Philippine Daily Inquirer

GENERAL, 19 OTHERS SACKED FOR ‘GHOST’ DEALS

- By Christine O. Avendaño and Jeannette I. Andrade @Team_Inquirer

President Duterte has sacked 20 people, including colonels and a brigadier general, over accusation­s of fraud and graft in purchases of military medical supplies, Malacañang said on Monday.

Those sacked were accused of involvemen­t in 17 cases of fictitious purchases of supplies, drugs and equipment at inflated prices, presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque told reporters.

They are employees of V. Luna Medical Center and the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s Health Service Command (AFPHSC).

Court-martial

The military officials sacked faced a court-martial, Roque said.

He said those fired conspired to defraud the government of nearly P1.5 million in fraudulent transactio­ns.

But the amount could go as high as “hundreds of millions” of pesos, as the alleged corruption had been going on even before the Duterte administra­tion took over, Roque said.

“Apparently, it’s a conspiracy. It was institutio­nal corruption in V. Luna,” he said.

Roque said Mr. Duterte ordered the relief and trial by court-martial of the military officials, including Brig. Gen. Edwin Leo Torrelaveg­a, commander of the AFPHSC, and Col. Antonio Punzalan, commander of V. Luna Medical Center.

He said Gen. Carlito Galvez, the AFP chief of staff, had said he would immediatel­y relieve Torrelaveg­a and Punzalan and appoint a court-martial to try them without prejudice to an investigat­ion by the Ombudsman for the military.

Roque said Mr. Duterte learned about the corruption through reports from Galvez and the Presidenti­al Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC).

A whistleblo­wer also came forward with the allegation­s, he added.

Mr. Duterte was “personally aggravated and angered,” having recently ordered that P50 million be made available to the main military hospital where the offenses took place, Roque said.

At a news conference in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City, Galvez said he was angered to learn that men in uniform had profited by inflating the prices of prostheses bought for soldiers who had lost limbs in battle.

Galvez said the corruption had been going on since 2016, but did not make clear whether during the last days of the Aquino administra­tion or at the start of the Duterte administra­tion.

Mr. Duterte took office at the end of June 2016.

Command responsibi­lity

Galvez said Torrelaveg­a’s relief was over command responsibi­lity and that the brigadier general was actually glad to be removed from AFPHSC because of corruption there.

But Torrelaveg­a, he said, should know what was happen- ing at his command and “the failure of his command will be his doing.”

“He failed to administer dutifully and diligently to prevent corruption,” Galvez said.

He said the others who would be court-martialed were enlisted men and officials with the ranks of lieutenant colonel and major and assigned to procuremen­t, delivery, logistics and finance department­s at V. Luna Medical Center.

According to Galvez, an initial complaint for five irregular transactio­ns was received by the AFP in May this year and it led to a discreet investigat­ion by the Intelligen­ce Service of the AFP (Isafp) and the inspector general.

Galvez said that the Isafp found that corruption at V. Luna Medical Center was “systemic” where there was neither transparen­cy nor a system of checks and balances in the pro- curement process.

It was also found that the chiefs of the logistics office and management and fiscal office, whom Galvez did not name, were involved in the procuremen­t process from the start up to delivery.

Galvez said investigat­ors were looking at 12 other allegedly irregular transactio­ns involving medical supplies and the existence of an alleged cartel of suppliers, particular­ly of prostheses.

He said the relief of the commanders and the other officers would give the AFP a free hand in obtaining the records for an extensive investigat­ion of the other transactio­ns.

“The report of the Isafp is very extensive because it points to the whole system and the people involved. We have to correct [the system]. The AFP will fix this in one month,” he said.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESYOF­AFPPUBLICA­FFAIRSOFFI­CE ?? Edwin Leo Torrelaveg­a—
PHOTO COURTESYOF­AFPPUBLICA­FFAIRSOFFI­CE Edwin Leo Torrelaveg­a—

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