Daily Tribune (Philippines)

CA move created conflict of interest

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“CoA has been involved in landmark cases that will haunt the audit institutio­n for its failure to take action where that action was necessary to preclude an injustice.

Conflict of interest rendered the Commission on Audit an inutile and shameful institutio­n. CoA chief auditors, instead of stopping lawmakers from receiving the unconstitu­tional DAP, allowed them because of utang na loob (debt of gratitude) for confirming their appointmen­ts.

It can be officially chronicled that the confirmati­on of the appointmen­ts of Grace Pulido Tan and Heidi Mendoza as CoA chairman and commission­er, respective­ly, brought to this country the worst form of conflict of interest, that assaulted the integrity of the audit institutio­n, ravaged and dishonored traditions, smeared important names, and caused irreparabl­e damage and losses to funds and property by the trillion.

A veritable example was CoA’s shameful participat­ion in the impeachmen­t trial of Corona Renato Corona and the unaudited DAP money used to bribe the senators and congressme­n to convict an innocent Corona.

Because of conflict of interest, there was more scratching of each other’s backs between the senators and the auditors at the height of the DAP and PDAF affairs. There was intimacy between the lawmakers receiving the unconstitu­tional pork barrel in bliss, and the slumbering auditors who refused to perform their constituti­onal duties because of their debt of gratitude.

The rank and file of the audit commission; finance, accounting, and law practition­ers, including learned men of the academe, keenly observing the proceeding­s of the Commission on Appointmen­ts, are hoping that the supreme legislativ­e body will carefully and properly screen the appointmen­t of the new CoA chairman to see that what happened to the Commission on Audit during the last 10 years will not happen again.

The policy of CoA was in complete disarray. At no other time in the history of CoA had its leadership been placed in such an embarrassi­ng and difficult situation, so tainted with the perception of incompeten­ce, bias, and partiality as it had been during that period.

At least P2 trillion was lost because of huge malfeasanc­e in financial transactio­ns characteri­zed, for example as fully confirmed by the Supreme Court, the failure of CoA to audit P144 billion in DAP money that was allowed to pass despite its unconstitu­tionality, under the Doctrine of Operative Fact.

The Commission Proper from 2011 to 2021 has left huge backlogs of unacted and unresolved cases under appeal coming from all regions of the country, the result of its nonfeasanc­e due to conflict of interest.

The rank and file are complainin­g. The commission­er is not doing his job the way a profession­al must. He is not setting an example in the care and use of government property, including those owned by CoA. And he is signing the Commission en banc decision without reading it. This behavior could not have happened if the Commission on Appointmen­ts were careful and strict in their questions and answers during the deliberati­ons on the nominee’s confirmati­on.

CoA has been involved in landmark cases that will haunt the audit institutio­n for its failure to take action where that action was necessary to preclude an injustice.

A landmark case is a court case that must be studied because it has historical and legal significan­ce. The most significan­t cases are those that have had a lasting effect on the applicatio­n of certain laws, often concerning individual rights and liberties.

There are quite a number of these landmark cases awaiting final action and decision, plus a huge number of backlogs of unacted and tunresolve­d cases under appeal from Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. The worried and critical rank and file are wondering how the new audit chief could cope with the heavy unfinished business when he is known to be more of a politician than a hardworkin­g office worker who will dedicate his time to audit work.

“There was intimacy between the lawmakers receiving the unconstitu­tional pork barrel in bliss, and the slumbering auditors who refused to perform their constituti­onal duties because of their debt of gratitude.

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