Dismantle Torre De Manila Jail Manila Building Officials and DMCI Consunji photobombing desecrated JoseRizal MonumentPark view and violated 2009 NHCA (RA 10066) Manila Ordinance 8119 Resolution 121, 7-storey building height limit in historical sites

The Issue

Why true patriotic Filipinos need to dismantle Torre De Manila ? Corruption could only be stop in the Philippines  if we show to the public and to the world that we do not tolerate syndicated corruption and  we will jail all corrupt Manila Building Officials in collusion with builder in bad faith like D.M.CI Consunji who photobombed and desecrated Jose Rizal Monument Park view and violated 2009 National Cultural Heritage Act (Republic Act 10066) Manila Ordinance 8119 Resolution 121, 7-storey building height limit (Floor to Area maximum of 4 only) in historical sites like Jose Rizal national park and monuments.

Here are the list of news from various media groups showing the facts, stories and the reasons why there is a need for a petition for the demolition of Torre de Manila by full implosion of the DMCI building structure constructed in the former Jai Alai building location.

The construction of the 49 storey Torre de Manila was built in bad faith by D.M.C.I. who pre-sell its condo units last 2012 during the time Carlos Celdran brought protest action against Torre de Manila publicized project construction in a Manila zoning area of 7-storey building height limit (maximum allowed floor to area ratio of 4 only) in order to protect appearances of cultural heritage park and monuments from desecration as stipulated in R.A. No. 10066 - National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 .

The appearances and view of Jose Rizal parks and monument was altered by the construction of 49-storey Torre de Manila at the background view of Jose Rizal monuments and the whole Luneta park as well.,  and thus, DMCI desecrated Jose Rizal national monument skyline view and sightline appearrances by building a photobomber Torre de Manila. We therefore concluded D.M.C.I. had violated the National Cultural Heritage Act of .2009. 

Republic Act No. 10066 or the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 lays down guidelines for local government units in maintaining a heritage zone, which involves maintaining the “appearance of streets, parks, monuments…as close to their appearance at the time the area was of most importance to Philippine history as determined by the National Historical Institute”;

ARTICLE IV HERITAGE ZONES 

SECTION 12. Designation of Heritage Zones. - The National Historical Institute and the National Museum in consultation with the Commission and, the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board or other concerned agencies, shall designate Heritage Zones to protect the historical and cultural integrity of a geographical area.

 SECTION 13. Maintenance of Heritage Zones. - A Heritage Zone shall be maintained by the local government unit concerned, in accordance with the following guidelines:

(a)      Implementation of adaptive re-use of cultural property;

(b)     Appearance of streets, parks, monuments, buildings, and natural bodies of water, canals, paths and Barangays within a locality shall be maintained as close to their appearance at the time the area was of most importance to Philippine History as determined by the National Historical Institute; and,

(c)      Local government units shall document and sustain all socio-cultural practices such as but not limited to traditional celebrations, historical battles, recreation of customs, and the re-enactment of battles and other local customs that are unique to a locality. 

Philippine 1935, 1972, 1987 Constitution in Art. XIV Section 15 states that: “The State
shall conserve, promote, and popularize the nation’s historical and cultural heritage and resources, as well as artistic creations”;

Republic Act No. 4846, otherwise known as the “Cultural Properties Preservation and Protection Act” defines a “National Cultural Treasure” as “a unique object found locally, possessing outstanding historical, cultural, artistic and/or scientific value which is highly significant and important to this country and nation.

Republic Act No. 7160 or the Local Government Code of 1991 authorizes among others, Local Government Units (LGUs) to prepare their comprehensive land use plans by enacting zoning ordinances, which shall be the primary and dominant bases for the future use of land resources;

On 14 November 2013, the National Museum issued Museum Declaration 9-2013 for the Declaration of the Monument to Dr. Jose Rizal in Rizal Park, City of Manila as a National Cultural Treasure; Also on 31 December 2013, the Monument was declared a National Cultural Treasure by the National Museum of the Philippines;

 Before securing exemption from Manila zone law of 7-storey building height limit and  Section 22 and Section 47 of Ordinance 8119, also known as the Manila Comprehensive Land Use Plan in June 2012, D.M.C.I. (David M. Consunji Incorporated ) builder and contractor  in bad faith had pre-sell condo units of 49-storey Torre de Manila as evidence in pre-construction plan and brochures given to real estate brokers and sales persons. D.M.C.I. had twice bribe Manila City building officials to secure building permit with exemption in collusion with the City Mayor Alfredo Lim, who disregarded the Manila City Council's resolution 121 and during the time of Mayor Estrada administration.  Do you think D.M.C.I. just get the exemptions for free? 

