Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Pelaez Sports Center is not private property

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THE local government-run sports facility, Misamis Oriental Integrated Sports Complex (Moisc) in Cagayan de Oro can never be considered a private property, City Mayor Oscar Moreno said Saturday.

Moreno was responding to the recent decision from the Office of the Ombudsman that cleared two public officials from nepotism and graft charges.

These officials were Misamis Oriental Gov. Yevgeny Vincente Emano and his brother-in-law and incumbent provincial board member President Elipe.

The mayor argued that Moisc could not be a private enterprise because it has not been incorporat­ed and “it has no separate personalit­y.”

“It (Moisc) is not a corporatio­n. It’s very basic: a corporatio­n has its own separate identity distinct from the personalit­ies of its owners. But this sports council is not a corporatio­n,” Moreno said.

He said the provincial government is the one running Moisc given that a good portion of the sports facility is owned by it.

“Although there is a council, which includes the city government and the Department of

Education, that does not make it private,” he added.

The mayor, who is also a lawyer, has questioned the Ombudsman’s six-page ruling issued July 27, 2018 and signed by graft investigat­ion and prosecutio­n officers Rosemil Bañaga and Hilde dela Cruz-Likit and deputy Ombudsman for Mindanao Rodolfo Elman.

“The charge of nepotism or unlawful appointmen­t against respondent­s hinged on whether the subject sports center is public in character. The evidence on record, however, do not satisfacto­rily establish this fact,” a part of the Ombudsman’s decision reads.

While the land on which the complex stands belongs to the government, “the records do not point with clear certainty whether it is a government-ran (sic) enterprise,” anti-graft court added.

Moreno was tagged by Emano and Elipe as the brains behind the charges against them, although the case was filed by a certain Ernesto Molina on Sept. 29, 2017, a few months after Emano appointed Elipe as general manager of the Misamis Oriental Integrated Sports Complex (Moisc), sometime in 2016.

The sports complex, located along Velez Street, was jointly managed and operated by the provincial government, city government, and the Department of Education.

Molina, who used to work at city hall, accused Emano and Elipe of committing nepotism since they are relatives by affinity within the second civil degree.

Elipe, former city councilor of Cagayan de Oro, was married to Emano’s sister Nadya Emano-Elipe, a current member of the city council.

Aside from nepotism, the two officials were also charged for violating the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials, Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, Article 244 of the Revised Penal Code (Unlawful Appointmen­ts), malversati­on, grave misconduct, and grave abuse of authority.

In his counter-affidavit, Emano denied committing any of the offenses saying Moisc operates as a private enterprise since 1976, “as such, it has no government accountabl­e forms, not subject to audit by the Commission on Audit, and does not receive funding of any form from the national or local government­s.”

Elipe, in his counter-affidavit, echoed Emano’s defense that the sports center is a private entity as it “has no obligation to remit any of its collection­s to the government nor are its procuremen­ts subject to RA 9184.”

Republic Act 9184 refers to the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act.

“This is the plan of the Moreno camp to get even with his more than 100 graft cases which they blamed and accused me as the mastermind, where in fact his cases are the results of his own actions,” Emano said in a statement.

Moreno is facing numerous graft cases during his terms as former Misamis Oriental governor and his present position as city mayor. He is now on his last term.

“How can it be a privately-owned entity? The land is owned by the government, and it is elementary in land ownership that the owner of the land is also the owner of all the improvemen­ts thereon,” Moreno said, referring to the sports complex. (PNA)

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