The Philippine Star

Ombudsman should be open to probe – Palace

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ

Malacañang yesterday stood pat on President Duterte’s plans to investigat­e and rid the Office of the Ombudsman of its corrupt officials.

The ombudsman, however, maintained it will not be intimidate­d by Duterte’s threats to create a commission to look into anomalies at the anti-graft agency.

“The Office of the Ombudsman should be open to any probe that would check into alleged corrupt practices amongst its officials and employees to underscore that there are no sacred cows in the government,” presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella said.

Duterte turned the tables on the ombudsman after it launched a fact-finding investigat­ion into his and his family’s bank accounts, which stemmed from the exposés of Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV.

“We recognize that the Office of the Ombudsman has the constituti­onal duty to probe erring government officials. As the protector of the people, the Office of the Ombudsman is expected to act promptly on complaints filed against officers or employees of the government,” Abella said.

Abella then echoed Duterte’s tirades, questionin­g the integrity of the officials based on reports that some accepted bribes from local officials in exchange for the dismissal of charges against them.

“The sad reality, however, is that the Office of the Ombudsman is not exempt from allegation­s of corruption, which the President said need to be investigat­ed,” Abella said.

In a recorded interview aired over PTV-4 last Friday, Duterte said he will use his executive powers to create a commission to conduct an inquiry into the reports of bribery and other corruption issues against the ombudsman.

Duterte added he will ask the courts to issue subpoena to force the individual­s who will be subject of the inquiry to cooperate with the commission.

Duterte said he himself was a victim of corruption at the agency when it filed charges against him based on newspaper clippings, which were eventually reversed by a higher court.

“There are things in life that as a matter of principle I cannot accept. There is a vacuum and nobody can investigat­e you, you keep on sending, I will answer you,” Duterte said.

“But at the end of the day, after my presidency, you cannot find something against me… I will slap your documents to your face,” he said.

Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III said the President was well within his rights to create a commission to investigat­e the alleged corrupt activities of the ombudsman.

Pimentel said the commission’s work would be purely fact-finding and whatever evidence it gathers could be used later on in an impeachmen­t complaint against Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, if there are sufficient grounds to support this.

He said that the executive branch could always conduct the necessary investigat­ions especially if, such as this particular instance, the Office of the Ombudsman, as the institutio­n in charge of investigat­ing graft and corrupt acts in government, is the one involved.

It is then up to the legislativ­e branch to act on these findings to discipline the ombudsman through the impeachmen­t process.

Pimentel said it was unfair for the critics of the President to say that he is onion-skinned in acting out against the ombudsman.

He said the President is used to all kinds of criticisms and attacks as a long-time local chief executive so there is nothing being done against him that he is not used to at all.

Sen. Risa Hontiveros, on the other hand, said the move of the President does not look good for the highest office of the land to be conducting an investigat­ion into a constituti­onal body.

She aired her concern about the democratic institutio­ns of the country being under duress because of an overreachi­ng executive branch.

Hontiveros encouraged all Filipinos to use the example of the ombudsman in refusing to be intimidate­d by the President and to continue standing up for what is right.

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Carpio-Morales

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