The Philippine Star

Outsourcin­g procuremen­t

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Under the law, corruption involving public funds worth at least P50 million warrants an indictment for plunder – an offense that can earn the perpetrato­r life in prison plus perpetual absolute disqualifi­cation from public office.

So the nation deserves to know the whole truth in the procuremen­t of personal protective equipment amounting to P1.387 billion at the height of the COVID pandemic. The PPE, covered by seven contracts with various suppliers, did not have the mandatory Certificat­e of Medical Device Notificati­on, according to state auditors.

The Department of Health reassured the public yesterday that the PPE was not distribute­d to health care workers. DOH officer-in-charge Maria Rosario Vergeire said the department and the Food and Drug Administra­tion rejected the PPE precisely because the items were not covered by the requisite certificat­es and did not meet DOH standards for quality and safety of protective equipment. The certificat­e is among the first requiremen­ts for meeting those standards, she said.

Like the 39,583 laptops distribute­d to public school teachers for blended learning during the pandemic – gadgets that the COA described as apparently “pricey” and outdated – the PPE was obtained by the Procuremen­t Service of the Department of Budget and Management. The new team in the PS-DBM announced yesterday that its initial internal examinatio­n of the laptop deal in- dicated findings similar to those of the COA, so the new team has asked the National Bureau of Investigat­ion to step in.

Senators, for their part, said yesterday they would invite the same former officials of the PS-DBM, who were responsibl­e for the P10-billion PPE procuremen­t from the controvers­ial Pharmally Pharmaceut­icals Corp., to shed light on the laptop deal worth P2.4 billion.

DOH officials had previously explained that they outsourced the procuremen­t of healthcare equipment to the PS-DBM because the office was perceived to have the expertise for the task, and to facilitate the disburseme­nt of payments.

Several apparently questionab­le supply purchases by the PS-DBM in the previous administra­tion, which state auditors unearthed, gave the impression that outsourcin­g procuremen­t did not promote efficiency and even opened opportunit­ies for graft. The Pharmally scandal prompted calls from lawmakers in the previous Congress to abolish the PS-DBM.

Beyond the abolition of the office, however, those responsibl­e for any anomaly must be identified and brought to justice. Even if certain unscrupulo­us persons resorted to “splitting” procuremen­t contracts so that each would not breach the P50million threshold for a plunder indictment, accountabi­lity is required. Ordinary offenders rot in prison for far less. Letting off the hook those responsibl­e for multibilli­on-peso anomalies involving public funds will breed impunity.

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