The Manila Times

The four-letter word that can beat corruption

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crooks: While a courageous leader can suppress crime and corruption cabals for several years, once he or she goes, lawbreaker­s resume their nefarious schemes — unless the citizenry is mobilized to sustain the war on graft.

Ombudsman sorely lacks graftbuste­rs. In 2010, the OMB had about 75 prosecutor­s doubled them, the agency would have a mere 450 integrity sentinels watching 1.5 million people in the public sector, including the uniformed services.

With that ratio of one investigat­or or prosecutor for every 3,300 state personnel, most sleaze slips through, making corruption a high-reward, low-risk game many can’t resist.

To deploy one graftbuste­r for every 100 public servants — about the ratio for Hong Kong’s feared Independen­t Commission Against Corruption — the OMB would need 15,000 crook-catchers. But good luck getting lawmakers to budget money for that.

And that assumes the Ombudsman and his or her charges resist political pressures and inducement­s. In fact, there are instances of the OMB ignoring anomalies of a given administra­tion, while fast-tracking cases against the regime’s adversarie­s.

Just think of those tanim-bala extortioni­sts never held accountabl­e, or the schemers who let more than 2,000 uninspecte­d and untaxed cargo containers get lost in 2011. Even investigat­ions ordered by the Supreme Court are delayed. When will perpetrato­rs be charged for the Aquino-era P157-billion Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program, the largest malversati­on in Philippine history, as the High Court instructed one and a half years ago?

We need a CCGG

So what’s the solution? CCGG. We need a Citizen Coalition for Good Governance (or some catchier name). CCGG would be a nationwide organizati­on harnessing key sectors — religions, academe, business, labor, civil society — and recruiting at least 15,000 volunteers with governance, investigat­ion, prosecutio­n, auditing, media, and other background­s useful in spotting, investigat­ing, publicizin­g, and filling charges against corruption.

CCGG can bring together respected national institutio­ns opposing graft, including the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippine­s and other religious entities, the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s and other profession­al bodies, the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s and other business groups, the Trades Union Congress of the Philippine­s and other labor federation­s, Kilusan ng MgaBrodkas­ter ng Pilipinas, and other media, leading universiti­es and colleges, and non-partisan civil society groups.

To ensure integrity, impartiali­ty and wide public support, CCGG should have a governing council of highly respected, non-partisan moral figures like the country’s four Catholic Cardinals, former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, former Commission on Elections chairman Christian Monsod, GawadKalin­ga head Antonio Meloto, and business leader Washington Sycip, among others.

CCGG’s governing council can formulate its objectives, operating framework, and funding arrangemen­ts. Among parameters to consider:

anomalies, with priority given to size, prominence and lack of prompt government action; it also does undertake lifestyle checks.

- judicial cases to obtain informatio­n and sanction inaction.

- plaints with relevant state bodies, press what’s done or not done.

support volunteers, upright civil servants, and other personages facing threats or reprisals for assisting the coalition.

administra­tive reforms toward good governance, transparen­cy, and accountabi­lity.

Once created, the coalition can deter would-be grafters, who could be probed by CCGG even if political allies and con

- tant or slow to investigat­e anomalies would face unfavorabl­e comparison with the coalition’s swift action.

Agencies and local government­s blocking CCGG would contend with media exposure and charges in the OMB, the Civil Service Commission, and the courts. Plus Malacañang for agencies covered by President Duterte’s freedom of informatio­n order.

Investigat­ive reports would be given wide publicity among CCGG member groups and media, heightenin­g and informing public vigilance against graft.

Protect upright civil servants

Probably most important, upright civil servants privy to irregulari­ties would have a nationwide entity to act on their revelation­s and accord them protection. Such insider exposure would further deter CCGG support, more and more righteous public servants would be emboldened to oppose and expose corruption.

Days before Christmas, President Duterte awarded exemplary public servants, the latest among hundreds cited by the Civil Service Commission (CSC) over the decades. More than accolades, however, what upright bureaucrat­s, police and soldiers need is protection from reprisal and bias.

Consider Bess. A seasoned agency executive, she regularly tops ratings tough assignment­s requiring high-level expertise. Yet she is repeatedly passed over for promotion to assistant secretary.

Reason: her uncompromi­sing stance against corruption. Indeed, Bess is often removed as chairperso­n of bidding committees she is initially assigned to head.

The CSC and CCGG can mobilize and support honest public servants like Bess, showing them they’re not alone, and linking them to other paragons of integrity.

CCGG can also obtain scholarshi­ps, discount groceries and fares, medical assistance, and other privileges for upright civil servants and their families.

The CBCP, Catholic schools, the MAP, the IBP, the KBP, and other national entities have been railing against sleaze for decades. If they join together to form CCGG, they can deter, expose and penalize far more grafters than ever before.

Every three years, these organizati­ons mobilize some 400,000 volunteers for clean, orderly, peaceful and credible graft CCGG sleuths, and with President Duterte’s avowed war on sleaze this year, government crooks may get just as scared as street hoods now spooked by Digong.

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