Business World

Report tags Aquino, others in Dengvaxia ‘tragedy’

- By Camille A. Aguinaldo

A DRAFT Senate report on the Dengvaxia controvers­y tagged former president Benigno S.C. Aquino III, former health secretary Janette P. Loreto- Garin, and former budget secretary Florencio B. Abad as “primary conspirato­rs” who should be held criminally liable for implementi­ng the P3.5-billion anti-dengue vaccinatio­n program.

“Aquino, Garin, Abad, and other officials are primary conspirato­rs and must be held criminally liable... and must be prosecuted for all the tragedy, damage, and possible deaths resulting from the Dengvaxia mass vaccinatio­n program,” Senator Richard J. Gordon said at Wednesday’s Kapihan sa Senado forum, citing the draft report by the Senate blue-ribbon committee which he heads.

The Senate panel recommende­d the filing of charges against Messrs. Aquino and Abad, Ms. Garin as well as Philippine Children’s Medical Center (PCMC) executive director Julius A. Lecciones for violating the Anti- Graft and Corrupt Practices Act and the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees.

In a statement, Ms. Garin said the draft report, which she described as “full of inaccuraci­es and half truths,” was merely the personal opinion of Mr. Gordon.

“The report is one-sided because he has prejudged the case from the very beginning based on the inputs of vested interest parties who want to control the DoH,” she said.

“My conscience is clear and I am ready to answer any charge that will be filed in the proper forum,” she added.

Mr. Abad, who was also sought for comment, replied in a text message: “I haven’t seen the Committee Report, but as far as I’m concerned there’s absolutely no basis for the recommenda­tion to file graft charges.”

Mr. Aquino has not responded to requests for comment as of this reporting.

For his part, presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry L. Roque, Jr. said Malacañang is awaiting the findings of the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) on the issue.

The draft report also called for civil and criminal charges against French pharmaceut­ical company Sanofi Pasteur for having sold “a defective product” which endangered Filipino children.

Aside from the aforementi­oned ex-officials, several former and incumbent DoH officials involved in the vaccine procuremen­t were also held liable, including former FDA chiefs Kenneth Hartigan- Go and Lourdes Santiago, FDA directors Melody Zamudio and Joyce Ducusin, and Mario Baquilod of DoH’s Disease Prevention and Control Bureau.

Meanwhile, Mr. Gordon cleared former health secretary Paulyn Jean B. Rosell- Ubial of any liability despite expanding the immunizati­on program to Cebu, saying that she was not involved in the vaccine procuremen­t back in 2016.

He said the draft report would be signed by members of the committee and later presented to the plenary once Congress resumes session in May.

Top officials of the previous administra­tion committed technical malversati­on for funding the Dengvaxia procuremen­t without Congress appropriat­ions, according to the draft report.

AQUINO’S ‘GREATEST SIN’

It concluded that Mr. Aquino was guilty of misfeasanc­e, malfeasanc­e, nonfeasanc­e for approving the mass immunizati­on program while deliberate­ly refusing to heed warnings about the vaccine use.

Mr. Aquino’s appointmen­t of Ms. Garin, who came from a political family, as Secretary of the Department of Health (DoH) in 2015 was also questioned.

“This appointmen­t, an act of patronage politics, bad as it already was, was worsened by enfeebling agencies in the DOH that led to regulatory capture,” it stated.

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