Mindanao Times

Rody’s hands tied by ‘due process’ vs corruption, say

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MANILA -- Even if President Rodrigo Duterte wants to get rid of crooked public officials as quickly as possible, Malacañang on Monday said due process is making the fight against corruption a “struggle” for his administra­tion.

Presidenti­al Spokespers­on Salvador Panelo made this remark after the Philippine­s fell by 14 notches in the 2019 Corruption Perception­s Index (CPI), ranking 113th out of 180 countries from 99th in 2018.

Panelo said the decline in the CPI could prod Duterte and his administra­tion to fire more corrupt public officials.

“It will goad us to sack more corrupt officials. Sack, S-A-C-K. Provided of course there is evidence to show that they are,” Panelo said in a Palace briefing.

He admitted that gathering documentar­y and testimonia­l evidence to fire these corrupt public officials made the process a tedious one as many witnesses were afraid to testify.

“We are in fact struggling because the President’s hands are tied by the due process clause of the Constituti­on,” he said.

Because not all public officials were presidenti­al appointees, Panelo said it was difficult for the President to just “dismiss all of them outright”.

“You need to file charges against them, and you need evidence to back your complaint,” Panelo said.

He, however, denied critics and detractors saying that the administra­tion’s fight against corruption is a failure.

“I don’t think so because precisely we’ve been fighting corruption. And as we have seen, the President has been firing top government officials and complains against erring—government officials have been

charged in the Ombudsman and in the courts,” Panelo said.

On Sunday the Presidenti­al Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC) chair Dante Jimenez belied reports that the Philippine­s is becoming a “more corrupt” state under Duterte’s leadership.

Jimenez’s statement was in response to the Jan. 24 article published by American business magazine Forbes, which claims that the Philippine­s is turning into a “more corrupt and less democratic state”.

Despite the decline in the Philippine­s’ CPI, Duterte has repeatedly voiced out his promise to fire public officials linked to even “a whiff” of corruption.

He also ordered to correct all existing contracts with the private sector found to be disadvanta­geous to the government and the Filipino people.

According to the 2019 CPI, the Philippine­s tied with five other countries namely El Salvador, Kazakhstan, Nepal, Eswatini, and Zambia.

Asia Pacific, where the Philippine­s is a part of, has a regional average score of 45, it added.

It noted that the Asia Pacific region “hasn’t witnessed substantia­l progress in anticorrup­tion efforts or results”.

The CPI, a rating of global anti-corruption watchdog Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, uses a scale of zero to 100, where zero is “highly corrupt” and 100 is “very clean”.

It ranks countries by their perceived levels of public sector corruption. (PNA)

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