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But I was wrong. No one showed up.
Just seven hours after the standoff began at the five-star Peninsula Manila hotel in Makati City, it was over. The coup's ringleader, Antonio Trillanes, a former naval officer and elected senator, along with several other people, including the former vice president of the Philippines, a Catholic bishop, and several journalists, were arrested and hauled off to jail.
What happened? I wondered. Had no one gotten the text messages? Were the two biggest telecommunications providers, Smart Communications and Globe, experiencing an SMS outage? Had the government blocked the messages from being delivered?
More important, did they really intend this to be coup by text message? In the Philippines, that shouldn't be much of a surprise. Text messaging is by far the most widely used mobile data service in the world, with roughly 72 percent of all mobile-phone users in 2006 having been active SMS users. But nowhere is it more widely used than in the Philippines. Filipinos send on average between 12 and 15 SMS messages a day.
But the people leading the coup last month seemed to have made a big mistake: they did it during working hours. Edna Maguigad, a lawyer for the Alternative Legal Assistance Center, said she got more than a dozen messages encouraging her to join the protest. But Maguigad, a politically active 31-year-old who is no fan of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's government, quite simply said she had no time for protests.
"I kept getting messages from people, 'Come down to Makati, big protest, show your support,'" she said. "But it was like 2 p.m. I had to work. And the traffic would have been a nightmare."
Indeed, anyone who knows Manila can attest that traffic is almost always bad. But throw in an attempted coup and protest in the busy business district of Makati City and the city's highways and byways practically become parking lots.
In fact, the one text message I received about the coup had been forwarded to me from the U.S. Embassy by my friend who works for the U.S. State Department. The message that was sent to employees and their families went something like this: "Demonstration in Makati City in the vicinity of the Manila Peninsula hotel. Traffic expected to be heavy. Avoid the area."
Various newspapers reported that Trillanes and his supporters sent hundreds of text messages while holed up in the Peninsula. But even though their efforts may have failed, historically the technology has been used very successfully in organizing other protests here. In fact, in 2001 millions of text messages were sent as Filipinos turned up the heat on disgraced President Joseph Estrada. After tens of thousands of protesters hit the streets of Manila, Estrada was forced out of office. And Arroyo took over the presidency.
Now Arroyo's political rivals are trying to use the same tactics to overthrow her government. Opponents have criticized the legitimacy of her rule from the start, and she has been fighting allegations that she tampered with election results in 2004.
Still, the Philippines is not the only country in the world where text messaging has been used as a tool to rally political protesters. Text messages played an important role earlier this year in gathering people in Jena, La., to express their anger when six young African-Americans were believed to be overzealously prosecuted for assault.
Hundreds of thousands of urgent text messages were sent to cell phones in Xiamen, China, warning that the construction of a chemical plant there would destroy the environment. Public outrage was strong enough to shut down the project.
Activists in Pakistan also leveraged the technology earlier this year to organize themselves against martial law there. And text messaging was seen as such a threat that during the recent protests in Myanmar, authorities temporarily suspended the service.
But text messaging has been particularly useful and popular in the Philippines.
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- Nice article! Informative
- It would be nice to see a follow up article as to why the vast difference between SMS use and voice use in the Philippines as well as the "cellular" access to the internet as it is more common in Asia than other parts of the world.
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- LOST OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
- I am impress with the ability of a lot of Filipinos being able to use the technology but the effect that I see especially with our young people is that they tend to lose their capability in speaking and spelling the write english words. I have witness some e-mails and letters that people could no longer see the difference in writing formal letters. I believe in the use of modern technology but we should still emphasize the exercise of proper writing and speaking in order for us to face the global economy. Filipinos tend use cell phones just for show, or maybe just want to be IN with the trend to the point of sacrificing a lot more important things. I hope this will awaken some of you and understand my position.
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