In 2012, DM Consunji Inc. (D.M.C.I.), by securing a zoning permit, started constructing Torre de Manila in a lot along Taft Avenue. The Torre de Manila has been considered as a photo bomber of the monument of Rizal by many citizens, especially heritage conservationists.

The Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order on the construction of the said project on June 17, 2015.

The Rizal Monument, and the park that cradled it, was at the heart of a master urban architectural plan for the capital of the Philippines, devised by the Chicago architect and city planner Daniel Burnham in 1905.

Facts about Luneta Park

Luneta comes from the word “lunette” which means crescent moon – the shape of the park. The park is also regarded as “Manila’s green lung”. It is located next to Manila’s Intramuros, the historic walled city. Luneta Park has been renamed to Rizal Park in 1913 to pay tribute to Dr. Jose Rizal, although many Filipinos still call it today as Luneta or Luneta Park.

 "The public outrage at DMCI’s Torre de Manila springs from two grounds. The first is aesthetic.. It is an ugly addition to the clear horizon behind Rizal’s monument...citizens are in universal intersubjective agreement about the project’s ugliness.

The second ground concerns national interest. The project’s ugliness shows disrespect for the most hallowed monument of the national hero...Indeed, the existence of a protruding phallic symbol in Rizal’s background is simply irreverent and sacrilegious."

"Let us hope, then, that the high court affirms the community’s aesthetic judgment and saves us from this outrageous eyesore. Questions of taste should be taken seriously. For, as Immanuel Kant reminds us, we find in taste the true sense of community."

DMCI should have stuck to the 7-floor limit - consistent with all the others who observed the law; instead DMCI bought, bribed, lobby for,, asked for exemption. How's that for consistency? Is that in good faith and effort to follow the law? Previous builders in the area should be crying foul that DMCI was granted special consideration. How powerful and influential DMCI is in order to get an exemption? What do you think why there is a 7-storey building height limit in Manila historical landmark zone law in the first place? 

DMCI never stopped construction when we issued the CDO last January. Construction was at 30% when we issued the order, obviously it's more than 30% now," says Trixie Cruz-Angeles, NCCA legal counsel on the Torre de Manila case.

NHCP chair Maria Sereno Diokno and Executive Director III Ludovico Badoy should step down for failing to uphold the agency's mandate to protect the country's cultural heritage through the conservation of historical sites" says City Councilor Don Juan “DJ” Bagatsing.

http://manandwomen.net/link/115937_manila-councilor-wants-nhcp-execs-to-resign-over-torre-de-manila-controversy

"Just like that, the City Legal Officer Renato dela Cruz, in collusion with the City Mayor Alfredo Lim, disregards the Manila City Council's resolution 121 and gives go signal to City Building Official Engr. Melvin Balagot to go ahead with the permit for DMCI's Torre de Manila project. As such, by Sept. 25, the project has obtained an HLURB Certificate of Registration and a License to Sell.

http://www.abante.com.ph/news/nat/30725/op.html

The Supreme Court is inviting professional organizations and interest groups to give their position on the controversial Torre de Manila, hoping to get as many viewpoints as possible when it deliberates on the petition to have DMCI Homes condo project demolished for ruining the view of the Rizal Monument.

The move is said to be unprecedented in the Supreme Court, reflecting the significance of the Torre de Manila case and the uncharted legal territory it may lead to.

The high court limited the invited non-parties to professional associations, non-government organizations and interest groups in the fields of real estate, tourism, construction, architecture, engineering and heritage conservation."

Jose Rizal fought for our country - in the process, he became an ideal to which we Filipinos can all aspire to. The least we can do is fight to keep pristine and sacred the ground on which he died and is buried. The least we can do is offer him the sky which he taught us to look up to.

“If we can’t protect the monument of our national hero, how are we supposed to protect our other historical sites?” Akbayan Party-list Rep. Ibarra Gutierrez says the Supreme Court should order the demolition of Torre de Manila.

Other countries protect their historic landmark.  France would not allow new building construction around eiffel tower. Turkey Supreme court had ordered demolition of a new building constructed around or near its historical landmark.  China prohibits construction of new buildings around the forbidden city. 

