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Philippines mourns Corazon Aquino

The Philippines has declared 10 days of mourning for its former leader Corazon Aquino, Asia’s first female president, who has died at the age of 76.

Flags are at half-mast and hundreds of people have tied symbolic yellow ribbons to cars and trees.

Mrs Aquino had been suffering from colon cancer for more than a year and recently refused further treatment.

She became president when the 1986 "people power" uprising deposed dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

"Cory remained untainted by corruption up until her last days in office"

Nelson, Long Beach USA
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Hundreds of people have been visiting her home and the shrine where her 1986 revolution culminated, leaving yellow flowers and lighting candles.

Mrs Aquino’s body will lie in state at the De La Salle Catholic school in Manila from Saturday evening to Monday morning.

She will be buried beside her husband at the Manila Memorial Park in a private ceremony on Wednesday, her son said.

Coup attempts

"Our mother peacefully passed away at 0318 [1918 GMT Friday] of cardio-respiratory arrest," the son, Senator Benigno Aquino Jr, told the media.

People, many dressed in symbolic yellow, hold candles in front of a huge poster of Mrs Aquino

"She would have wanted us to thank each and every one of you for all the prayers and the continuous love and support," he said.

"It was her wish for all of us to pray for one another and for the country."

Mrs Aquino, who was known as Tita (Aunty) Cory, had been admitted to hospital about a month ago suffering from a loss of appetite related to her condition.

A series of daily masses were held to pray for Mrs Aquino’s health, at least one of which was attended by her former political rivals, President Joseph "Erap" Estrada and former first lady Imelda Marcos.

Catapulted to the top

Mrs Aquino was catapulted into politics following the murder of her husband, the prominent Senator Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino, who had been preparing to run for president.

He had already spent seven years in prison following President Marcos’s declaration of martial law, with his wife as his only contact with the outside world.

Mrs Aquino said of her husband’s death: "What is more important is that he did not die in vain and that his sacrifice, certainly, awakened the Filipino people from their apathy and indifference."

After winning the presidential elections in 1986, she went on to run a country deeply divided after years of martial law and communist insurgency.

She battled several coup attempts against her rule, protected the country’s fledgling democracy and freed political prisoners.

In recent years, she campaigned against former President Estrada, but then reconciled with him to join protests against incumbent President Gloria Arroyo over allegations of vote-rigging and corruption.

She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 and later received several awards and citations for her work to promote democracy and human rights.

Tribute from president

The current president of the Philippines, Gloria Arroyo, announced 10 days of national mourning.

"Cory Aquino helped lead a revolution that restored democracy and the rule of law to our nation at a time of great peril," she said.

"Our nation will mourn her passing. History was thrust upon her when her noble husband was cut down in the prime of his life, as he fought for democracy and the rule of law.

"She picked up the standard from the fallen warrior Ninoy and helped lead our nation to a brighter day…

"Our hearts go out to the family in this hour of grief and sorrow."

The US President, Barack Obama, has also paid tribute to Mrs Aquino.

His press spokesman Robert Gibbs said she had played a crucial role in Philippines history.

"Her courage, determination and moral leadership are an inspiration to us all and exemplify the best in the Filipino nation," he said.


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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Former Philippine president Aquino passes away

Former Philippine president Corazon "Cory" Aquino, who died on Saturday at the age of 76, was a reluctant leader despite guiding her nation through a revolution that restored it to democracy in 1986.  For three days in February of that year, the world watched as the woman in a bright yellowFormer Philippine president Corazon “Cory” Aquino, who died on Saturday at the age of 76, was a reluctant leader despite guiding her nation through a revolution that restored it to democracy in 1986. For three days in February of that year, the world watched as the woman in a bright yellow

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Fading democracy

By David Loyn
BBC News, Attock, Pakistan

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people"

Maj Tahir Sadik

Maj Tahir Sadik

Retired Pakistani army Maj Tahir Sadik will leave office as the elected "Nazim", mayor of Attock, with mixed feelings in October.

"Eight years is a hell of a long time," he told me as we drove around the town.

Remembering the thousands of small issues he had dealt with, the grievances heard, the arguments settled, he added rather quietly, "they even pray for us".

He could not stand again as he has served the maximum two terms. But he is now leading a national campaign to save the Nazim system, which is being allowed to fade away when the mandate of those elected across the country expires in October, with no fresh elections planned.

Attock marks the historic crossing point of the Indus River, where armies since Alexander the Great have come after crossing the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan with India to the east in their sights.

Scuffles

But history has passed the town by as nowadays a motorway bridge further north is the route to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), giving the ancient border town a forgotten air.

Bridge in Attock

Maj Tahir says that the Nazim system offers voters unique access to the levers of power that they do not have when their political rulers are far away in the Punjabi power centre of Lahore, or the national capital Islamabad.

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people, small problems, scuffles between people, and development issues, where a road goes, where a school should be built," he says.

In the eight years that he has been in power a public park has been built along with hospitals and sports facilities, rural bridges, eight dams and 375 school upgrades.

The system provides direct elections for village representatives, who come together with neighbouring villages to discuss issues, and vote for the district nazim, the post held in Attock by Maj Tahir. One third of the seats are reserved for women.

In a nation that has struggled to settle its constitution, veering between periods of military rule and unstable democratic control, ironically it has been military rulers who have done most for rural democracy.

The nazim system was introduced in 2001 by Gen Musharraf. Earlier attempts to introduce local voting were made in two other periods of military rule, under Ayub Khan in the late 1950s and Zia al-Haq in the 1980s.

Maj Tahir claims that since democracy was restored after the military dictatorship ended at the beginning of last year, not a single school has been upgraded in Attock as the provincial government has starved the nazims of funds ahead of suspending local government.

