Manila Bulletin

VACC charges versus Lopez, HARI ‘baseless, pure harassment’ – Agudo

- MARIA FE PEREZ AGUDO

In a statement, Hyundai Automotive Resources, Inc. said yesterday accusation­s of plunder, smuggling and estafa hurled by the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) against the company, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez, and several others are baseless and “pure and simple harassment.”

HARI President and CEO Maria Fe Perez Agudo said there is nothing irregular with the Board of Investment­s’ (BOI) action of reconsider­ing its earlier decision of canceling, and instead suspending, HARI’s assembly license under government’s Motor Vehicle Developmen­t Program (MVDP) due to alleged inadequacy (not absence) of painting and welding activities in its assembly process.

“We sought reconsider­ation of BOI’s original decision to cancel our MVDP license as matter of right and as allowed by BOI rules,” Agudo said. She stressed that HARI’s motion for reconsider­ation and reinvestig­ation were all part of due process. “Whatever the final decision of BOI was based on lawful deliberati­ons even if we believe we are the victim, not a conspirato­r as VACC alleges,” she added. Acting on unnamed sources, the BOI had earlier accused HARI of violating its MVDP license, EO 156 in particular. Aside from insisting that importatio­n of car parts should be on a CKD basis, it also concluded – after an ocular inspection of HARI’s assembly plant in Sta. Rosa, Laguna – that the firm’s assembly process had “zero” welding and painting activities.

Insisting that it has the required activities, HARI requested for a rein- spection. The joint ocular inspection confirmed there were indeed painting and welding activities, but BOI still insisted that these were not in the quantity and scope required by “industry standards.”

In its MR, HARI also raised the following defenses:

•EO 156 which prescribed that importatio­n of car parts must only be on CKD basis has been repealed/amended by EO 877-A. The latter allowed the importatio­n of KD parts, a common practice in countries with similar KD assembly programs in the region;

All of HARI’s importatio­ns were approved by the BOI and covered by Electronic Certificat­es of Authority to Import (ECAIs) “KD parts.” More importantl­y, BOC officials confirmed, “under oath,” during a recent congressio­nal hearing, that HARI’s importatio­ns at the Port of Batangas were indeed KD parts, not CBUs or Completely Built Units;

•There are no specific guidelines on the quantity and scope of painting and welding activities required under MVDP. In the absence of such clear guidelines, there can be no violation to speak of; and

•In its initial decision, BOI required HARI to refund the VAT and Customs Duty waived under MVDP. BOI pegged the amount at R1.1-billion but nowhere in its ruling did it explain or demonstrat­e how it arrived at said figure.

“Afterwards, the BOI, realizing the merits of HARI’s assertions, resolved to suspend, instead of cancel, our assembly license for six months. Acknowledg­ing the legal and administra­tive competence of the Bureau of Customs, BoI also passed on to the bureau the task of computing the duty and tax differenti­al,” Agudo pointed out.

While HARI originally planned to appeal BoI’s decision to the Court of Appeals on substantia­l legal grounds, it opted to abide by the ruling for practical and long term business considerat­ions. As proof of good faith, she said HARI has been introducin­g additional painting and welding activities and would refund the VAT and duty differenti­al being computed by BOC, as preconditi­ons for the lifting of its MVDP suspension.

Unfazed by VACC’s complaint, Agudo said the company and its executives are ready to answer all charges at the proper time and forum.

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