3 Istanbul's 'illegal' towers are to be demolished after landmark court ruling on August 21, 2014. The Turkish Council of State has ordered three luxury apartment blocks to be bulldozed amid widespread outrage. But will it have any impact on the country’s unstoppable, and often unlawful, construction boom?

Butting into the Istanbul skyline like a trio of stumpy minarets, three luxury apartment towers loom above the city’s historic peninsula, destroying a majestic silhouette of domes and spires that has remained unchanged for centuries. But now, in an unprecedented ruling, an order from the highest court in Turkey has ordered the buildings to be pulled down.

The Onalti-Dokuz Residence, which comprises three graceless shafts of 27, 32 and 37 storeys in the western district of Zeytinburnu, claimed to “redefine what it means to be a citizen”, offering its wealthy residents “a new perspective with breathtaking panoramic views”. Its million-pound penthouses were to provide a “unique living philosophy”, a vantage point from which “the city surrounds you in all its magnificence”. But the city itself wasn’t so keen. The development sparked widespread outrage, lumbering into view like an uninvited guest, photo-bombing cherished vistas of the 400-year-old Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace and Hagia Sophia.

Now the Turkish Council of State has weighed in, approving an earlier ruling by an Istanbul court in May that ordered the buildings’ demolition. It ruled that the structures were illegal, as they “negatively affected the world heritage site that the Turkish government was obliged to protect”. The decision follows earliermurmurings from Unesco, that the city might be placed on its endangered list if the rampant construction continues to press ahead unabated. It is a landmark ruling, but not one that helps to clarify the legal situation of Istanbul’s unstoppable building boom in the slightest.

 

How and why Jose Rizal has a shrine in China more dignified than in Manila luneta park?

 A visitor to the Rizal Shrine here in Jinjiang, Fujian province, southern China can't help but compare it to the Rizal Monument in Luneta amid the "photobomber" controversy.

Regardless of one's stand on DMCI's Torre de Manila project, Dr. Jose Rizal's statue in Jinjiang county looks more dignified without any structure in the background.

The shrine is described in the memorial wall as "surrounded with blooming flowers and greenery, grand and impressive monument."

The Federation of Filipino-Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry and 7 other organizations proposed to build a Rizal Shrine here to commemorate Rizal's Chinese roots.

Rizal was the 22nd generation descendant of the first generation Ke family whose roots are in Shang Guo village in Jinjiang. Rizal's great-great grandfather was Domingo Lameo, or Ke Yi Nan in Chinese, who immigrated to the Philippines.

The Rizal Shrine stands as a symbol of friendship between China and the Philippines. According to the Knights of Rizal, it is the biggest Rizal Shrine outside of the Philippines.

In 1999, then-President Joseph Estrada and then-Chinese Ambassador Fu Ying laid the foundation for the memorial.

Construction of the Rizal Shrine here started in 2003 and was completed that same year.

1861, the year Rizal was born, was used as basis for the height of the monument--18.61 meters.

“It’s very important for DMCI to know that the preservation of national culture is more important than profit. This is not just about commercialism but the important issue here is about patrimony, preservation of our heritage and our culture.” Rep. Winston Castelo of Quezon City, chairman of the House Committee on Metro Manila Development.

‪#‎NotoDMCIsTorredeManila‬
‪#‎TeardownTorredeManila‬
‪#‎TerrordeManila‬
‪#‎PambansangPhotobomb‬
‪#‎TheUglyGiant‬

#demolishTorreDeManila

#dismantleTorreDeManila

 

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avatar of the starter
Jam FlorPetition Starter
This petition had 12 supporters

The Issue

Why true patriotic Filipinos need to dismantle Torre De Manila ? Corruption could only be stop in the Philippines  if we show to the public and to the world that we do not tolerate syndicated corruption and  we will jail all corrupt Manila Building Officials in collusion with builder in bad faith like D.M.CI Consunji who photobombed and desecrated Jose Rizal Monument Park view and violated 2009 National Cultural Heritage Act (Republic Act 10066) Manila Ordinance 8119 Resolution 121, 7-storey building height limit (Floor to Area maximum of 4 only) in historical sites like Jose Rizal national park and monuments.

Here are the list of news from various media groups showing the facts, stories and the reasons why there is a need for a petition for the demolition of Torre de Manila by full implosion of the DMCI building structure constructed in the former Jai Alai building location.

