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 About 30,000 people
Wednesday participated in a rally at the financial district of Makati,
MetroManila, calling for the resignation of President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo. (Xinhua
Photo) | MANILA, July 13
(Xinhuanet) -- About 30,000 people Wednesday participated in a rally at the
financial district of Makati, MetroManila, calling for the resignation of
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, according to local radio reports.
This is the biggest ever anti-Arroyo street rally
since Arroyo was accused of vote rigging in last year's presidential election
early last month, but the rally failed to draw the support of the country's
middle class and the number of participants was lower than the 50,000 expected
by the opposition.
Radio reports said at least
30,000 people, mostly young men, converged at a major intersection along Ayala
Avenue, Makati, where an eight-lane artery cuts through Metro Manila's business
and diplomatic district.
Protesters mostly remained the
old foes of the Arroyo administration including left-wing militants, radical
student and discontent farmers apart from the followers of Estrada and the late
Ferdinand Poe Jr.
Reports also said Susan Roces, widow of defeated
presidential candidate Fernando Poe Jr., is expected to join the protesters late
afternoon or early evening. But former president Cory Aquino refused to attend
the rally.
Arroyo has rejected repeated calls for her
resignation and the powerful Roman Catholic Church, which supported the toppling
of two other presidents in 1986 and 2001 through mass protests, has refused to
endorse calls for her resignation.
The president said she would work on the
constitutional reform proposed by former president Fidel Ramos, which could
provide her with an "exist of grace" through a one-year transitional period
during which a new constitution will be drafted and new elections held next
year.
She also challenged the opposition to settle their
discontent with her at the Congress through a possible impeachment process.
About 6,000 policemen, including units from nearby
provinces, were deployed for crowd-control duty, backed by 1,000 soldiers in
charge of security for Manila, said National Capital Regional Police chief Vidal
Querol. Enditem |