President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's Speech at the Awarding Ceremonies of the Outstanding Voulunteer Workers/Mother Leaders of Bulacan
Saturday, December 22, 2007
bulet-arow.gif (856 bytes) President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's Speech at the Awarding Ceremonies of the Outstanding Voulunteer Workers/Mother Leaders of Bulacan
Congratulations sa mga Outstanding Volunteer Workers ng Bulacan!
Isinusulong natin ang voluntarism sa ating bansa sapagkat napakarami ang dapat gawin para sa ating kaunlaran at hindi lamang dapat i-asa ang mga ito sa pamahalaan.
Ang pinaka-importanteng mithiin nitong pamahalaan at lipunan ay ang pag-ahon ng bansa sa kahirapan. Nitong Kapaskuhan, kailangan bawat may kaya ay tulungan ang mga nangagailangan. Ang gobyerno ay gagawin ang lahat para tutukan ito.
Ang bigas ay hindi lamang pangunahing pagkain ng ating taumbayan; ito ay simbolo ng ating kakayahang tuparin ang ating kompromisong pakainin iyong mga kulang-palad. Naka-kompromiso tayong isigurado na ang nangangailangan sa buong bansa ay may abot-kayang bigas dito sa panahon ng Kapaskuhan.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
CURRICULUM VITAE
Edgardo "Edong" J. Angara
PRESENT AND PREVIOUS POSITIONS
July 2001 - Present | Senator , Senate of the Philippines |
September 2004 - Present | Chairman , Committee on Banks, Financial Institutions & Currencies Chairman , Committee on Peace, Unification & Reconciliation |
March 31, 2005 (until 2007) | Charter President , South East Asia Parliamentarians Against Corruption (SEAPAC) |
March 15, 2005 - Present | Chairman , Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) |
September 2001 - September 2004 | Chairman , Committee on Constitutional Amendments, Revision of Codes and Laws |
January 6 - 20, 2001 | Executive Secretary Office of the President |
May 25, 1999 - January 5, 2001 | Secretary , Department of Agriculture |
1998 - March 15, 2005 | President , Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) |
July 1998 - May 1999 | Chairman , Philippine National Bank (PNB) |
January 1993 - August 1995 | Senate President , Senate of the Philippines Chairman , Commission on Appointments |
1987-1998 | Senator , Senate of the Philippines |
1997-1998 | Chairman , Congressional Commission on Agricultural Modernization Chairman , Committees on Agriculture and Food, Foreign Relations, and Economic Affairs |
September 1995 - October 1996 | Minority Leader , Senate of the Philippines |
1992 - 1993 | Chairman , Committee on Finance |
1987 - 1992 | Chairman , Committee on Education, Arts and Culture Chairman , Committee on Health |
1990 - 1991 | Chairman , Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM) |
May 1994 - January 1998 | Chairman , Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) |
1981 - 1987 | President , University of the Philippines |
1980 - 1981 | Founding President , ASEAN Law Association |
1979 - 1981 | President , Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) |
1975 - 1976 | President , Philippine Bar Association |
1971 | Delegate , 1971 Constitutional Convention |
HONORS AND CITATIONS
Commandeur dans I'ordre des Palmes , Government of France
Lee Kuan Yew Fellow , Republic of Singapore
Most Distinguished Alumnus Award , University of the Philippines
Highest Professional Award , U.P. College of Law
Doctor of Educational Management (honoris causa), De La Salle University
Doctor of Laws (honoris causa), Southwestern University
Doctor of Laws (honoris causa), Mindanao State University
Doctor of Humane Letters (honoris causa), Philippine Normal University
Doctor of Humane Studies (honoris causa), Pangasinan State University
Doctor of Education (honoris causa), Don Mariano Marcos State University
Medalya ng Karangalan , Province of Quezon
Dangal ng Aurora Award for Public Service , Province of Aurora
MEMBERSHIP IN BUSINESS, CIVIC, CULTURAL & OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
Chairman | National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) Artists Foundation of the Philippines Philippine Futuristic Society Philippine Philharmonic Society Metropolitan Museum of the Philippines Philippine Swedish Society |
Co-Chairman | The Working Group that reviewed the U.N. Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) Merida , Mexico - December 2003 |
Member | International Executive Committee of the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC) Wilton Park Conference , U.K. , June 2004 |
Charter President | South East Asia Parliamentarians Against Corruption (SEAPAC) (2005, until 2007) |
Director | Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC), October 2002 |
Director | Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (1985-1986) |
Director | Management Association of the Philippines (1985-1986) |
Founding President | Philippine-Japan Parliamentarians Association |
Founding President | ASEAN Law Association |
Founding Partner | Angara , Concepcion , Cruz, Regala and Abello Law Offices ( ACCRA Law) |
Partner | Gawad Kalinga Philippines (Kalinga Luzon) |
Trustee | International Rice Research Institute (1981-1987) |
Trustee | International Center for Living Aquatic Resources (1984-1985) |
Member | Sigma Rho Fraternity Order of the Purple Feather, UP Law Honor Society Distinguished Order of Quezon Rotary Club of Manila |
Life Member | International Honor Society of Phi Kappa Pi International Honor Society of Pi Gamma Mu |
Personal Information
Birth Date | 24 September 1934 |
Birthplace | Baler, Aurora Province |
Wife | Gloria Manalang Angara |
Children | Anna Rosalyn (Anna), Juan Edgardo (Sonny), Katerina Gloria (Katya), & Alexandra Leia (Alex) |
Educational Background
1958 | Bachelor of Laws University of the Philippines |
1964 | Master of Laws University of Michigan, USA |
EdAngara.com is the official website of Philippine Senator Edgardo J. Angara.