The construction of the 49 storey Torre de Manila was built in bad faith by D.M.C.I. who pre-sell its condo units last 2012 during the time Carlos Celdran brought protest action against Torre de Manila publicized project construction in a Manila zoning area of 7-storey building height limit (maximum allowed floor to area ratio of 4 only) in order to protect appearances of cultural heritage park and monuments from desecration as stipulated in R.A. No. 10066 - National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 .

The appearances and view of Jose Rizal parks and monument was altered by the construction of 49-storey Torre de Manila at the background view of Jose Rizal monuments and the whole Luneta park as well.,  and thus, DMCI desecrated Jose Rizal national monument skyline view and sightline appearrances by building a photobomber Torre de Manila. We therefore concluded D.M.C.I. had violated the National Cultural Heritage Act of .2009. 

Republic Act No. 10066 or the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 lays down guidelines for local government units in maintaining a heritage zone, which involves maintaining the “appearance of streets, parks, monuments…as close to their appearance at the time the area was of most importance to Philippine history as determined by the National Historical Institute”;

ARTICLE IV HERITAGE ZONES 

SECTION 12. Designation of Heritage Zones. - The National Historical Institute and the National Museum in consultation with the Commission and, the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board or other concerned agencies, shall designate Heritage Zones to protect the historical and cultural integrity of a geographical area.

 SECTION 13. Maintenance of Heritage Zones. - A Heritage Zone shall be maintained by the local government unit concerned, in accordance with the following guidelines:

(a)      Implementation of adaptive re-use of cultural property;

(b)     Appearance of streets, parks, monuments, buildings, and natural bodies of water, canals, paths and Barangays within a locality shall be maintained as close to their appearance at the time the area was of most importance to Philippine History as determined by the National Historical Institute; and,

(c)      Local government units shall document and sustain all socio-cultural practices such as but not limited to traditional celebrations, historical battles, recreation of customs, and the re-enactment of battles and other local customs that are unique to a locality. 

Philippine 1935, 1972, 1987 Constitution in Art. XIV Section 15 states that: “The State
shall conserve, promote, and popularize the nation’s historical and cultural heritage and resources, as well as artistic creations”;

Republic Act No. 4846, otherwise known as the “Cultural Properties Preservation and Protection Act” defines a “National Cultural Treasure” as “a unique object found locally, possessing outstanding historical, cultural, artistic and/or scientific value which is highly significant and important to this country and nation.

Republic Act No. 7160 or the Local Government Code of 1991 authorizes among others, Local Government Units (LGUs) to prepare their comprehensive land use plans by enacting zoning ordinances, which shall be the primary and dominant bases for the future use of land resources;

On 14 November 2013, the National Museum issued Museum Declaration 9-2013 for the Declaration of the Monument to Dr. Jose Rizal in Rizal Park, City of Manila as a National Cultural Treasure; Also on 31 December 2013, the Monument was declared a National Cultural Treasure by the National Museum of the Philippines;

 Before securing exemption from Manila zone law of 7-storey building height limit and  Section 22 and Section 47 of Ordinance 8119, also known as the Manila Comprehensive Land Use Plan in June 2012, D.M.C.I. (David M. Consunji Incorporated ) builder and contractor  in bad faith had pre-sell condo units of 49-storey Torre de Manila as evidence in pre-construction plan and brochures given to real estate brokers and sales persons. D.M.C.I. had twice bribe Manila City building officials to secure building permit with exemption in collusion with the City Mayor Alfredo Lim, who disregarded the Manila City Council's resolution 121 and during the time of Mayor Estrada administration.  Do you think D.M.C.I. just get the exemptions for free? 

In 2012, DM Consunji Inc. (D.M.C.I.), by securing a zoning permit, started constructing Torre de Manila in a lot along Taft Avenue. The Torre de Manila has been considered as a photo bomber of the monument of Rizal by many citizens, especially heritage conservationists.

The Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order on the construction of the said project on June 17, 2015.

The Rizal Monument, and the park that cradled it, was at the heart of a master urban architectural plan for the capital of the Philippines, devised by the Chicago architect and city planner Daniel Burnham in 1905.

Facts about Luneta Park

Luneta comes from the word “lunette” which means crescent moon – the shape of the park. The park is also regarded as “Manila’s green lung”. It is located next to Manila’s Intramuros, the historic walled city. Luneta Park has been renamed to Rizal Park in 1913 to pay tribute to Dr. Jose Rizal, although many Filipinos still call it today as Luneta or Luneta Park.

