The Freeman

No more redactions on acquisitio­n cost of properties on SALN — Palace

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MANILA — Malacañang yesterday said there would be no more redactions in the future on certain details on the Cabinet’s wealth declaratio­ns such as data pertaining to acquisitio­n costs of personal and real properties.

This was after the Philippine Center for Investigat­ive Journalism recently reported that copies of the Cabinet’s Statement of Assets, Liabilitie­s and Net Worth released by the Palace were “invariably outstandin­g” for the blacked out details.

“If you check again, they will give you the full,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Ernesto Abella said in a press briefing.

“It (acquisitio­n costs of personal and real properties) will show if requested,” Abella added.

The Palace earlier said the redactions were made to shield Cabinet members from harassment, arguing that the officials “still have their right to privacy” under the Data Privacy Act.

But according to National Privacy Commission Deputy Commission­er Ivy Patdu, who also took part in the news briefing, the law invoked by the Palace does not spare government officials from “legitimate concerns about public interest.”

“It is easy to claim that the privacy becomes an obstacle to transparen­cy and public accountabi­lity,” Patdu said, adding that acquisitio­n costs of personal and real properties are not sensitive informatio­n.

“So if we look at the law, the SALN law, for instance, what [are] the required fields? Real property, assets, liabilitie­s and net worth. Even if you look at these through the Data Privacy Act, these are not sensitive personal informatio­n,” she explained.

Making good on his promise of transparen­cy, President Rodrigo Duterte signed in July last year a landmark order on freedom of informatio­n or FOI that would require all government offices under the executive branch to disclose details of their transactio­ns. The order was signed after several congresses failed to pass an FOI law, which advocates said is a requiremen­t for good governance.

The redactions on the SALN of top officials of Duterte, however, were seen as a practice that reverses the spirit of the FOI. Perceived misreprese­ntations on SALNs were used to impeach Chief Justice Renato Corona in 2012 and oust former president Joseph Estrada. It is also the subject of a pending impeachmen­t complaint at Congress against current Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno.

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