The Philippine Star

Bangayan, 5 others face raps over rice cartel

- By EVELYN MACAIRAN – With Paolo Romero, Louise Maureen Simeon

The Department of Justice (DOJ) yesterday indicted suspected rice smuggler Davidson Bangayan, alias David Tan, and five others for rice trade monopoly.

In a resolution dated Nov. 5, DOJ Senior Deputy State Prosecutor Miguel Gudio Jr. said they found probable cause to indict Bangayan for violation of Paragraph 3, Article 186 of the Revised Penal Code, which penalizes trade monopoly with up to six years in prison plus fines.

The other respondent­s were Elizabeth Faustino, David Lim, Judilyne Lim, Eleanor Rodriguez and Leah Echeveria.

The charges against Bangayan and the other respondent­s stemmed from the complaint filed last year by the National Bureau of Investigat­ion AntiGraft Division.

The respondent­s allegedly used farmers’ organizati­ons as their dummies in the bidding of rice importatio­ns conducted by the National Food Authority (NFA).

They were tagged for allegedly “combining with and employing the farmers’ cooperativ­es to participat­e in the bidding of rice importatio­ns with the intention of manipulati­ng and increasing the market price of the rice supply.”

The DOJ dismissed the complaint against the respondent­s for violation of Republic Act 9184 or the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act, saying that bidding for rice importatio­ns is not covered by the law as it only applies to procuremen­t of infrastruc­ture, projects, goods and consulting services by government offices.

Respondent­s Eugene Pioquinto, Mary Joyce Lim, Jason Colocado, Michael Villanueva, Denis Gonzales, Willy Sy, Sandra Lim, Gil Calipayan and Inigo Espiritu were cleared of all charges.

Sen. Joseph Victor Ejercito welcomed the DOJ’s move to prosecute Bangayan.

“At last, a big fish will be prosecuted under the Anti Agricultur­al Smuggling Law,” Ejercito, author of Republic Act 10845, said.

Large-scale agricultur­al smuggling is declared as economic sabotage with a maximum penalty of life in prison under the law enacted in 2016.

Rice inventory

Meanwhile, the country’s rice inventory has improved after 10 months of consecutiv­e declines, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.

Latest data from the PSA showed that the total rice inventory as of October stood at 1.59 million metric tons, 36 percent higher than the previous month’s level of 1.17 million MT.

The figure is still 18 percent below last year’s volume stock of 1.94 million MT.

The PSA did not specify the number of days that the stock inventory of Filipinos’ main staple will be sufficient for.

But based on the average daily consumptio­n of Filipinos of 32,000 MT, the current inventory is sufficient for 50 days.

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