 "The public outrage at DMCI’s Torre de Manila springs from two grounds. The first is aesthetic.. It is an ugly addition to the clear horizon behind Rizal’s monument...citizens are in universal intersubjective agreement about the project’s ugliness.

The second ground concerns national interest. The project’s ugliness shows disrespect for the most hallowed monument of the national hero...Indeed, the existence of a protruding phallic symbol in Rizal’s background is simply irreverent and sacrilegious."

"Let us hope, then, that the high court affirms the community’s aesthetic judgment and saves us from this outrageous eyesore. Questions of taste should be taken seriously. For, as Immanuel Kant reminds us, we find in taste the true sense of community."

DMCI should have stuck to the 7-floor limit - consistent with all the others who observed the law; instead DMCI bought, bribed, lobby for,, asked for exemption. How's that for consistency? Is that in good faith and effort to follow the law? Previous builders in the area should be crying foul that DMCI was granted special consideration. How powerful and influential DMCI is in order to get an exemption? What do you think why there is a 7-storey building height limit in Manila historical landmark zone law in the first place? 

DMCI never stopped construction when we issued the CDO last January. Construction was at 30% when we issued the order, obviously it's more than 30% now," says Trixie Cruz-Angeles, NCCA legal counsel on the Torre de Manila case.

NHCP chair Maria Sereno Diokno and Executive Director III Ludovico Badoy should step down for failing to uphold the agency's mandate to protect the country's cultural heritage through the conservation of historical sites" says City Councilor Don Juan “DJ” Bagatsing.

http://manandwomen.net/link/115937_manila-councilor-wants-nhcp-execs-to-resign-over-torre-de-manila-controversy

"Just like that, the City Legal Officer Renato dela Cruz, in collusion with the City Mayor Alfredo Lim, disregards the Manila City Council's resolution 121 and gives go signal to City Building Official Engr. Melvin Balagot to go ahead with the permit for DMCI's Torre de Manila project. As such, by Sept. 25, the project has obtained an HLURB Certificate of Registration and a License to Sell.

http://www.abante.com.ph/news/nat/30725/op.html

The Supreme Court is inviting professional organizations and interest groups to give their position on the controversial Torre de Manila, hoping to get as many viewpoints as possible when it deliberates on the petition to have DMCI Homes condo project demolished for ruining the view of the Rizal Monument.

The move is said to be unprecedented in the Supreme Court, reflecting the significance of the Torre de Manila case and the uncharted legal territory it may lead to.

The high court limited the invited non-parties to professional associations, non-government organizations and interest groups in the fields of real estate, tourism, construction, architecture, engineering and heritage conservation."

Jose Rizal fought for our country - in the process, he became an ideal to which we Filipinos can all aspire to. The least we can do is fight to keep pristine and sacred the ground on which he died and is buried. The least we can do is offer him the sky which he taught us to look up to.

“If we can’t protect the monument of our national hero, how are we supposed to protect our other historical sites?” Akbayan Party-list Rep. Ibarra Gutierrez says the Supreme Court should order the demolition of Torre de Manila.

Other countries protect their historic landmark.  France would not allow new building construction around eiffel tower. Turkey Supreme court had ordered demolition of a new building constructed around or near its historical landmark.  China prohibits construction of new buildings around the forbidden city. 

3 Istanbul's 'illegal' towers are to be demolished after landmark court ruling on August 21, 2014. The Turkish Council of State has ordered three luxury apartment blocks to be bulldozed amid widespread outrage. But will it have any impact on the country’s unstoppable, and often unlawful, construction boom?

Butting into the Istanbul skyline like a trio of stumpy minarets, three luxury apartment towers loom above the city’s historic peninsula, destroying a majestic silhouette of domes and spires that has remained unchanged for centuries. But now, in an unprecedented ruling, an order from the highest court in Turkey has ordered the buildings to be pulled down.

The Onalti-Dokuz Residence, which comprises three graceless shafts of 27, 32 and 37 storeys in the western district of Zeytinburnu, claimed to “redefine what it means to be a citizen”, offering its wealthy residents “a new perspective with breathtaking panoramic views”. Its million-pound penthouses were to provide a “unique living philosophy”, a vantage point from which “the city surrounds you in all its magnificence”. But the city itself wasn’t so keen. The development sparked widespread outrage, lumbering into view like an uninvited guest, photo-bombing cherished vistas of the 400-year-old Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace and Hagia Sophia.

