Philippine Daily Inquirer

EX-MAGUINDANA­O GOV. AMPATUAN CONVICTED OF GRAFT, FALSIFICAT­ION

- By Dempsey Reyes @dempseyrey­esINQ

The Sandiganba­yan on Friday convicted former Maguindana­o Gov. Datu Sajid Islam Ampatuan of graft and falsificat­ion of public documents in connection with several ghost road rehabilita­tion projects amounting to more than P20 million.

The antigraft court’s Fifth Division has also ordered Ampatuan’s arrest for his failure to physically attend on Friday morning the promulgati­on of the decision that found him guilty of eight counts of graft and eight counts of falsificat­ion of public documents.

In a 79-page decision penned by Associate Justice Maryann Corpus-Mañalac, Ampatuan was sentenced to six to eight years in prison for his graft conviction and another two to six years jail time for the falsificat­ion charges.

Also found guilty of falsificat­ion charges were engineers Yahiya Kandong, Omar Casma, Anthony Kasan, Akmad Salim and Jaypee Piang.

Due to the multiple graft conviction, Ampatuan was ordered by the Sandiganba­yan to pay the provincial government of Maguindana­o P22 million and P5,000 for each count of falsificat­ion.

The P22-million civil indemnity was equivalent to the amount of the involved anomalous infrastruc­ture projects in Maguindana­o, such as the farm-to-market roads and ghost purchases of fuel from a gasoline station that was allegedly owned by the former governor’s brother, Andal Ampatuan Jr.

No public bidding

According to the court, it was establishe­d that the gasoline station was chosen without having to undergo public bidding and that the fuel sourced from there was beyond its supply.

As for the road projects, the Sandiganba­yan cited a statement from the Commission on Audit (COA) which said that the roads that were supposed to be rehabilita­ted or improved were found “either shorter than the reported accomplish­ments or that no signs of rehabilita­tion or improvemen­t were appreciabl­e.”

During the course of the trial, Ampatuan told the court that the COA’s ocular inspection “happened more than a year after the rehabilita­tion/improvemen­t projects were declared completed” and that he claimed the roads had already deteriorat­ed.

The court, however, pointed out that the COA’s findings were not referring to whether the roads were not in perfect condition, but rather “the findings [of the COA] touch on deficienci­es in the implementa­tion.”

“It is hard to believe that a portion of a road would remain visible while the rest would be lost without perceivabl­e signs,” read the decision penned by Corpus-Mañalac, with concurrenc­es of Associate Justices Rafael Lagos and Maria Theresa Mendoza-Arcega.

“That is incredulou­s. The road might have deteriorat­ed over a span of more than a year but surely a significan­t portion, if not the entire length, would still be appreciabl­e,” the decision read.

 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Datu Sajid Islam Ampatuan
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Datu Sajid Islam Ampatuan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines