Philippine Daily Inquirer

Even the dead rising to get some ‘ayuda’

- —STORY BY JULIE M. AURELIO AND LEILA B. SALAVERRIA

Minors, overseas Filipinos and even the dead have turned up among the recipients of the latest round of cash aid for people most affected by the lockdown in Metro Manila and four nearby provinces, according to a party list lawmaker. Puwersa ng Bayaning Atleta Rep. Jericho Nograles sees shades of “technical malversati­on of public funds.”

A lawmaker on Friday said his office had received reports that “questionab­le” individual­s—minors, dead persons and Filipinos based in other countries—were included in the list of beneficiar­ies in the P22.9-billion cash aid for low-income families in Metro Manila and adjacent provinces.

In a statement, Puwersa ng Bayaning Atleta Rep. Jericho Nograles urged the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD), the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), and the Commission on Audit to investigat­e the matter.

Nograles cited the case of a person who has been dead since August 2020, minors and a former house helper who used to reside in Pasay City as among those listed as cash aid recipients.

In Cainta, Rizal, a person who lives and works in Qatar was also listed as a recipient.

He said such questionab­le inclusions indicate that thousands more unqualifie­d beneficiar­ies were on the DSWD’s social ameliorati­on list.

“It is easy to suspect and surmise, but it is the duty of the government to find out why and how did this happen,” Nograles said.

“The list should be carefully looked into. I hope the DSWD can defend the listing because technical malversati­on and malversati­on of public funds is a serious crime that must be reported,” he said.

Only 31% distribute­d

Only 31 percent of financial assistance, or P3.4 billion, has so far been distribute­d by the government to low-income earners in Metro Manila more than a week after the funds were handed down to local officials, Jonathan Malaya, spokespers­on for the DILG, said.

The cash aid was intended for 22.9 million beneficiar­ies in Metro Manila, Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna and Rizal, which were placed under enhanced community quarantine for two weeks due to surging COVID-19 cases in these areas.

“The pace of the distributi­on has picked up, and [local government­s] are not stopping in giving out the aid from the national government,” he said at an online briefing.

Local government­s have been given 15 days to complete the distributi­on.

Deadline extension sought

But Muntinlupa, Valenzuela and Quezon cities, as well as several local government­s in Bulacan, Rizal, Laguna and Cavite, have requested for an extension of the deadline to give out the aid, Malaya said.

He said Interior Secretary Eduardo Año, who had returned to work after taking a break following his COVID-19 infections, would decide on how many days would be given to the local government­s to complete the distributi­on.

One of the possible reasons granting an extension is if the employees of the local government­s had been infected with coronaviru­s and this delayed the distributi­on of the assistance.

Another is the huge population of the local government, as is the case with Quezon City and Manila, he said.

Malaya said the DILG would coordinate with the Presidenti­al Anti-Corruption Commission to get its data after its chair Greco Belgica said his office had received 8,000 complaints in relation to the government aid.

 ??  ??
 ?? — NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? ‘AYUDA’ QUEUE Residents endure the heat outside a barangay hall in Quezon City while waiting for their turn to receive cash aid from the government.
— NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ‘AYUDA’ QUEUE Residents endure the heat outside a barangay hall in Quezon City while waiting for their turn to receive cash aid from the government.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines