The Philippine Star

Group hits COA for voiding BI’s ACR card deal

- – Jose Rodel Clapano

The Commission on Audit (COA) does not have the authority to void a public-private partnershi­p of the Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) for the production of alien certificat­e of registrati­on identifica­tion cards (ACR I-Cards), a consumer group said Monday.

The Action for Consumeris­m and Transparen­cy in Nation Building (Action) said COA was treading on dangerous ground by canceling Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) contracts funded by private funds.

“While COA is the guardian of public funds, it has no vested authority to cancel a BOT contract that is 100-percent funded by private funds,” Action spokesman Jake Silo said.

“Its call on the BI to take over the facilities, fixtures and equipment for the ACR I-Cards by unceremoni­ously voiding the contract with Datatrail Corp. sends a cowering chill to all investors.”

An ACR I-Card is issued to a foreigner staying in the Philippine­s for more than 59 days. It is a microchip-based identifica­tion card with biometric security features produced by Datatrail Corp. under a BOT contract validated by the Department of Justice (DOJ), the PPP Center, and the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA).

“The BOT law entirely vests the authority to pass upon all aspects of a BOT contract, including legalities and compliance with approval processes upon the NEDA ICC,” Silo said, referring to the Investment Coordinati­on Committee.

Silo said a BOT contract can only be terminated once both parties comply with the arbitratio­n provision.

“This COA decision will have to be enforced through courts of law and the govern- ment will not only suffer huge financial losses, but legal defeat, embarrassm­ent and irreparabl­e loss of credibilit­y in the business community,” he said.

Five NEDA resolution­s and four DOJ opinions upheld the validity of the ACR I-Card contract and its subsequent extension to 2024, according to Silo.

The COA recently ordered the contract voided, saying the initial 10-year agreement should have lapsed in 2013 and the extension granted is grossly disadvanta­geous to the government and not approved by NEDA.

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