he news
was officially announced by China Central Television (CCTV) in Beijing on
August 25:
Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao, the “national fist” of the Philippines and the
winner of eight world boxing titles, signed an agreement with the Chinese
government “to establish a string of boxing academies” all over China with
the aim of helping to “grow the sport in China and provide opportunities for
young people to take part."
In a telephone press conference with the Philippine media the following day,
Pacquiao confirmed that the Chinese government will establish the first
"Manny Pacquiao Boxing Education Institute" in Beijing, with 15 others soon
to be built all over China.
Pacman in Beijing
In an exclusive interview with Balitang America TV reporter Rommel Conclara
upon his arrival in San Francisco on August 27, Pacquiao claimed that his new
partnership with the Chinese government “will ease tensions between China
and the Philippines.”
Balitang America, which has an estimated 250,000 cable subscribers in the
US, reported the news to its viewers and then polled them on the question:
“Do you agree with Pacquiao’s decision to help China train and produce
champion boxers?”
The response of Balitang America TV viewers was an overwhelming “No” (97%).
LINK
But as to the question of whether public opinion will affect Pacquiao’s
decision in any way, the answer is also “No”. His decisions have always been
based on what Pacquiao believes to be in his best interest, not on what may
be in the interest of his country.
The fact that the Chinese government was involved in the deal did not
discourage him or give him pause, instead it encouraged him.
The power to waive taxes
Pacquiao knows that the Chinese government can waive the taxes on whatever
income he earns in Macau, China unlike the US government which has been
unwilling to waive the $18 million in taxes owed to the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) or the Philippine government which has also been unwilling to
waive the $50 million (P2.2 billion) owed by Pacquiao to the Bureau of
Internal Revenue (BIR).
When the BIR moved to freeze his Philippine assets, Pacquiao went to the
Philippine Supreme Court and obtained a reprieve on August 21 banning the
Philippine government from seizing any of his assets while his income tax
case is being heard, a process
that may take years.
Pacquiao claims that he filed his US taxes in 2008and 2010 but he has
refused to publicly release it other than to show the top front of the first
page of his purported 2008 tax return to a TV reporter.
According to blogger Raissa Robles, Pacquiao fears that the release of his
US tax returns will reveal that he is a U.S. green cardholder which will
disqualify him from holding public office in the Philippines.
LINK
In the boxing ring, Inquirer’s Gil Cabacungan wrote, Pacquiao “stings like a
bee, a la Muhammad Ali. In the political ring, he also floats like a
butterfly—except that he seems to float from flower to flower, sipping
nectar from each flower.”
Floats like a butterfly
Pacquiao’s first foray in politics came in 2007 by when he ran for Congress
to represent his hometown, General Santos City, under the Liberal Party
faction of former Manila Mayor Lito Atienza. After he lost his race,
Pacquiao joined the Kampi Party founded by then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo,
whom he publicly supported.
In the 2010 congressional elections, Pacquiao ran for Congress in his wife’s
home province of Sarangani but this time under the Nacionalista Party banner
of Sen. Manuel Villar, whose presidential candidacy he supported. Though his
presidential candidate lost, Pacquiao won his House seat.
After his House victory, Pacquiao appeared to be willing to join the Liberal
Party of House Speaker Sonny Belmonte and Pres. Benigno Aquino III. Instead,
he announced that he will be supporting Vice-President Jojo Binay’s party,
the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA), and that he will run for senator
under its banner in 2016.
When asked why he was supporting Binay in 2016, Pacquiao answered: “Why
not?”
Pacquiao will certainly be a shoo-in when he runs for senator in 2016
because his popularity is unrivaled. It will not matter to most of the
voters that Pacquiao has one of the worst attendance records of any elected
member of Congress - attending only 98 out of 168 sessions.
But will the news that the Pacman will now be acting as a pitchman for China
affect is senatorial and presidential ambitions?
