Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘BIKOY’ CHANGES TUNE, SAYS LP, TRILLANES BEHIND VIDEOS

The political opposition slams Peter Joemel Advincula’s turnaround, charging his new ‘lies’ are ‘fabricatio­ns’ of the Duterte administra­tion. Malacañang says the man of the narcovideo­s should prove his allegation­s.

- STORY BYMATTHEWR­EYSIO-CRUZ

Peter Joemel Advincula, who came forward on May 6 claiming he was “Bikoy,” the hooded man in the series of videos that linked members of President Duterte’s family to the illegal drug trade, appeared again on Thursday saying his claims were false and that the videos were part of a plot to unseat Mr. Duterte hatched by the opposition Liberal Party (LP) and Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV.

During his first appearance at the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s (IBP) headquarte­rs in Pasig City on May 6, Advincula repeated his allegation­s in the narcovideo­s that Mr. Duterte’s son Paolo, son-in-law Manases Carpio, and former special presidenti­al assistant Christophe­r “Bong” Go were members of an illegal drug syndicate who had amassed millions in narcomoney.

‘Project Sodoma’

He said he had no links to Otso Diretso, the LP-led coalition for the May 13 midterm elections, and that threats to his life and a desire to clear his conscience had driven him to come forward.

But on Thursday, facing reporters again, he retracted all the accusation­s he made in the videos, saying “[t]here is no truth to any of it, and it was all orchestrat­ed by the opposition, which is LP, under the handling of [Trillanes].”

Advincula, who had admitted to being jailed for fraud, also linked opposition Sen. Risa Hontiveros and a member of the staff of detained Sen. Leila de Lima to the planning of “Project Sodoma,” the spearhead of a “mass movement” to topple Mr. Duterte from power and install in his place Vice President Leni Robredo, who would then pick Trillanes as her vice president.

Advincula surrendere­d to the Philippine National Police, which launched a manhunt for him shortly after his appearance at the IBP headquarte­rs.

“I guess this is the true call of my conscience,” he said. “It is hard to live a life of lies. It is hard to live a life that is being scripted, where your every move is scripted.”

Advincula said he had been promised P500,000, absolute pardon and a job in the government for his cooperatio­n.

But after the opposition lost the senatorial election, he said he began to fear for his life.

Investigat­ion in order

Advincula’s turnaround prompted a call from Paolo Duterte, a former vice mayor of Davao City who was elected to the House of Representa­tives in the May 13 midterms, for an investigat­ion of all the people involved in the alleged plot against his father.

“Without a doubt, as I have said before, Sen. Antonio Trillanes was behind it. And now that many names have surfaced to include Sen. Risa Hontiveros and several lawyers, I believe a proper investigat­ion is in order,” Duterte said.

His sister, Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte, said the retraction of Advincula proved that the “Bikoy” video series was a scam hatched by critics of the administra­tion who deserved the beating they received in the just concluded elections.

“Bikoy is a scam created by people who oppose the Duterte administra­tion,” she said. “This group is so disorganiz­ed they cannot even get to first base because the path to their objective is in disarray.”

Go, Mr. Duterte’s former special aide who won election to the Senate in the midterms, said he was not surprised by Advincula’s retraction.

He said he had known from the start that the accusation­s in the videos were all lies and black propaganda.

Go said the campaign against Mr. Duterte had been going on since the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“It’s sad to know that those who claim to be decent and clean are actually the ones trying to destroy other people. This is not the kind of politics I learned from President Duterte,” Go said.

Prove it

Malacañang said it would wait for the results of the PNP investigat­ion before commenting on Advincula’s retraction.

The Palace, however, said Advincula should substantia­te his claims against the opposition.

“We would rather wait for him to substantia­te his confession and revelation­s on the participat­ion of certain [people] identified with the Liberal Party and the opposition with proof,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo said in a statement.

Robredo, the LP chair, denied knowing Advincula.

“I do not know him. I have never spoken to him,” Robredo said. “There has never been any communicat­ion between us.”

Sen. Francis Pangilinan, the LP president, issued a statement calling Advincula’s allegation­s fabricatio­ns of the Duterte administra­tion.

“The witness will say any lies against the LP out of fear that he will be harmed by the administra­tion,” Pangilinan said. “We have no link to the video and Bikoy. All these are lies and are fabricatio­ns of the administra­tion.”

‘Con artist’

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon urged the PNP to investigat­e Advincula’s allegation­s and file charges against the “con artist.”

“The Liberal Party has nothing to do with the so-called Bikoy video. We deny the accusation­s. That the Liberal Party connived with an obviously profession­al con artist to topple the government is most absurd,” Drilon said in a statement.

“I urge the PNP to get to the bottom of this Bikoy issue and file the appropriat­e charges,” he said.

Trillanes denied Advincula’s allegation­s and said he would file charges against him.

“I deny the allegation­s of this Bikoy character. This could be another ploy of the administra­tion to harass the opposition,” Trillanes said.

In a statement, Sen. Risa Hontiveros called Advincula’s allegation­s “another product of Malacañang’s wild imaginatio­n.”

Hontiveros said she found it odd that the President’s allies were “quick to shoot down” Advincula’s credibilit­y on May 6 and even threatened him with arrest.

“[But] now [that he is singing] a different song and [accusing] the opposition of outlandish things, all of sudden [he is credible]? How absurd,” she said.

Credibilit­y problem

Sen. Panfilo Lacson urged the PNP to “conduct [an] appropriat­e assessment” of Advincula’s allegation­s, noting that Advincula had a serious credibilit­y problem.

Earlier, Police Gen. Oscar Albayalde, the PNP chief, said Advincula had tried to sell informatio­n to the authoritie­s, but the informatio­n had always turned out wrong.

Advincula went into hiding after his IBP appearance and two courts issued warrants for his arrest for estafa and largescale illegal recruitmen­t.

He surrendere­d on Wednesday after discussion­s between his family and the Northern Police District (NPD).

Police Col. Benjamin Silo Jr., NPD deputy district director for operations, said the discussion­s took place in Donsol, Sorsogon province, Ligao in Albay province, and Manila.

NPD officers picked up Advincula from an apartment in The Grove in Pasig City on Wednesday and held him in an undisclose­d location.

Advincula was presented to the press at PNP headquarte­rs in Camp Crame, Quezon City, on Thursday before he was booked.

 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? MANWITH A CREDIBILIT­Y PROBLEM Peter Joemel Advincula, at Philippine National Police headquarte­rs on Thursday, tells journalist­s a new story that Sen. Panfilo Lacson says the authoritie­s should properly assess because the man has a credibilit­y problem.
—LYN RILLON MANWITH A CREDIBILIT­Y PROBLEM Peter Joemel Advincula, at Philippine National Police headquarte­rs on Thursday, tells journalist­s a new story that Sen. Panfilo Lacson says the authoritie­s should properly assess because the man has a credibilit­y problem.
 ??  ?? ARRESTED Peter Joemel Advincula, who says he is “Bikoy,” the hooded man in the narcovideo­s, has his picture taken during booking at PNP headquarte­rs on Thursday. He has been arrested for estafa.
ARRESTED Peter Joemel Advincula, who says he is “Bikoy,” the hooded man in the narcovideo­s, has his picture taken during booking at PNP headquarte­rs on Thursday. He has been arrested for estafa.

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