Philippine Daily Inquirer

Solons got P5B in DAP during trial of Corona

I can’t remember... I’ll check–Speaker

- By Gil C. Cabacungan

THE AQUINO administra­tion used P6.5 billion from the little-known Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program (DAP) before, during and after the impeachmen­t trial of then Chief Justice Renato Corona to bend Congress to its will, two members of the House of Representa­tives told the INQUIRER.

The sources estimated that the House got as much as P5 billion in DAP funds, while the senators received the remaining P1.5 billion, as admitted by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) itself.

The sources, who did not wish to be identified because of the confidenti­al informatio­n involved, said the DBM released to the representa­tives at least P10 million each from the DAP, supposedly a novel scheme to stimulate the economy.

The amount represente­d P7 million for farm-to-market roads and P3 million for soft projects, such as milk-feeding programs, under the DAP—an impounding mechanism supposedly for government savings that shifted funds from projects identified by Congress to those chosen by the executive branch in 2012.

The funds released to congressme­n from the DAP, whose constituti­onality has been questioned in the Supreme Court, were on top of the P70 million

in annual allocation­s from the Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF), or pork barrel.

The sources said that the House leadership and its impeachmen­t team were rewarded between P25 million and P50 million in the DAP funds after Corona was convicted in May 2012, or seven months after Budget Secretary Florencio Abad announced the P70.5-billion spending plan for the DAP, including a P6.5 billion augmentati­on for the PDAF.

They said they were asked by the DBM to give their preferred LGUs and beneficiar­ies their DAP allocation­s.

Asked for comment, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte said: “I cannot remember the incident. Haven’t heard of DAP back then. We will check.”

In a text message, Abad said: “I don’t have the informatio­n right now, it’s a Sunday. But I am sure that the rest of the funds did not go exclusivel­y to representa­tives. Some were requested by and allocated to national government agencies, some were requested by local government units. Not all (DAP funds) were, I think, disbursed.”

Abad was adamant that the DAP was not meant to bribe lawmakers into ousting Corona whose midnight appointmen­t by former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was widely reviled.

“The allocation­s, if I recall correctly, were made irrespecti­ve of whether the representa­tives were for or against the impeachmen­t,” Abad said.

Corona was convicted for dishonesty in his statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth.

Special purpose

In a statement, Navotas Rep. Tobias Tiangco said: “Based on reports and by its own admission, the DBM used the DAP before, during and after the Corona impeachmen­t trial between 2011 and 2012.

“Corona was impeached on Dec. 12, 2011, endorsed by 188 congressme­n. Based on the timeline, the DAP was created in October 2011 and fund requests made by legislator­s were already in order in November 2011—or exactly during the time they were cooking up and gathering support for the Corona impeachmen­t.

“It’s a puzzle that only a few knew about DAP then.”

Tiangco, the United Nationalis­t Alliance (UNA) secretary general, said the DAPwas “used as an excuse to cover the P50-million bribe to senators and P10 million given to congressme­n for the conviction” of Corona.

“The DAP was designed and created as a piggy bank to fund persuasive missions with a very special purpose,” Tiangco said.

The DBM earlier claimed that DAP funds were released after Corona’s conviction because it was wary it could be seen as an attempt to influence Corona’s removal.

“No one knew about the DAP until September 2013 when Sen. Jinggoy Estrada disclosed that the administra­tion tapped the funds to ‘bribe’ lawmakers to oust Corona. Until now, the Administra­tion is not telling everything about the DAP—they’re twisting the facts to cover it up because they know it’s illegal and unconstitu­tional,” Tiangco said.

DAR and NLDC

In a phone interview, Agrarian Reform Secretary Virgilio de los Reyes said that when his agency received several special allotment release orders (Saros) and notices of cash allocation­s (NCAs) on Dec. 6, 2011, he was unaware that these were DAP funds. He said supporting documents identified the funding from the 2011 budget for beneficiar­ies of the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).

The INQUIRER has copies of the DAR’s Saros and NCAs for six senators worth a combined P475 million—P100 million each for Estrada, FerdinandM­arcos Jr. and Ramon Revilla Jr.; P70 million for Vicente Sotto III; P55 million for Juan Ponce Enrile; and P50 million for Loren Legarda.

De los Reyes said Abad had asked him to accommodat­e the release of the funds for the senators whose beneficiar­ies turned out to be fake foundation­s used by detained businesswo­man Janet Lim-Napoles in the alleged P10 billion pork barrel scheme.

He said he told the budget secretary that the DAR was yet to spend the P1 billion lump-sum funds that the DBM had allocated for 2011 and that he insisted that the new funds go through the required processes.

“We spent lots of time and manpower to spend the P1 billion by the book, we couldn’t just accept fresh funds and just release [the money] without putting it through the same process,” De los Reyes said.

Abad washes hands

The DBM had a different version. In a statement, it claimed that Estrada, Marcos, Revilla and Sotto had requested the realignmen­t of the funds from the DAR to stateowned National Livelihood Developmen­t Corporatio­n (NLDC). (The DBM has not yet revealed where the DAP funds of Enrile and Legarda went, although a government source said these were diverted to LGUs).

“The requests—which were made by the senators’ offices in late December 2011 and early February 2012—were received by the DBM in early February and March 2012. The four senators essentiall­y asked us to change the implementi­ng agency from DAR to NLDC.

“In their requests, Senators Marcos, Estrada, Sotto and Revilla changed their nominated projects to programs for displaced or marginal families, for which NLDC was specified by the senators’ offices as the implementi­ng arm. We thus withdrew the earlier Saros for the DAR and issued these instead to NLDC in March 2012, exactly as the senators requested,” the DBM said.

In their letters to NLDC, the senators were adamant on the immediate release of the funds as these would be used for the victims of recent natural calamities.

But just like the DAR, NLDC president Gondolina Amata told the DBM of her reluctance to have the state micro-lending firm used again as a conduit for the senators’ funds.

Amata also thought the funds the DBMgave to her inMarch 2012 were from the PDAF that NLDC had stopped dealing with since the COA started its probe of the fake foundation­s getting pork barrel funds.

The DBM, however, prevailed on her to release the funds as these were the DAP and not the PDAF.

Abad practicall­y washed his hands of any responsibi­lity on the deployment of the funds, saying this was a matter between the implementi­ng agency (IA) and the lawmaker. “You will have to ask the IA and the legislator what happened,” he said.

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