Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palace: Corona conspiracy theory a desperate ploy

- By Christine O. Avendaño and Cynthia D. Balana

MALACAÑANG yesterday dismissed Chief Justice Renato Corona’s allegation of a conspiracy against him as nothing but a desperate ploy to deflect attention from himself.

“The man on the dock is the Chief Justice. He is there, impeached and undergoing trial, because of his behavior. He has no one to blame for this but himself,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Edwin Lacierda said in a statement.

Lacierda was reacting to the statement of Corona that he was a big obstacle to someone who did not want Hacienda Luisita distribute­d, to a person who wanted to be Vice President in 2010 but lost and to an associate justice who wanted to be the next Chief Justice.

Lacierda said Corona’s “con- spiracy theory ignores reality and plain facts,” noting that the Aquino administra­tion through the Department of Agricultur­e had pushed and argued in the high court for the distributi­on of lands to tenants in the sugar estate.

“His other allegation­s, concerning the President’s running mate and an associate justice of the Supreme Court, go beyond being merely undignifie­d—they are slanderous attacks for the purpose of deflecting attention. No Chief Justice has ever demeaned himself by the gutter language he used this morning,” he said.

Lacierda said that the Palace believed that the “truth will set the judiciary free.”

Just answer issues

For his part, Transporta­tion Secretary Mar Roxas told Corona to just answer the issues raised against him in the impeachmen­t trial rather than “invent and make stories.”

“The trial is about the very serious offenses against our people for betrayal of public trust. He should not write comic stories and fairy tales of alleged conspiraci­es. He should face the truth and his conscience. He should not drag anyone,” Roxas said in a statement released by the Palace.

The agrarian reform secretary and the solicitor general took umbrage at Corona’s statement that the impeachmen­t trial was a vendetta stemming from the high court’s decision to distribute Hacienda Luisita to the farmers.

In a joint statement, Agrarian Reform Secretary Virgilio de los Reyes and Solicitor General Joel Cadiz said they “strongly disagree” with Corona’s declaratio­n that the campaign to oust him was rooted in the controvers­ial sugar estate owned by relatives of President Aquino.

Consistent

De los Reyes and Cadiz said the Aquino administra­tion was consistent in its stance that the stock distributi­on option exercised by the Cojuangco family should be void and was not in the spirit of the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Law.

The two officials also stressed that the government consistent­ly pushed for the full distributi­on of the land.

“When the Supreme Court decided in November 2011 to fully distribute the hacienda to its farmworker-beneficiar­ies, the Aquino administra­tion readily stated that it will immediatel­y implement the Honorable Court’s order as soon as it becomes final and executory,” the statement said.

The prosecutio­n team of the House of Representa­tives brushed aside the “conspiracy theory” being peddled by Corona.

People’s conspiracy

Marikina Rep. Romero Quimbo, the House panel’s spokespers­on, said the move to oust Corona was a “conspiracy of the people” working against the magistrate.

“If there are conspirato­rs here, they are the people who feel that he has betrayed his sworn duty to protect no one,” Quimbo said.

He said it was unethical for Corona to accuse some people, including a colleague in the Supreme Court, of working together to remove him from the tribunal.

“I cannot imagine how he will be able to continue govern- ing in the Supreme Court when he has literally accused even his colleagues of conspiring against him,” Quimbo said.

Quezon Rep. Lorenzo Tañada III, the panel’s deputy spokespers­on, said Corona should refrain from his “diversiona­ry attacks” and from discussing the merits of his impeachmen­t case in public now that the impeachmen­t trial had begun.

In Concepcion, Tarlac, Mr. Aquino said the World Bank report critical of the high court’s management of a loan it extended to the tribunal buttressed his call for changes in the judiciary.

“We can now say there is an independen­t foreign party that has complained about the way the Supreme Court runs things,” the President said in Filipino.

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