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  Opinion
Editorials: Debate on the anti-terrorism law
Nalzaro: Pardon and amnesty
Wenceslao: Remembering and celebrating
Yap: Ballpoint pen
Barrita: Anti-terror law
Carvajal: What price freedom?
Speak out: Erap case verdict
Speak out: Students and the Press Freedom Week

TigerDirect




Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Barrita: Anti-terror law
By Eddie O. Barrita
Small Bites


NATIONAL Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales became an unlikely critic of the Human Security Act of 2007, the law against terrorism.

He told journalism students many sectors, including the media, cause-oriented groups, the opposition and even the police, are afraid of the law.

Never have so many been so terrorized by the anti-terror law.

***

Gonzales said many provisions of the anti-terror law are so vague that even he can be considered a terrorist.

He also said many provisions of the anti-terror law seem to protect the terrorists.

But he almost lost his cool when a lady journalism student asked him why the law, with all its infirmities, was approved.

***

Sen. Mar Roxas is seeking pardon for former president Joseph Estrada who was convicted of plunder, so the country can move forward and end its divisiveness.

Roxas has long been looking at the presidency with misty eyes.

Maybe he thinks a united country will make him president in 2010.

***

The House of Representatives on Monday voted 149-50 to move the barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) elections from Oct. 29 to the second Monday of May, 2009.

Rep. Eduardo Gullas of Cebu’s first district, principal author of the bill seeking the postponement of next month’s polls, is confident the Senate will back the House move.

Surely, they will also have the support of last-termer barangay officials who are grudgingly enjoying the third poll postponement in seven years.

***

Abu Sayyaf bandits, aside from being vicious, are quick learners.

They now have started flying kites in Jolo to snare the Air Force’s UH1H helicopters, apparently learning from the Mactan incident where a Huey chopper crashed after its rotor got entwined in a kite’s nylon cord.

Kites are now their newest anti-aircraft weapons.

***

Investigators have recovered the flight data recorders, known as “black boxes,” of the plane that crashed in the island of Phuket in Thailand and killed at least 90 people.

Black boxes are designed to withstand crashes.

I think it’s high time they should design airplanes like black boxes.

For Bisaya stories from Cebu. Click here.

(September 19, 2007 issue)
Write letter to the editor.Click here.
Join the Sun.Star message board.Click here.




ENETWORK HEADLINE
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