Now the Turkish Council of State has weighed in, approving an earlier ruling by an Istanbul court in May that ordered the buildings’ demolition. It ruled that the structures were illegal, as they “negatively affected the world heritage site that the Turkish government was obliged to protect”. The decision follows earliermurmurings from Unesco, that the city might be placed on its endangered list if the rampant construction continues to press ahead unabated. It is a landmark ruling, but not one that helps to clarify the legal situation of Istanbul’s unstoppable building boom in the slightest.

 

How and why Jose Rizal has a shrine in China more dignified than in Manila luneta park?

 A visitor to the Rizal Shrine here in Jinjiang, Fujian province, southern China can't help but compare it to the Rizal Monument in Luneta amid the "photobomber" controversy.

Regardless of one's stand on DMCI's Torre de Manila project, Dr. Jose Rizal's statue in Jinjiang county looks more dignified without any structure in the background.

The shrine is described in the memorial wall as "surrounded with blooming flowers and greenery, grand and impressive monument."

The Federation of Filipino-Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry and 7 other organizations proposed to build a Rizal Shrine here to commemorate Rizal's Chinese roots.

Rizal was the 22nd generation descendant of the first generation Ke family whose roots are in Shang Guo village in Jinjiang. Rizal's great-great grandfather was Domingo Lameo, or Ke Yi Nan in Chinese, who immigrated to the Philippines.

The Rizal Shrine stands as a symbol of friendship between China and the Philippines. According to the Knights of Rizal, it is the biggest Rizal Shrine outside of the Philippines.

In 1999, then-President Joseph Estrada and then-Chinese Ambassador Fu Ying laid the foundation for the memorial.

Construction of the Rizal Shrine here started in 2003 and was completed that same year.

1861, the year Rizal was born, was used as basis for the height of the monument--18.61 meters.

“It’s very important for DMCI to know that the preservation of national culture is more important than profit. This is not just about commercialism but the important issue here is about patrimony, preservation of our heritage and our culture.” Rep. Winston Castelo of Quezon City, chairman of the House Committee on Metro Manila Development.

‪#‎NotoDMCIsTorredeManila‬
‪#‎TeardownTorredeManila‬
‪#‎TerrordeManila‬
‪#‎PambansangPhotobomb‬
‪#‎TheUglyGiant‬

#demolishTorreDeManila

#dismantleTorreDeManila

 

Philippine Senate Contact Information
@SenatePh

For Web site related questions and comments, please contact the EDP-MIS Bureau at (632) 552-6601 loc. 4129 or send an email to sysad@senate.gov.ph.

Inquiries regarding bills and resolutions should be directed to the Legislative Bills and Index Service at (632) 552-6601 loc. 2305 / 09, (632) 552-6845.

For Committee meeting schedules and other Committee matters, please contact the Committee Affairs Bureau at (632) 552-6601 loc. 3352 / 53, (632) 552-6816.

 For concerns regarding the Office of the Senators, please use their respective contacts below:

Senator Juan Edgardo "Sonny" M. Angara
Senate Office: Rm. 504 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5570 / 5572
Direct Lines: (632) 552-6779
Telefax: No.: (632) 552-6852
Email: sensonnyangara@yahoo.com
Social Media:
• Twitter: @sonnyangara
• Instagram: @sonnyangara
• Facebook: fb.com/sonnyangara

Senator Paolo Benigno "Bam" Aquino IV
Senate Office: Rm. 510 & 23 5/F GSIS Financial Complex, Roxas Boulevard, Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (02) 552 6601 local 6518 & 6512
Telefax No: (02) 552 6601 local 6518
Email: team.bamaquino@senado.ph

Social Media Accounts:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/BenignoBamAquino
Twitter: @bamaquino
Instagram: @bamaquino, @teambamaquino
Scribd: www.scribd.com/teambamaquino
Slideshare: www.slideshare.com/teambamaquino
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/teambam

Senator Maria Lourdes "Nancy" S. Binay
Senate Office: Rm. 523 & 16 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8616
Direct Line: (632) 804-3396
Telefax: (632) 804-3743
Email: binaynancy2013@yahoo.com
Website: www.facebook.com/SenatorNancyBinay

