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Related: Ex-president Aquino calls Arroyo
down
MANILA, July 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said Friday evening she would not step
down, abruptly rejecting calls for her resignation by former President Cory
Aquino and 10 cabinet members who resigned en masse in protest.
Arroyo dared her critics to bring "their grievances"
against her to Congress where she would submit herself to due process, in
reference to possible impeachment measures against her.
In a brief televised statement Friday evening, Arroyo
said she would also announce her new cabinet within the next two days and
announced the officers-in-charge for the departments vacated by her officials
who tendered their irrevocable resignations.
"This is democracy that's held together by the
Constitution andthe rule of law. The Philippines has fallen into a dangerous
pattern where the answer to every crisis is to subvert due process rather than
work within the system. This must stop," the president said.
Arroyo particularly addressed former President
Corazon Aquino,who asked her to make one great sacrifice for the nation and
resign.
"I was duly elected to uphold the Constitution and
ensure that the institutions of the nation will strengthen and not weaken. With
all due respect to former president Cory (Corazon) Aquino and others, I say that
their actions cost deep and gravest harm to the nation because they undermine
our democratic principles and the very foundation of our Constitution," she
said.
"By once again by subverting rule of law and
perpetrating a system that's broken, this would remain broken until fundamental
reforms are put in place", she added.
"As former president Aquino is well aware, the
president is charged by nation to defend our hard-won democracy at all cost. To
those who have forgotten this, I say, take your grievances to Congress. I'm very
willing to submit due process as called for by our Constitution," Arroyo said.
She said she will continue to focus on "people's
business -- getting the economy moving and creating a better quality of life for
our people".
The President said her new team will be made up of
individuals whose committed to the nation, and the democratic principles will be
beyond doubt.
"This is the team that will work with me to move away
from political bickering, to do what people of Philippines expect their leaders
to do, and that is to get our economy moving and ensure the delivery of
essential services including healthcare, educationand security to all parts of
the country," she said.
Executive Secretary Ricardo Ermita also said the
president would announce the composition of her new cabinet soon in order not to
interrupt governance.
"The president said she will not resign. The
president knows she is there by the mandate of the people. On the issue whether
she won fair and square - we know she won the elections," he said.
Led by former Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima, ten
key cabinetmembers who virtually made up Arroyo's economic team urged the
president to quit after announcing their resignation.
The mass resignation came after Arroyo Thursday asked
her entire cabinet to resign before she fundamentally reshaped the political
institutions of the country.
Rumors have circulated that some former cabinet
members wanted to replace Arroyo with Vice President Noli de Castro in a
bloodless palace coup in collaboration with Senate President Franklin Drilon,
who also announced his break with Arroyo Friday.
Arroyo still enjoys support of most provincial
governors, some of whom have vowed to secede from Manila if the president is
ousted by the opposition. Enditem |