The Philippine Star

Trillanes: Gordon report a cover-up

- By MARVIN SY

The findings of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee on the issue of corruption in the Bureau of Customs (BOC) were meant to cover up for President Duterte and his family, Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV said yesterday.

Trillanes did not sign the draft committee report, which was prepared by panel chairman Sen. Richard Gordon. In the report, the committee also recommende­d an overhaul of the BOC to stamp out corruption in the agency.

Explaining his refusal to sign the report, Trillanes said he found it unacceptab­le that the President’s son, Davao City Vice Mayor Paolo Duterte, and son-in-law Manases Carpio were cleared of involvemen­t in the smuggling of P6.4 billion worth of shabu from China.

Trillanes remains convinced that Vice Mayor Duterte and Carpio were behind the shipment that managed to slip past the BOC and landed in a warehouse in Valenzuela City.

“Suspected drug pushers and users are wantonly killed in the streets while the people behind the illegal drug smuggling are merely subjected to a lifestyle check. This is a clear case of a cover-up by Senator Gordon to please his political master,” Trillanes said.

“If Senator Gordon is really serious in getting to the bottom of this mess, then he shouldn’t terminate the hearing and clear Paolo Duterte of involvemen­t until Nanie Cabato-Coronacion a.k.a. Tita Nanie is located,” he added.

In the committee report, it was noted that Duterte and Carpio were invited to attend one of the hearings upon the insistence of Trillanes.

“Although they were summoned on the basis of hearsay, we sought to accommodat­e the importunin­g of Senator Trillanes,” the report stated.

“The committee wanted to show likewise that there are no sacred cows exempted from our processes, especially involving issues that are very serious in nature: in this circumstan­ce, entry of illicit drugs through the Bureau of Customs,” it added.

The committee recommende­d that the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) conduct a lifestyle check on Duterte and Carpio. Trillanes vowed to prevent the report from getting adopted in the plenary.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson said he has not yet signed the report as he has “serious reservatio­ns” about the findings.

“Chairman Gordon said he will make an addendum once he receives my comments. Kulang. Wanting. Findings and recommenda­tions are not consistent with what was discussed, not only during the hearings, but in the committee report itself,” Lacson said.

Apart from the shabu shipment from China, the Blue Ribbon committee also took up in the hearing Lacson’s privilege speech dealing with corruption within the BOC.

Overhaul

In Gordon’s report, the committee also pushed for an overhaul of the BOC.

The panel found several officials of the BOC liable for the irregulari­ties, including its former head Nicanor Faeldon.

At the center of it all is the so-called “tara” system, or payment of grease money to facilitate the release of cargo, including those containing contraband.

Based on estimates of the committee, the tara for this year has already reached P98.5 billion, which ended up in the pockets of BOC officials and employees.

According to the report, the government’s efforts to generate additional revenue to finance its ambitious infrastruc­ture program would have gotten a huge boost had the BOC conducted an “honest to goodness assessment of cargo, completely obliterati­ng the benchmarki­ng at the BOC.”

“The tara system, as discovered by this committee, must be utterly dismantled and never allowed to come into existence again,” the committee stated.

The committee found gross negligence on the part of Faeldon, who has denied involvemen­t in irregulari­ty but has been detained by the Senate for refusing to attend the panel’s hearings on the issue.

“He imposed a military structure which was good, but the concomitan­t diligence and competence were sorely lacking. We, therefore, hold him responsibl­e as specified above,” the committee said, referring to Faeldon.

“He recommende­d the hiring of (Gerardo) Gambala as deputy commission­er for management informatio­n system and technology. He too was grossly negligent and therefore his appointmen­t and competence are Faeldon’s direct responsibi­lity,” it added.

The committee recommende­d that all the officers of the BOC’s Command Center, headed by Gambala, resign. Gambala resigned yesterday.

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