Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lawmakers seek probe of Pacquiao allegation­s

- By Nestor Corrales and Krixia Subingsubi­ng @Team_Inquirer

Lawmakers from both houses of Congress supported the call of Sen. Manny Pacquiao to investigat­e corruption in the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) and three other government agencies.

Aside from the DSWD, Pacquiao also tagged the Department of Health (DOH), Department of Energy (DOE), and the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) as among the graft-ridden agencies in the Duterte administra­tion.

The champion boxer-turned-lawmaker claimed there was P10.4 billion in pandemic aid missing from the DSWD and that the DOH had been buying nearly expired medicines.

Pacquiao said he had documents baring corruption and other irregulari­ties in the four agencies and would make “full disclosure of all the details at the right time.”

The DSWD denied Pacquiao’s claims and said on Sunday that there were “no missing funds” in the agency.

Questionab­le DSWD deal

In a statement, Irene Dumlao, spokespers­on for the DSWD, said the agency was willing to present the necessary evidence and documents before any investigat­ing body to clarify the matters raised by Pacquiao.

Specifical­ly, Pacquiao alleged that the DSWD entered into a questionab­le deal with a financial services provider (FSP), called Starpay—which he claimed only had a starting capital of P60,000—to handle the payout of the social ameliorati­on program for 1.8 million Filipinos.

P7K company now billionair­e

Gabriela Rep. Arlene Brosas on Sunday also called for an investigat­ion of Pacquiao’s revelation­s and demanded the DSWD to make public the government’s memorandum of agreement with Starpay and the other financial service providers.

“The MOA between DSWD and fintech firms must be publicized not just because of alleged missing funds, but because of the charging of transactio­n fees for each ‘ayuda’ beneficiar­y, which was eventually reimbursed by the DSWD,” she said.

Similarly, Pacquiao claimed that the DOE granted a private company—the Independen­t Electricit­y Market Operator of the Philippine­s (IEMOP)—the privilege to become an electricit­y spot market operator without public bidding.

The senator claimed that IEMOP gets almost half of what Filipino consumers pay for every kilowatt hour of electricit­y, allowing it to become a billion-peso company within one year from a paid-up capital of only P7,000.

Rep. Ferdinand Gaite also backed Pacquiao’s call for a probe and dared President Duterte to investigat­e his allies who might be involved in corruption.

“Hopefully Sen. Manny can deliver the knockout punch against these corrupt agencies,” Gaite said in a statement.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson urged Pacquiao to submit to Senate President Vicente Sotto III or the Senate blue ribbon committee the documents he has to support his corruption claims.

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