© 2007 All Rights Reserved.
© 2007 All Rights Reserved.
SEPTEMBER 11
Police Arrest Mastermind of September 11, 2001 Attack on the United States Saturday, March 1, 2003 By KATHY GANNON, Associated Press Writer © AP | |
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - The suspected mastermind of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, has been arrested in one of the biggest catches yet in the war on terrorism, Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed told The Associated Press. Mohammed, perhaps the most senior al-Qaida operative after Osama bin Laden and Egyptian Ayman al-Zawahiri, was one of three people arrested in Rawalpindi, near the Pakistani capital of Islamabad on Saturday, Ahmed said. His arrest is a major coup in the effort to stifle al-Qaida. Mohammed, who is on the FBI most wanted list, had a hand in many of the terror organization's most notorious attacks in recent years. In Washington, U.S. President George W. Bush exclaimed "That's fantastic!" after his national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, delivered the news. CIA officers and Pakistani authorities carried out the operation that led to Mohammed's capture, according to American officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The tip-off came about a week earlier following a raid in the southwestern town of Quetta and the arrest of a Middle Eastern man, possibly of Egyptian origin, according to a Pakistani government source who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity. "At the time of that raid in Quetta the authorities were looking for Khalid Shaikh but he escaped and from there they followed him to Rawalpindi," said the official. "They got information from the man they picked up in Quetta and from phone calls until they tracked him down to Rawalpindi." | |
Mastermind of the September 11, 2001 Attacks Khalid Shaikh Mohammed | U.S. officials regard Mohammed as a key al-Qaida lieutenant and organizer of the terror mission that sent hijacked passenger jets crashing into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and into a field in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, killing more than 3,000 people. Mohammed was arrested along with a second man of Middle Eastern origin and a Pakistani, Ahmed Abdul Qadoos, 42, a member of one of the country's best organized and well established religious parties, Jamaat-e-Islami. The identity of the Middle Eastern man has not been revealed. |
Pakistani government officials wouldn't say whether Mohammed had been handed over to the United States, but it's likely given Islamabad's previous practice of handing over al-Qaida suspects to the U.S. authorities. While Qadoos' family said he was alone when police stormed the house, senior government officials said Mohammed and the second man were picked up in the same raid, which took place around 3 a.m. Saturday (2200 GMT Friday). A guard protecting the Qadoos house tried to stop police from firing at them, but they quickly overpowered him, said Omar Qadoos, a cousin of Ahmed Abdul Qadoos. Neighbors fearing that a robbery was under way called the police. "The police pounded on the gate and then they rushed through. There was some firing, but no one was hurt and then they beat the guard and broke the lock on the front door," Omar Qadoos said. The only people home at the time of the raid were Qadoos, his wife and two children. Qadoos lives with his father. Omar said police held the entire family at gunpoint while they collected cassettes, a computer and computer discs. Clothes, papers and household items were strewn on the floor of the Qadoos household evidence of the police search. Mohammed has not been charged in the Sept. 11 attacks, but he has been charged in a 1995 plot to blow up 11 passenger planes on their way from Asia to the United States. The U.S. government was offering up to US$25 million for information leading to his capture. Mohammed's ties to terrorism are deep. He is the uncle of convicted 1993 World Trade Center conspirator Ramzi Yousef, and one of his older brothers is also an al-Qaida member. Another brother died in Pakistan when a bomb he was making exploded. He is also said to be close to bin Laden's son, Saad bin Laden. While the U.S. Embassy in Pakistan does not comment on FBI activities here, a spokesman, speaking on condition he not be identified, said: "We do have excellent cooperation with the Pakistanis. We provide technical assistance, but they conduct their own arrests." Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf has been an important ally in the U.S.-led war on terror, but has said that only a small number of FBI agents are operating in Pakistan and only to provide intelligence on suspected al-Qaida or Taliban fugitives from neighboring Afghanistan. However, Pakistani police and intelligence officials say FBI agents have been involved in nearly every important terror arrest in Pakistan since the war on terrorism began. The Pakistani government says it has handed over more than 420 al-Qaida and Taliban suspects to U.S. custody. Until now the biggest catch so far was the arrest last March of al-Qaida's suspected financier, Abu Zubaydah, who was taken into custody in a raid in the central Pakistani city of Faisalabad. Abu Zubaydah, a Saudi-born Palestinian, was said to be a link between bin Laden and many of al-Qaida's operational cells. Abu Zubaydah ran the Khalden camp in Afghanistan, where U.S. investigators believe many of the Sept. 11 hijackers trained. On Sept. 11, 2002, Ramzi Binalshibh, a would-be hijacker who couldn't get into the United States, was captured in the southern port city of Karachi. He became an aide to Mohammed and a key moneyman for the attacks. Binalshibh was also the former roommate of hijacker Mohamed Atta. http://www.september11news.com/2003KSM.htm |
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