The Philippine Star

NFA ordered to submit documents on P93-M rice sale

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO – With Bella Cariaso, Sheila Crisostomo, Jasper Emmanuel Arcalas

Ombudsman Samuel Martires on Thursday went to the National Food Authority main office in Quezon City to personally serve a subpoena that would compel the agency to submit several documents in connection with the alleged anomalous sale of P93.75 million worth of NFA rice to two traders.

“I personally went to the NFA to obtain the data that we need in our investigat­ion, such as the list of warehouses of milled rice or bigas. Because we cannot guess where these sacks of rice were stored, where they were delivered or where this rice delivered to traders were sourced from,” Martires said over dzBB.

Martires said the requested documents will be crucial to his office’s ongoing investigat­ion of NFA Administra­tor Roderico Bioco and 138 other NFA officials and employees facing administra­tive charges of grave misconduct, gross neglect of duty and conduct prejudicia­l to the best interest of the service.

The charges stemmed from the alleged illegal sale of 75,000 bags of rice, part of the country’s buffer stock, to two traders for a total of P93.75 million.

The ombudsman had earlier ordered the six-month preventive suspension without pay of Bioco and the 138 other NFA officials and employees as it found “strong evidence showing their guilt” of the administra­tive charges.

At a press conference on Monday, Agricultur­e Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. said Bioco and the other officials and employees were already placed under preventive suspension in compliance with the ombudsman’s order.

Laurel said those suspended include NFA assistant administra­tor for operations John Robert Hermano, 12 regional managers, 26 branch managers and 99 warehouse supervisor­s all over the country.

During the Bagong Pilipinas Ngayon briefing, Agricultur­e Assistant Secretary and spokesman Arnel de Mesa said that Laurel already directed NFA officer-in-charge Piolito Santos to prepare all the documents needed by the ombudsman.

“Our Internal Audit Service and the independen­t investigat­ing panel (will assist) so that all the necessary papers will be made available, as well as all the people involved,” De Mesa said.

On Wednesday, the NFA Council appointed Santos, the concurrent NFA assistant administra­tor for finance and administra­tion, as OIC of the agency.

At the same time, De Mesa said that Laurel also tasked Santos to ensure the resumption in the operation of NFA warehouses after the storage facilities were padlocked.

In a separate text message to The STAR, Santos said the NFA main office already complied with the subpoena of the ombudsman and directed field offices to submit the required documents.

“We provided the documents and additional papers will come from the (NFA) branches. We advised field offices to submit today,” Santos told

The STAR.

According to De Mesa, the Department of Agricultur­e will also tap officials of the Commission on Audit as witnesses in the ongoing investigat­ion.

“We need to make sure that the current stocks are intact and there will be proper accounting of new deliveries,” De Mesa added.

Santos said that among his priorities is to ensure the resumption of operations of NFA warehouses.

Martires, meanwhile, said that while some of the NFA rice buffer stocks may still be in the warehouses, this does not automatica­lly mean that they were not illegally sold.

“There may be warehouses that have yet to release the rice, or maybe the traders or buyers have yet to haul the sold items, though, these were already paid,” he said. “We will find out about all of this in our investigat­ion.”

House probe

Speaking at a hearing of the House committee on agricultur­e and food last Thursday, NFA assistant administra­tor for operations Lemuel Pagayunan reaffirmed his allegation that the rice stocks sold were not deteriorat­ing but were treated and fit for human consumptio­n.

He said the dispositio­n of the rice stocks did not undergo public bidding and was not approved by the NFA Council, the agency’s governing board.

“There was no bidding, the quality of rice was good, the rebagging and the resellling price (of the rice) was not appropriat­e,” he told the panel.

The motu proprio inquiry was called based on House Resolution 1611, filed by panel chair and Quezon Rep. Wilfrido Mark Enverga, citing a report of Pagayunan about Bioco’s “improper” sale of some 75,000 bags to “selected rice traders who bought the said stocks at a price much lower than the prevailing price… and sold the same at very much higher prices.”

Enverga moved for the amendment of his resolution, as it turned out that the bags sold were actually 130,000.

The bill stated that NFA is authorized to dispose of rice stocks before the quality of the stocks deteriorat­es and becomes unacceptab­le and unsafe.

 ?? ?? Speaker Martin Romualdez delivers a message during the groundbrea­king for the 20-story Philippine Cancer Center in Quezon City yesterday. Romualdez said the center is not just an ordinary hospital as its goal is to redefine cancer treatment sby integratin­g the latest medical advances and fostering collaborat­ion among specialist­s to provide world-class treatment of cancer patients.
Speaker Martin Romualdez delivers a message during the groundbrea­king for the 20-story Philippine Cancer Center in Quezon City yesterday. Romualdez said the center is not just an ordinary hospital as its goal is to redefine cancer treatment sby integratin­g the latest medical advances and fostering collaborat­ion among specialist­s to provide world-class treatment of cancer patients.

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