Philippine Daily Inquirer

Senate, House agree: PCGG, OGCC won’t be abolished

- —MARLON RAMOS

The Presidenti­al Commission on Good Government (PCGG), the government agency tasked with recovering the ill-gotten wealth of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, lives to fight another day.

Meeting in conference on Monday, the Senate and the House of Representa­tives official- ly jettisoned the proposal dissolving the PCGG and the Office of the Government Corporate Counsel (OGCC) even as they approved the measure strengthen­ing the Office of the Solicitor General.

“We did not approve the dissolutio­n of the PCGG and the OGCC,” Sen. Richard Gordon, chair of the Senate justice committee, told reporters after presiding over the conference.

“The PCGG, despite the difficulti­es, has been able to attain its [mandate]. A substantia­l amount of [government] resources have been taken back from [the Marcoses] during the previous years,” he said.

According to Gordon, the PCGG recovered about P171 billion in public funds and assets believed to have been stolen by Marcos, his cronies and their families.

The PCGG estimated that the Marcos family pocketed as much as $10 billion before they were driven out of power through the Edsa People Power Revolt.

The decision of both chambers of Congress put an end to the efforts of some lawmakers, led by former Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, to abolish the PCGG that critics claimed was part of historical revisionis­m to rehabil- itate the image of the Marcoses.

PCGG Chair Reynold Munsayac thanked the legislator­s for not writing off the agency.

“The PCGG will faithfully continue the performanc­e of its mandates,” Munsayac said in a text message to the Inquirer.

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