what positions they acquire in society, they aren’t above the law; that they have to behave and live by the standards expected of them as high elected officials.
Most importantly, the cops--or any ordinary person in Guimbal or anywhere else-for that matter, also have human rights and dignity.
Macaya, as a police officer, is a person in authority who did not even have a personal grudge against him or any of his family members.
But he allegedly spat at Macaya’s face after kicking the hapless cop on the face three times while the cop was manacled.
Has power--absolute power--gone to Rep. Richard’s head?
He is not the Richard Garin that I know, if Macaya is telling the truth.