Hrvoje Hranjski, Associated Press, Manila, Philippines | Thu, 02/23/2012 12:03 PM
Former Philippine President and now Congresswoman Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, center, arrives at a Pasay City Court for her arraignment on electoral fraud charges in Manila, on Thursday. Arroyo, who is currently under hospital arrest, pleaded not guilty to rigging the elections in a landmark case that is testing her reformist successor's promise to fight a high-level corruption and move his Southeast Asian nation beyond perennial instability. (AP/Bullit Marquez, Pool)
Former Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo pleaded not guilty to an
electoral fraud charge Thursday at the opening of a landmark trial that is seen
as a key test of her reformist successor's campaign to stamp out corruption.
Arroyo, president from 2001 to 2010, is accused of rigging the results of
senatorial polls in 2007 to favor her candidates. The electoral sabotage charge
is the first of several criminal cases being prepared against her.
"Not guilty," she told the court in a soft voice and with a stoic
expression after her defense team waived a full reading of charge details. If
convicted, she could face life in prison.
The stakes are high for both Arroyo and President Benigno Aquino III. Aquino
risks losing public support if she is acquitted and his rallying cry of
"no corruption, no poverty" may fizzle out as just another failed
attempt to fix the graft and poor governance that have hounded the nation for
decades.
Arroyo's acquittal would vindicate a former leader who has portrayed her
prosecution as a political vendetta to destroy her reputation and mask Aquino's
failure to improve the lives of Filipinos, a third of whom lives on $1 a day.
"Despite the continuous and massive vilification campaign against me
and my family, I have always said that I will dispute all charges in the proper
forum," Arroyo said in a statement, adding she wants to clear her name.
She promised to respect the law and said she expects the same from the
country's leaders.
The electoral fraud case against the former president centers on a
notoriously corrupt southern Philippine region where all 12 of Arroyo's Senate
candidates swept all the votes and no opposition candidate won.
According to the charges, there are witnesses who said Arroyo gave instruction
to rig the vote in collusion with a powerful political clan leader, Andal
Ampatuan Sr. Amptuan is on trial facing murder charges in connection with the
2009 politically motivated massacre of 57 people, including 32 journalists and
opponents. He has pleaded not guilty.
Arroyo's husband, Miguel "Mike" Arroyo, said that his wife
"feels the case is an injustice."
"There is no case here," he dded.
He said his wife is frustrated and still suffering from spine and back pain
that he said requires medical treatment abroad. After her appearance, which
lasted about 10 minutes, Arroyo was escorted under tight security from the
courtroom to a military hospital where she is detained while being treated for
the spine ailment.
Court spokeswoman Felda Domingo said the trial is historic because "the
votes of the people were sabotaged and the accused is a former president."
Aquino has promised to root out corruption and said that no one should be
allowed to evade justice.
"There are no exceptions in our campaign against corruption," he
said in a speech Tuesday. "It shouldn't matter if you are a former
president or in the lower ranks of public service. If you are dishonest, then
you must be held to account."
Arroyo's arrest in November struck chord among many Filipinos hungry for
accountability following he presidency, which was overshadowed by scandals,
coup attempts and botched congressional hearings into corruption allegations
involving Arroyo's officials and family members.
Apart from the electoral fraud charge, Arroyo is facing a second criminal
case in a separate court over an overpriced deal with a Chinese
telecommunications giant that allegedly involved huge kickbacks. Two more cases
are being filed against her - for the alleged plunder of lottery funds and the
alleged diversion of $17 million in state funds to boost her 2004 election.