The solution to the metro rail accidents and the gigantic traffic jam  affecting Manila and nearby locales is a pipe dream. The decrepit mass  transit system will stay the way it is, despite the fact that the  Philippine public sector brags about purchasing the MRT transport  utility for more than One Billion Two Hundred Million United States  Dollars (US$1.2 B) using taxpayers’ money.
On the other hand, the  media hype and the traffic drama arising from the so-called overstocking  of container vans in Manila is just that: part of a telenovela.
The  elite and finest Manila Police District alone, all on its very own, can  solve the problem about the so-called crisis that took the entire  government months and weeks and too many conferences, overt and cloaked,  to solve.
It is a simple problem, ask the Manila Police that holds  the time-honored distinction of being almost all of Asia’s silent  university for solving traffic management problems or any other  traffic-related concerns – were it not for the hidden intentions to  prolong the bull shit about over stocking and causing single vehicle  stalls that create 5-hour or more traffic jams unheard of in the history  of this country. Just because of a simple 1-truck stalling incident.  Not particularly defensible nor justifiable at all, Your Honors.
Supposedly  a gargantuan problem besets the Philippine Mass Rail Transit system  that is one of the sectors dominantly held and controlled by foreign  interests.
What does Anglo-Philippine Holdings mean to you? To the  average rail commuter? What does MRTHI mean to any of us? Or the banks  LBP? DBP? Nothing, obviously, except that they own 100 percent of the  Metro Rail. On the other hand, the government now completely owns and  runs the Light Rail Transit – that is no longer in private hands.
These  entities Anglo-Philippine Holdings, Metro Rail Transit Holdings, Land  Bank of the Philippines, Development Bank of the Philippines and other  closely linked institutions determine the life of every commuter that  steps on board an MRT coach.
For those injured in the recent MRT  mishap at the Pasay Terminal, look for the people behind  Anglo-Philippine Holdings, Metro Rail Transit Holdings, Land Bank of the  Philippines, Development Bank of the Philippines, et al to sue. With  the incumbent regime officials on their side, taking their defense while  at the same time stabbing their backs.
So now the government is  ending the back-stabbing and the enormous shame that goes with it and  claim the MRT as a public sector asset. Remember what they say when a  utility is in public sector hands? Its transactions will reek of  corruption so the government determines to unfollow and unfriend the model of U.S.,  U.K., Canada, Australia, Europe and others in privatizing government  assets.
The regime of the late Madam Corazon Aquino started the  privatization frenzy in the Philippines. This was followed by the  succeeding Philippine presidents since and now Mr. Aquino wants to buy  back the debt to Metro Rail Transit Corporation (MRTC), a subsidiary of  Metro Rail Transit Holdings (MRTH) which in turn is co-owned by  Anglo-Philippine Holdings also peculiarly known as the APO.
What  is in store for the MRT riding commuter? More accidents? Real to  goodness mass casualty incident where a train smashes through a throng  of vehicles and people involving no less than fifty to a hundred dead  and two, three hundred injured?
And all because you can’t buy  newer more functional coaches, ride more people, allow unsafe buses,  jeepneys and shuttle vans to dominate the transport system.
Buses are no longer allowed in city streets in Metro Manila.
But lobby money keeps flowing and they continue to terrorize
the streets of Metro Manila with abandon threatening to kill
at any time with the government always looking the other way.
For  the favored few under this regime, quislings or significant others,  their fortunes will balloon, as in the time of the late Madam Aquino  when all of a real sudden too many shining, brand new abodes kept  springing up in large numbers in exclusive enclaves of the rich and  announced as the trophies of the late Madam’s sycophants, lickspittles  and doormats. Good for them, meanwhile the troubles that await the poor  riding public are one too many.
Railways Incidents
Fourteen  years ago, during the presidency of now Mayor of Manila, Joseph Estrada  the Light Rail Transit (LRT) was subjected to serious and deadly  assault from supposed terrorists. In a series of fatal bombings  coinciding with the commemoration of the martyrdom of Dr. Jose Rizal on December 30, 2000, the most critical being on an LRT coach, twenty two people were killed and more than one hundred were seriously injured. 
While  there were purported arrests made of the perpetrators, up to this day,  the real culprit has not yet been identified and placed behind bars.  Some culprits may even be very successful and honorable today and no  longer qualify as persons of interest.
For now, the incident may  have maimed, wounded, injured only a few recently. Will this change?  Will there be more in the future? Will there also be some foreigners  thrown into the fire so the accidents will become international  incidents? No one know as of now, but it will be a little more clear in  the near future.
It is not difficult to surmise that if the gods get crazy they might just plant bombs in the trains like in the December 30 affair.
Yet this is not the worst part of the story.
Lobby money
There  is big money in keeping the mass railway transit in its fledgling,  skinny, malnourished state. The same regime generating pecuniary  assistance and other gains from visibly cooperating generously and  extremely cordially with the private owners of the MRT on the surface  instead of keeping it in line (note the severely deficient performance  of the maintenance contractor hired under this regime among the other  defects in management) is also the very regime that gets  friends-with-benefits from the lobby of the bus and other public  transport utility companies servicing the same routes as the very aged,  old and feeble Metro Rail – or as it were even the LRT and in some  sense, also the PNR.
The security system of MRT and so with the  other rail operations (LRT, PNR) sucks. Much money goes into skim and  all the add-ons on the third party private security provider contract  are never declared as the very freebies that the contractors brag about  in their technical bid documents.
