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Philippines President: Coup try quashed
(AP)
Updated: 2006-02-25 09:03

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo announced she had quashed a coup plot Friday and declared a state of emergency, gambling that the backlash wouldn't leave her government crippled.


Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, right, gestures as she talks with business group leaders inside the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila on Friday Feb. 24, 2006. Arroyo declared a state of emergency as she struggled with a reported coup plot and a possible repeat of the popular revolts that ousted two predecessors. [AP] 

It was one of the toughest days yet for Arroyo, who already has withstood two coup attempts and other crises during five tumultuous years in power.

Imposing a state of emergency is a dangerous move in a country still smarting from the martial-law decrees of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos. It came on the eve of the 20th anniversary of the culmination of the "people power" revolt that ousted Marcos.

Riot police — already on heightened alert as reports of a coup plot have circulated for more than a week — used force to disperse two protests before they could gather steam, leading to accusations that Arroyo was suppressing dissent.

Former President Corazon Aquino and about 5,000 people were allowed to march peacefully to a memorial to her late husband Benigno, whose assassination in 1983 sparked huge protests that led to the revolt against Marcos.

Aquino, a one-time Arroyo ally, criticized the emergency declaration and reiterated a call for the president to "make the supreme sacrifice" and resign.

"I believe that during these times, we should not forget that many sacrificed to regain our democracy," Aquino said.

The stock market fell and the peso ended at its lowest level in nearly a month.

The protesters want Arroyo to resign because of alleged election-rigging in 2004, as well as accusations of corruption and human rights abuses like the purported killing of activists by security forces. Arroyo vigorously denies the accusations.

An army general also was arrested and a police commander was relieved of his duties as military chiefs moved to prevent any rebellion.

The military played major roles in the revolt that ousted Marcos and a similar uprising that toppled President Joseph Estrada in 1991, and it has a recent history of restiveness.

Arroyo ordered a security clampdown, with military camps barricaded to keep troops from joining the demonstrations.

Military chiefs said they backed Arroyo and had eased the threat of a coup, but had not wiped it out completely.

U.S. State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said Americans in the Philippines were advised to be careful. "Our view is that the constitution of the Philippines and the rule of law must be respected and violence must be rejected. We hope the situation will return to normal," he said in Washington.

Arroyo said she was in control but clearly was worried about losing her grip on events as her opponents tried to hijack anniversary commemorations.

Many Filipinos see the four-day "people power" revolt that toppled Marcos on Feb. 25, 1986, as their country's proudest moment.

Presidential spokesman Ignacio Bunye told reporters that the commemorations have been canceled and the military was ordered "to prevent and suppress lawless violence."

Arroyo, who started with a pre-dawn meeting of her national security council and remained in the presidential palace late Friday, appealed for calm. She said the political opposition was determined to bring down the elected government.

"This is my warning against those who threaten the government: the whole weight of the law will fall on your treason," Arroyo said in a nationally televised statement.

Her chief of staff, Mike Defensor, said no curfew will be imposed but the declaration bans rallies, allows arrests without warrants, permits the president to call in the military to intervene and lets her take over facilities — including media outlets — that may affect national security.

Amnesty International spokeswoman Saria Rees-Roberts said the rights group was "concerned that this state of emergency may increase the risk of serious human rights violations, and may undermine the rule of law in the Philippines."

Arroyo's aides linked Estrada, who was toppled in massive street protests in 2001 and held under house arrest on charges of plunder, and several others to the coup plot.

Estrada dismissed the allegations, saying he's been out of work and under detention for five years and didn't have the money to finance a coup. "I don't have any work, how can I finance?" he asked.

The Integrated Bar of the Philippines, the country's largest lawyers' group, said it will question the legality of Arroyo's declaration before the Supreme Court. And Rep. Teodoro Casino said anti-Arroyo protests won't end.

Rep. Roilo Golez, Arroyo's former national security adviser who withdrew support from her, warned things could get worst. "This could get out of control ... if her crisis team doesn't manage this well," Golez said.

Arroyo survived three impeachment bids in September, when her dominant allies in the House of Representatives used a technicality to block complaints of alleged corruption and vote-rigging.



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