Alfredo Lim

Philippine politician
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Quick Facts
Born:
December 21, 1929, Manila, Philippines
Died:
August 8, 2020, Manila (aged 90)

Alfredo Lim (born December 21, 1929, Manila, Philippines—died August 8, 2020, Manila) was a Philippine politician who rose from poverty to become the most heavily decorated police officer in Manila’s history, the mayor of Manila (1992–98, 2007–13), and a senator (2004–07) in the Philippine government.

Lim was an orphan from a Manila slum. He studied at the University of the East, earning a bachelor’s degree in business administration in 1951 and a bachelor of law degree in 1963. He earned a master’s degree in national security administration from the National Defense College of the Philippines in 1981.

Lim joined the police force in 1951. In the years that followed, he garnered a notable collection of some 40 medals and 400 commendations. He served as superintendent of the Philippine National Police Academy (1984–85) and was named director of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) in 1989, stepping down in 1992. Along the way, Lim gained a reputation for quick justice. As head of the NBI he ordered (1990) the arrest of a notorious Manila drug lord, who was shot dead while being escorted to police headquarters (allegedly after he reached for one of his captors’ guns).

Lim won against six opponents in Manila’s March 1992 mayoral election. He faced a daunting mandate to clean up the streets of the capital, and he promised to do his best to eradicate crime, smut, and corruption from the city. After his election, the controversial mayor came to be viewed as a restorer of peace and justice but also as a strong-arm enforcer who was relentless in the pursuit of his goals.

Lim carried his reputation for discipline and swift retribution into the mayor’s office; jaywalkers commonly stood in cages on the side of the street for up to two hours, as did offenders of the city’s new antilittering and antismoking laws. Lim declared bars, nightclubs, massage parlours, and "love motels" illegal and gave owners a June 30, 1993, deadline to leave the city. While many relocated outside city limits, others stood their ground, and some 250 owners of the businesses that Lim had closed filed lawsuits and obtained restraining orders.

The Lim administration also attacked such problems as garbage disposal, traffic jams, and flood control. In addition to tough antilittering laws and community street washings, Lim requested every homemaker and storekeeper to plant a tree. To solve the problem of traffic congestion, he banned provincial buses from the city. The traffic improved, though the bus operators sued; the courts sided with the mayor. For flood prevention Lim proposed a new system of ground-level canals. He also favoured penalizing the city’s 400,000 squatters, saying, "Slums are not necessarily the result of poverty, but the offshoot of laxity in law enforcement." Lim proposed creating a 3,000-member police unit, recruited and trained by the mayor’s office, to augment the existing police force. The new officers would be college graduates and receive the highest pay in the country. The plan was abandoned, however, because it would destandardize officer pay.

Lim won reelection by a wide margin in 1995 and served until 1998. In that year he made an unsuccessful run for president of the Philippines as the Liberal Party candidate, losing to Joseph Estrada. From 1998 to 2000 he was secretary of interior and local government in Estrada’s cabinet, and he served in the Philippine Senate from 2004 to 2007. Lim was again elected mayor of Manila in the 2007 elections, resigning from the Senate in order to take office. In his valedictory speech to the Senate he made it clear that he intended to resume his anticorruption and anticrime efforts in his new mayoral term. Shortly after Lim was reelected in 2010, a former police officer hijacked a tour bus in Manila, and eight of the hostages were killed, as was the perpetrator. Lim’s handling of the crisis subsequently drew criticism from investigators. In 2013 he was defeated by Estrada in his bid for another term as mayor, but two years later he announced that he would be running in the 2016 elections. His primary opponent was again Estrada, who narrowly won reelection. Lim staged another unsuccessful bid in 2019. The following year he died from COVID-19.

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