Senator Alan Peter "Compañero" S. Cayetano
Senate Office: Rm. 603 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5584
Telefax No.: (632) 832-5518
Email: alanpetercayetano.media@gmail.com / senalanpetercayetano1028@gmail.com
Website: www.alanpetercayetano.com

Senator Pia S. Cayetano
Senate Office: Rm. 505 & 18 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5556 - 57 / 5565 / 5588
Direct Lines: (632) 552-6683 / (632) 552-9003
Telefax No.: (632) 552-6684
Email: pia@senatorpiacayetano.com
Website: www.senatorpiacayetano.com

Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago
Senate Office: Rm. 521-A GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5561
Direct Lines: (632) 552-6693
Telefax No.: (632) 552-6692
Email: miriam@miriam.com.ph, mdslegal@yahoo.com
Website:www.miriam.com.ph


Senator Franklin M. Drilon
Senate Office: Rm. 606 & 22 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8592 / 8595
Direct Lines: (632) 659-5841 / (632) 659-7479
Telefax No.: (632) 659-5581
Email: os_frankdrilon@yahoo.com
Website:


Senator Joseph Victor Ejercito
Senate Office: Rm. 511 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8685 to 8688
Direct Lines: (632) 552-6748 / (632) 586-4882
Email: jvejercito@me.com
Website: www.jvejercito.com

Senator Juan Ponce Enrile
Senate Office: Rm. 601 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5552 / 5587
Telefax No.:  (632) 552-6690
Email: senator_enrile@senate.gov.ph
Website: www.juanponceenrile.com

Senator Francis Joseph “Chiz” Escudero
Senate Office: Rm. 517 & 10 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 6537 / 6540 / 8610
Direct Lines: (632) 833-5034
Telefax No.:  (632) 833-8765
Email: sen.escudero@gmail.com
Website: www.chizescudero.com
Twitter: @SayChiz; @ChizNewsAlert
Instagram: @ChizNewsAlert

Senator Jinggoy Ejercito Estrada
Senate Office: Rm. 602 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 2520 - 2521
Telefax Nos.: (632) 552-6685
Email: senjinggoyestrada@senate.gov.ph / jinggoy@senjinggoyestrada.com
Website: www.senjinggoyestrada.com

Senator Teofisto "TG" L. Guingona III
Senate Office: Rm. 502 & 14 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8560 to 8563
Direct Lines: (632) 986-2001 / (632) 986-5774
Telefax No.: (632) 832-6768
Email: senatorguingona@gmail.com
Website: www.tgguingona.ph

Senator Gregorio "Gringo" B. Honasan II
Senate Office: Rm. 507 & 13 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5531 to 5533 /5580
Telefax No.: (632) 551-0525
Email: piu0720@yahoo.com, gringobhonasan@gmail.com
Website: www.gringohonasan.ph

Senator Manuel "Lito" M. Lapid
Senate Office: Rm. 516 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunkline: (632) 552-6601 to 70  loc. 5536 / 5575
Direct Line: (632) 552-6694
Telefax No.: (632) 552-6695
Email: senmanuellapid@yahoo.com.ph, sen.litolapid@senate.gov.ph
Website:

Senator Loren B. Legarda
Senate Office: Rm. 209 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5537 to 5539
Direct Line: (632) 833-1606 /  (632) 832-7627 / (632) 833-1434
Telefax No.: (632) 833-4987
Email: loren@lorenlegarda.com.ph, appointments@osl.ph
Website: www.lorenlegarda.com.ph

Senator Ferdinand "Bongbong" R. Marcos, Jr.
Senate Office: Rm. 518 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8570 to 73
Direct Line: (632) 552-3415
Telefax No.: (632) 659-5045
Email: inquiry.bbmoffice@gmail.com, info@bongbongmarcos.com
Website: www.bongbongmarcos.com

Senator Sergio R. Osmeña III
Senate Office: Rm. 527 & 3 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8526
Direct Line: (632) 551-9999
Telefax No.: (632) 551-9888
Email: osmena111@yahoo.com, serge_osmena@yahoo.com
Website:

Senator Aquilino 'Koko' Pimentel III
Senate Office: Rm. 512 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5548
Direct Lines: (632) 822-9758
Fax No.: (632) 822-9759
Email: kokopimenteloffice@yahoo.com
Website: www.kokopimentel.org

Senator Grace L. Poe
Senate Office: Rm. 525 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunkline: +632 552-6601 to 80 Local No. (8607,5266, 8656,8657,8658)
Telefax +632 5526790