Taliban threat

The local government minister, retired Justice Abdul Razak Thahim, insists that local democracy is not being abolished for good.

He says that elections will be held after a period, but hinted that with elections already for the president, parliament, and assemblies for the four Pakistani provinces, that was enough democracy for now.

Polling in Pakistan

Justice Thahim says that it would be too difficult to hold elections now while the country is facing a threat from the Taliban.

This would make voting hazardous not just in NWFP, where Pakistani forces are fighting an intense campaign for control.

"How could elections be held in the provinces, when terrorists are so busy" he asked. "All the provinces are in the grip of terrorists and we are taking action against them."

After the terms of the nazims expire in October, local power will return to non-elected officials controlled from the centre.

It is easy to be cynical about what lies behind any political move in Pakistan, where the restoration of national democracy in 2008 has not reduced corruption.

Unprecedented

And Maj Tahir is tied by marriage to a powerful Punjabi political dynasty, the Chaudharys of Gujarat, political opponents of both of the major national ruling parties.

Map

But he says that the place to settle this is in the voting booth, not by scrapping polls.

And the fact remains that the suspension of polls will centralise power, and reduce local accountability.

It seems there will be little public agitation to preserve the system as people are more worried about the threat of terrorism and how to get through the long hot summer faced by power cuts on an unprecedented scale.

A leading political analyst, Rasul Baksh Rais, from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, says that the abolition of local voting is a backward step, and blames all political parties for failing to provide a platform for public arguments on policy.

"The centralised decision-making within the political parties will hurt the cause of democracy. People will think that instead of Pervez Musharraf who wore a military uniform, now we have civilian dictators," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fading democracy

By David Loyn
BBC News, Attock, Pakistan

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people"

Maj Tahir Sadik

Maj Tahir Sadik

Retired Pakistani army Maj Tahir Sadik will leave office as the elected "Nazim", mayor of Attock, with mixed feelings in October.

"Eight years is a hell of a long time," he told me as we drove around the town.

Remembering the thousands of small issues he had dealt with, the grievances heard, the arguments settled, he added rather quietly, "they even pray for us".

He could not stand again as he has served the maximum two terms. But he is now leading a national campaign to save the Nazim system, which is being allowed to fade away when the mandate of those elected across the country expires in October, with no fresh elections planned.

Attock marks the historic crossing point of the Indus River, where armies since Alexander the Great have come after crossing the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan with India to the east in their sights.

Scuffles

But history has passed the town by as nowadays a motorway bridge further north is the route to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), giving the ancient border town a forgotten air.

Bridge in Attock

Maj Tahir says that the Nazim system offers voters unique access to the levers of power that they do not have when their political rulers are far away in the Punjabi power centre of Lahore, or the national capital Islamabad.

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people, small problems, scuffles between people, and development issues, where a road goes, where a school should be built," he says.

In the eight years that he has been in power a public park has been built along with hospitals and sports facilities, rural bridges, eight dams and 375 school upgrades.

The system provides direct elections for village representatives, who come together with neighbouring villages to discuss issues, and vote for the district nazim, the post held in Attock by Maj Tahir. One third of the seats are reserved for women.

In a nation that has struggled to settle its constitution, veering between periods of military rule and unstable democratic control, ironically it has been military rulers who have done most for rural democracy.

The nazim system was introduced in 2001 by Gen Musharraf. Earlier attempts to introduce local voting were made in two other periods of military rule, under Ayub Khan in the late 1950s and Zia al-Haq in the 1980s.

Maj Tahir claims that since democracy was restored after the military dictatorship ended at the beginning of last year, not a single school has been upgraded in Attock as the provincial government has starved the nazims of funds ahead of suspending local government.

Taliban threat

The local government minister, retired Justice Abdul Razak Thahim, insists that local democracy is not being abolished for good.

He says that elections will be held after a period, but hinted that with elections already for the president, parliament, and assemblies for the four Pakistani provinces, that was enough democracy for now.

Polling in Pakistan

Justice Thahim says that it would be too difficult to hold elections now while the country is facing a threat from the Taliban.

This would make voting hazardous not just in NWFP, where Pakistani forces are fighting an intense campaign for control.

"How could elections be held in the provinces, when terrorists are so busy" he asked. "All the provinces are in the grip of terrorists and we are taking action against them."

After the terms of the nazims expire in October, local power will return to non-elected officials controlled from the centre.

It is easy to be cynical about what lies behind any political move in Pakistan, where the restoration of national democracy in 2008 has not reduced corruption.

Unprecedented

And Maj Tahir is tied by marriage to a powerful Punjabi political dynasty, the Chaudharys of Gujarat, political opponents of both of the major national ruling parties.

Map

But he says that the place to settle this is in the voting booth, not by scrapping polls.

And the fact remains that the suspension of polls will centralise power, and reduce local accountability.

It seems there will be little public agitation to preserve the system as people are more worried about the threat of terrorism and how to get through the long hot summer faced by power cuts on an unprecedented scale.

A leading political analyst, Rasul Baksh Rais, from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, says that the abolition of local voting is a backward step, and blames all political parties for failing to provide a platform for public arguments on policy.

"The centralised decision-making within the political parties will hurt the cause of democracy. People will think that instead of Pervez Musharraf who wore a military uniform, now we have civilian dictators," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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US President Barack Obama on Saturday addresses parliament and visits a historic slave castle during a landmark visit to Ghana, widely seen as a tribute to a vibrant democracy in conflict-scarred Africa.  Obama will speak to lawmakers about democracy during the 24-hour visit, his first toUS President Barack Obama on Saturday addresses parliament and visits a historic slave castle during a landmark visit to Ghana, widely seen as a tribute to a vibrant democracy in conflict-scarred Africa. Obama will speak to lawmakers about democracy during the 24-hour visit, his first to