While Pacquiao may not care to educate himself about his country’s
"tensions" with China, the results of a nationwide poll taken early this
year by the Social Weather Station (SWS) should give him pause. It showed
that “an overwhelming majority of Filipinos (93 percent) back the
government’s efforts to defend the national territory and its rules-based
approach in seeking international arbitration (82 percent) for its dispute
with China, which claims the entire South China Sea.”
LINK
A reporter should ask Pacman what he believes is the cause of the “tensions”
with China that his boxing academies in China will “ease”. He will likely
just smile and defer the answer to the Philippine government even though he
is an elected member of that government.
Pacquiao is no Klitschko
Wladimir Klitschko is the undisputed heavyweight boxing champion of the
world with a record
of
62 wins and 3 losses, with 52wins by knockout. He is the second longest
reigning heavyweight champion in history and a proud Ukrainian who cares
deeply about his country.
In March of this year, while the Ukrainian people were engaged in a People
Power overthrow of the corrupt dictatorship of Pres. Viktor Yanukovych,
Klitschko was interviewed in London about his next title match.
Instead of talking about his fight, however, Klitschko responded: ‘How can I
even think about boxing when my fellow countrymen and women are being
murdered in the streets of Kiev? It is so terribly sad. I want to pay my
respect to those tortured and beaten up, to those put in prison and to those
who have been killed. They died as heroes.”
Unlike Pacquiao, Klitschko would never consider an offer from the Russian
government for him to set up boxing academies all over Russia as a means to
“ease tensions” between Russia and Ukraine. He would tell Russia to remove
its troops from Ukraine and to stop supplying the separatists with arms.
Can we imagine Pacquiao telling China that he will refuse to fight Chris
Algieri in the Chinese city of Macau on November 22 unless China lifts its
naval blockade of the Philippine Navy ship Sierra Madre which is defending
Ayungin Shoal, the gateway to the oil-rich Recto Bank?
Can we imagine Pacquiao telling China that he will not help Chinese boxers
become champions unless China abandons the military base it is constructing
on Mabini Reef in the Kalayaan Island Group which will have a mile long
airstrip capable of dispatching Chinese jets to any part of the Philippines?
Can we imagine Pacquiao telling China that he will not be its pitchman
unless China recognizes the 200 mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of the
Philippines which China initially agreed to in 1992 when it signed the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) but which it now
rejects?
All we can do is imagine
When Pacquiao’s promoter, Bob Arum, announced the Algieri match in July, he
predicted that his boxer will likely fight “at least once a year in Macau
the rest of his career” because, he said, “in Macau, he’s not subject to
U.S. income taxes, which are 39.5
percent.” He will receive a guaranteed purse of $20 million for the Algieri
fight, tax-free.
But money is not the only reason why Pacquiao will not turn his back on his
highly profitable China deal. The deeper reason is because he has never
really embraced Philippine nationalism other than the surface variety of
wearing the Barong Tagalog or singing the Philippine National Anthem.
Philippine nationalism, James Fallows wrote, “allows them to look beyond
themselves rather than pursuing their own interests to the ruination of
everyone else.” In his Atlantic Monthly article The Philippines: A Damaged
Culture, Fallows observed: “Filipinos pride themselves on their lifelong
loyalty to family, schoolmates, compadres, members of the same tribe,
residents of the same barangay.” But they do not pride themselves on their
loyalty to the Philippines as a nation.
When Pacquiao is elected senator in 2016, he will be among those who will
replace termed-out Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, who once lamented the fact
that “Filipinos have no sense of shared destiny.”
Unfortunately, if and when China completes its invasion and occupation of
the Philippines in the near future, perhaps under Pres. Manny Pacquiao, Sen.
Miriam will sadly be proven wrong. Filipinos will then share a common
destiny of living under China's thumb.
Published 09/07/2014
(Send comments to
Rodel50@gmail.com or mail them to the Law Offices of Rodel Rodis at 2429
Ocean Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94127 or call 415.334.7800).