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sengracepoe
Twitter: www.twitter.com.sengracepoe or @sengracepoe
Instagram: www.instagram.com/sengracepoe or @sengracepoe
Website: www.gracepoe.ph
Email Address: gracepoe2013@gmail.com

Senator Ralph G. Recto
Senate Office: Rm. 508 & 12 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 8543 to 44 /8546
Direct Lines: (632) 659-5756
Telefax Nos.: (632) 659-5766
Email: ralphgrecto@gmail.com
Website:

Senator Ramon "Bong" B. Revilla, Jr.
Senate Office: Rm. 506 & 8 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5521 to 5523 / 5577
Direct Line: (632) 552-6776
Telefax No.: (632) 552-6698
Email: rbongrevillajr@yahoo.com, senbongrevilla@senate.gov.ph / lodgene@senate.gov.ph
Website: www.ramonbongrevillajr.com

Senator Vicente C. Sotto III
Senate Office: Rm. 526 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 6502 to 6505
Direct Lines: (632) 659-5259 / (632) 804-0270
Fax No.:  (632) 552-6601 loc. 6501
Email: os_sotto@yahoo.com
Website:

Senator Antonio "Sonny" F. Trillanes IV
Senate Office: Rm. 519 & 15 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 to 70 loc. 5660 / 5666 to 5667
Direct Line: (632) 804-0609
Fax No.: (632) 833-2937
Email: senateoffice@trillanes.com.ph / senate.office.trillanes@gmail.com
Website: www.trillanes.com.ph


Senator Cynthia A. Villar
Senate Office: Rm. 503 & 515 GSIS Bldg., Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City
Trunk Lines: (632) 552-6601 loc. 6508-09, 6511
Direct Lines: (632) 552-6715
Telefax No.: (632) 552-6734 Email: sencynthiavillar@gmail.com
Website: www.cynthiavillar.com.ph
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Senator.Cynthia.Villar
Twitter: @cynthia_villar

 

Philippine Congress
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE PHILIPPINES
HOR Complex, Constitution Hills 1126
Quezon City, Philippines (632) 931-5001
http://www.congress.gov.ph/contact/

congressman Neri J. Colmenares
@ColmenaresPH
Party List - BAYAN MUNA
Term: 3

House of Representatives, Quezon City
Rm. N-210
Phone: (632) 931-5001; local 7389, 9316722
Chief of Staff: Imelda V. Luna

congressman. Zarate, Carlos Isagani T.
Party List - BAYAN MUNA
Term: 1

rep.kaloi.zarate@gmail.com
Website http://WWW.BAYANMUNA.NET/

House of Representatives, Quezon City
Rm. N-617
Phone: (632) 931-5001; local 7436, 9312830
Chief of Staff: Amirah Lidasan

Bayan Muna Partylist
@BayanMuna
Our name is our message. It embodies our core idea and ideals--people first! Their interest and welfare above all.

45 K-7 St., Brgy. West Kamias, Quezon City, Philippines

Tel (+632) 426 0417 / 921 3473
twitter: @bayanmuna
https://www.facebook.com/bayanmunapartylist/timeline?ref=page_internal
www.bayanmunapartylist.net

 

Kabataan Party-List
@KabataanPL
The official Twitter account of the sole youth party-list in Philippine Congress
call us or visit our office at the House of Representatives:
+63 (02) 931-5504
+63 (02) 931-5001 loc. 7378
Room 419, North Wing
Batasang Pambansa Complex,
Batasan Heights, Quezon City

or our National Headquarters:
118-B Scout Rallos St.,
Brgy. Sacred Heart, Quezon City
+63 (02) 352-1054

www.kabataanpartylist.com

Judicial and Bar Council
2nd Floor, Centennial Bldg., Supreme Court,
Padre Faura, Manila
Philippines 1000

Email:
jbc@sc.judiciary.gov.ph
jbc87supremecourt@gmail.com

Phone No.: (02) 552-9512 / 552-9608
Fax No.: (02) 552-9607

Philippine Supreme Court's Public Information Office.  

SC PIO (Official)
Twitter @SCPh_PIO

Official account of the Philippine Supreme Court's Public Information Office. Feedback: pio@sc.judiciary.gov.ph.

Questions: pio_questions@sc.judiciary.gov.ph.

Padre Faura, Manila, Philippines

http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph

 

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Petition created on July 18, 2015