The Philippine Star

After suing Sumitomo, gov’t hiring it for MRT-3

- JARIUS BONDOC

The Dept. of Transporta­tion is suing Japanese giant Sumitomo Corp. for alleged faulty maintenanc­e of the MRT-3. Yet it is borrowing hundreds of millions of dollars from Japan to hire Sumitomo to rehabilita­te the commuter railway.

DOTr accuses Sumitomo of unfulfille­d upkeep obligation­s. Supposedly the Japanese firm failed to maintain the tracks and stinted on rail parts. This allegedly led to the deteriorat­ion of MRT-3 trains, power supply, signaling, and stations.

Procuremen­t laws require agencies to blacklist contractor­s that fail to deliver the agreed goods or services. Such contractor­s may no longer deal even with other agencies. Yet DOTr, while suing Sumitomo, repeatedly is declaring to hire it for much-needed repair of MRT-3.

DOTr in its lawsuit is demanding monetary recompense for Sumitomo’s maintenanc­e breaches. At the same time, it will make Filipinos repay the Japan loan it is taking out to hire that firm.

DOTr’s duplicity can jeopardize its ongoing loan negotiatio­ns with the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency. JICA and Sumitomo engineers presently are inspecting the MRT-3 to determine the extent of needed repairs. In three months they are to advise whether to lend to DOTr.

Any more delay in rehab would worsen MRT-3’s dilapidati­on. Ever since DOTr took over the railway’s daily upkeep from a Filipino group in Nov. 2017, the number of trains have dwindled. Sixteen three-coach trains used to run at ten-minute intervals on peak hours, serving 420,000 riders per day. Now it’s down to eight to ten trains at 15 minutes’ headway, taking in only 300,000 daily passengers.

Trains, power supply, and signaling break down twice to thrice a day, like under the old servicer. Hundreds of passengers perilously are offloaded on the tracks, to trudge to the nearest station. Tens of thousands of commuters along the 17-km line are inconvenie­nced. Traffic has worsened not only on E. delos Santos Avenue that MRT-3 traverses, but in the entire megalopoli­s.

The other week smoke from under a seat filled up a jampacked coach, panicking passengers. MRT-3 managers belittled the incident, falsely claiming there was no fire or spark. Firemen water-hosed the train, drenching the electrical­s, further reducing the coaches in service.

DOTr’s complaint against Sumitomo’s poor maintenanc­e work is little known in the Philippine­s. It was filed in Singapore by DOTr Sec. Joseph Abaya on May 31, 2016, a month before leaving office.

Present Sec. Arthur Tugade is con- tinuing the case. DOTr pays tens of millions of dollars, or hundreds of millions of pesos, for foreign lawyers. The legal fees are taken from Filipino taxpayers, who will also shoulder the loan from Japan to hire Sumitomo.

The case is in arbitratio­n at the United Nations Commission on Internatio­nal Trade Law, based in the island-state. Proceeding­s of the UN-CITL are strictly confidenti­al. It is talked about only in whispers at DOTr.

Abaya filed the complaint against the Metro Rail Transit Corp., private ownerbuild­er of MRT-3. But he blamed mainly Sumitomo for the maintenanc­e breaches, since MRTC hired the Japanese for the railway upkeep for 12 years, 2000-2012. In pass-through arrangemen­t, DOTr directly paid Sumitomo.

In press statements U-Sec. for Railways Timothy John Batan stresses the hiring of Sumitomo as justificat­ion for the Japan rehab loan. He says that Sumitomo, with partner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, had designed, constructe­d, and equipped the commuter railway in 1997-2000, then maintained it in the subsequent 12 years. The Japanese giant

Under procuremen­t laws, a non-performing contractor must be blackliste­d from any more contracts.

is well-versed with MRT-3 needs, he also defends the hiring.

Batan has been with DOTr, formerly DOTC (Dept. of Transport and Communicat­ions), since 2012. He was assistant of USec. Rene Limcaoco, Abaya’s deputy for legal and operations. Batan knows about the Singapore arbitratio­n against Sumitomo, insiders say, and of talks with JICA to hire it.

Sources say Abaya revived the arbitratio­n at the 11th hour to cover his tracks. He and predecesso­r Mar Roxas had caused Sumitomo’s sudden removal in Oct. 2012. It was replaced by a series of unqualifie­d, inept, undercapit­alized outfits: PH Trams, then Global Epcom, and lastly Busan Universal Railway Inc. (BURI). Behind all three were Liberal Party mates of Abaya and Roxas, who served as LP presidents.

At least P3.5 billion was paid to the three LP companies from 2012 to 2017. They only took the money but did not maintain MRT-3, overhaul the trains, or buy necessary parts and components. Insiders say they even used up $17 million (P850 million) in parts and equipment left behind by Sumitomo in 2012.

Records show there were glitches during Sumitomo’s time, but minor and infrequent compared to the LP contractor­s and the present. It fielded up to 21 trains at five-minute intervals, serving 560,000 riders. Although MRTC got Sumitomo under a build-lease-transfer scheme, DOTr directly paid the Japanese $1.2 million to $1.4 million a month. In suing MRTC, Abaya in effect also sued the government, which in 2011, had taken over ten of its 15 board seats.

Sumitomo was the single point of responsibi­lity to repair all subsystems and procure all parts. It supposedly charged little but staked its reputation in MRT-3 in order to bag other train contracts in Asia and America.

* * * My piece last Wed. correctly was titled “Dengvaxia vaccinees need ‘lifetime watch’.” It was about public health specialist­s advocating lifelong monitoring of children harmfully injected with the vaccine. In the online edition “vaccinees” was altered to “vaccines,” so the title lost sense. Sorry for that.

* * * Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882AM).

Gotcha archives on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/ Jarius-Bondoc/1376602159­218459, or The STAR website http:// www.philstar.com/author/Jarius%20Bondoc/GOTCHA

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