The Philippine Star

‘Rody plan threatens independen­ce of ombudsman’

- By JESS DIAZ

President Duterte’s plan to form an independen­t commission to investigat­e alleged corruption in the Office of the Ombudsman threatens the independen­ce of the corruption watchdog, an opposition lawmaker said yesterday.

Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said the constituti­onally guaranteed independen­ce of the ombudsman “will be imperiled by any investigat­ion, much more a partisan inquiry, exerting interferen­ce and pressure on the ombudsman.”

“The purported investigat­ion of the ombudsman is perceived as vindictive­ness and reprisal against the ombudsman for authorizin­g an inquiry into the supposed unexplaine­d wealth of the President and his family,” he said. The President has said he would even order the military to arrest officials in the ombudsman’s office if they don’t cooperate in the planned probe.

The corruption watchdog remained unfazed, saying it could not be threatened.

The ombudsman also confirmed that it has received documents showing the bank transactio­ns of Duterte and members of his family.

Overall Deputy Ombudsman Arthur Carandang was quoted as saying the records showed that over the years, transactio­ns amounted to more than P1 billion.

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV and Magdalo Rep. Gary Ale Central jano had accused the President of allegedly amassing P2 billion in ill-gotten wealth.

Instead of creating a body to investigat­e the ombudsman, Lagman said the President should form an independen­t commission to look into unabated extrajudic­ial killings.

“The formation of a commission to investigat­e the summary killings of drug suspects is in order to secure justice for the victims of human rights violations,” he said.

Lagman said the independen­t body should be authorized to inquire into the causes, motives and possible rewards for summary killings and alleged collusion between police forces and vigilantes, and recommend the prosecutio­n of errant policemen and private citizens.

He urged Duterte to follow the example of the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos, who, faced with accusation­s that he mastermind­ed the airport assassinat­ion of former senator Benigno Aquino Jr., created a commission to investigat­e his critic’s murder.

Or he could learn from his staunch ally, former president and Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who formed two commission­s to look into the grievances of soldiers involved in the Oakwood mutiny and political killings and summary executions, Lagman said.

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