The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Philippine­s spotlights antigraft measures to woo US aid

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MANILA: The Philippine­s yesterday defended its graftfight­ing efforts in a bid to convince the US to continue providing developmen­t assistance after an initial five-year grant of US$434 million expired in May last year.

The move comes despite President Rodrigo Duterte’s remark that America’s money could be replaced, after the US government’s Millennium Challenge Corporatio­n last year cited human rights concerns in deferring its vote on aid for Manila.

The Philippine­s fell short of the ‘control of corruption’ target on the MCC’s scorecard for fiscal 2018, which determines a country’s eligibilit­y for assistance.

However, the rating “may not completely reflect the reform initiative­s of the Duterte administra­tion in the area of fighting corruption and good governance,” said Harry Roque, a spokesman for the Philippine president.

Duterte has fired government officials over corruption allegation­s, ordered agencies to open their records to the public, cut red tape and set up a hotline for people to report graft, Roque said in a statement.

“We are hopeful that the MCC board would take into account these initiative­s and see our commitment to further reforms in the areas covered by the compact assistance,” he added.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez also weighed in, saying the president had been ‘relentless in the campaign against corruption in government’.

Duterte ‘cleansed the corruption­plagued’ Bureau of Correction­s, and last month set up an antigraft panel to investigat­e cases against presidenti­al appointees, he added.

Duterte took power on a platform of battling crime, drugs and graft, but is himself being investigat­ed by an independen­t anti-graft body over allegation­s of non-disclosure of wealth when he was mayor of the southern city of Davao.

He raised the prospect of severing ties with Washington after being infuriated by US criticism of his war on drugs, which has claimed more than 3,900 lives since he took office 16 months ago. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Rodrigo Duterte
Rodrigo Duterte

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