For the average riding public,  they are not aware that the compulsory restricting ersatz at the  terminals by security personnel are merely going through the motions of  providing security. While useless items are banned from being brought  into the riding platforms, no one is ever certain that the real bootie  of terrorists will be detected and the suspects will be identified.
Can  the security CCTV actually capture distinct images? Or are the freebie  CCTV cameras simply analog pieces that won’t even measure up to cheap  built-in cameras in pirate china phones? Was the MRT recent accident  viewable in the MRT security CCTV video databank or no?
The riding  public is in a lot of trouble riding those death machines. But the  masses are helpless, so they will ride and ride and ride to their end up  to kingdom come.
Tightened knot
Public  Transport Utility companies have been given the marching orders to stay  out of Metro Manila under the Philippine law but this is not happening.
The  lobby by bus and jeepney operators is so palatable such that damned the  riding public, if the mass railway transit system will die, to hell  with the consumers, to hell with the public sector, Buses and Jeepneys will ride their merry way through all over Metro Manila railway routes and kill the mass railway transit system.
Jeepney  accident in Makati City ABC Commercial complex.
In Marikina City nearly  on the same period, 11 people were killed
in a similar jeepney  accident. Nowhere are commuters safe from
these coughing, deadly machines equipped with truck engines.
So  if government itself and its partners in the public utility transport  companies are killing the mass rail transit, we ask again, why will  government purchase the MRT? That’s the Billion Dollar question.
And its sicker than bombing 22 people to death and maiming, wounding more than one hundred others.
More  than Fifty up to nearly Seventy Billion Philippine Pesos will be used  to buy only the MRT, and as a result, the Philippine Government and the  public that owns and finances its humongous expenditures (including DAP,  family full twenty reasons for appointments and regular skim, Cabinet’s  own safe keeping activities, Drilon’s multi million fancy houses,  Congress’ diligent profitable Housekeeping and other shenanigans) will  not even own a single dream railway coach.
With more than Fifty up  to nearly Seventy Billion Pesos, it would be nice to have at least one  coach similar to the bullet train for the public to enjoy riding in –  instead of suffering in those running coffins that have  open-close-open-close viewing windows for the bereaved to see their dead  relatives.
No less than half of the Philippines populations’ one  hundred billion people will be elbowing each other just to ride that one  bullet train coach. Imagine the staggering revenue of servicing fifty  million souls at fifty pesos per ride. (Bullet train ride will not come  cheap, so fifty Philippine Pesos may be charged instead of just more  than ten Philippine Pesos.)
But the bullet train, better be safer than riding in the MRT veritable death traps.
If  you are an MRT riding commuter, in the space of months to more than a  year under this regime you could possibly end up in a real coffin if the  public sector does not get their act together and be more transparent.
Losing for gains
It  is not the lack of political will that the railway system is not being  allowed to grow and therefore with better revenue, to improve its  services dramatically over time.
Despite the fact that the railway  transit coaches are always loaded to the rafters, this is the not the  actual expected captive market for the system. Much of the commuter  market is siphoned off by the secondary public transport utility  services made up of buses, jeepneys, contract point-to-point minivan  shuttle taxis, contract big van shuttles. Many contract point-to-point  shuttle vans are even prowling the streets without licenses to operate issued to them from the government.
Contract fare Mini Van Shuttle figures in accident.
Too many of these utility vehicles are not even licensed
to navigate the streets of Metro Manila or the suburbs.
Thus, the greatest  weaknesses of the Mass Rail Transit is that there are fewer than the  desired passengers it can service, and therefore little justification  for acquiring new coaches.
Ergo, without new coaches, no  definitive growth for the railway service provider, except that the  corporation that owns it, is already assured of money back guarantee by  the government with fifteen percent profit once these owners appear to  lose heart and place their money elsewhere.
For this reason, there  is overload in nearly all coaches during rush hour and this might give a  semblance that it is the real one and only mass transport choice of the  people. It is definitely not.
Clearly the urban rail transport  under both the Phillippine National Railways (PNR) and Light Rail  Transit (LRT) I and II, started projecting sales that in terms of  predicted income appear to be palatable to investors, there has been no  realization of the plan to restrict buses outside the busy streets of  Metro Manila.
When the project Metro Rail Transit (MRT) came off  the drawing board it was launched at a time when there was anticipated  greater losses than its pioneering counterparts. Just because there was  absolutely no niche for the railways commuter services system in the  Philippine transport market, as there is no room for railways cargo  transport in the country.
What was supposed to be the Master Plan,  along with the construction and installation of more railroad lines  beyond the current 3 lines of PNR, LRT I and II and MRT. The original  intention for the Philippine Rail sector was to build a network of more  or less eight (8) rail lines (Lines A - H). Up to this time, only the  three are in functional existence despite too many offers to build the  same -- including building subway lines.
But there is the skim and the lobby funds to seriously think about before allowing the railways transit system to go forward.
Meanwhile,  the regular dude and chick that goes to the train terminal each day and  at limited hours at night and in the early hours of morning, have no  inkling that a few unregular, scheming business people and managers of  the regime are playing gambles and cashing in chips by the billion  dollars simply because the foolish public keeps riding and riding the  train to their possible final journey. They are so clueless they can’t  even think about the best wording for their last will or for a quaint  epitaph should they figure in a sham accident.
Train rams jeepney. This should not happen if jeepneys are plying routes
outside of Metro Manila busy thoroughfares and railway routes.
Themes: 	 Accidents, Future Mishaps,Anglo-Philippine Holdings, bribery, corruption, DAP, dirty politicians, Metro Rail Transit Corporation, illegal public transport