The Philippine Star

Senate wants to summon Napoles, whistle-blowers

- By MARVIN SY

he enate intends to su on business o an anet i apoles, the al leged b ains behind the billion po ba el sca , along ith the his tle blo e s ho e posed the issue, to appea in the ne t hea ings

So far only Commission on Audit (COA) Chairman Grace Pulido Tan has testified before the committee during its first hearing on the pork barrel scam last Thursday.

Blue Ribbon committee chairman Sen. Teofisto Guingona III said the next hearing on Sept. 5 would still focus on the COA’s audit report on the use of the PDAF from 2007 to 2009.

COA director Susan Garcia is expected to represent Tan, who begged off from the hearing because of a prior commitment overseas.

Guingona said a representa­tive of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) was also invited to attend the hearing.

Sen. Francis Escudero has asked the committee to invite Napoles, her cousin Benhur Luy and the other whistle-blowers to attend the hearings.

This is on top of Escudero’s earlier manifestat­ions to summon the officials of the National Agribusine­ss Corp., Technology Resource Center, National Livelihood Developmen­t Corp., Zamboanga del Norte Rubber Estate Corp. and the Philippine Forest Corp.

He said these firms were “commonly appearing as conduits for PDAF releases to seemingly favored NGOs.”

Escudero also asked the secretarie­s of agricultur­e, social welfare and developmen­t, and DBM be invited to future hearings.

He added the officials of C.C. Barredo Publishing House to his list of resource persons that he wants to appear in future hearings.

He said the company appeared to be a common denominato­r for several of the activities of the bogus non-government organizati­ons (NGOs) linked to Napoles.

Guingona and Escudero though admitted the difficulty of getting Napoles to appear before the Senate inquiry since this decision would have to be made by the court.

Napoles is facing charges of illegal detention and has been ordered by the Makati City court to be detained at Fort Sto. Domingo in Sta. Rosa, Laguna for security considerat­ions.

Guingona agreed that Napoles and the whistle-blowers should appear before the hearings to allow the Senate committee to have “the whole story.”

During the hearing last Thursday, Guingona said the committee would issue subpoenas for documents that would serve as proof that some legislator­s endorsed Napoles-linked NGOs as recipients of their PDAF.

The COA was the one that secured the endorsemen­t letters during its audit but Tan said the documents were already turned over to the Department of Justice and the Office of the Ombudsman to aid them in their investigat­ion into the pork barrel scam.

“We are trying to trace where in the process of releasing the PDAF does the opportunit­y to divert the fund comes in. The chain of procedures in the release of the PDAF is implemente­d to ensure accountabi­lity,” Guingona said.

“We learned… there are instances where key procedures were bypassed to ensure that specific NGOs be the beneficiar­y of the PDAF. We must determine whether this action is illegal. It may be irregular, but we must determine whether the law was violated,” he added.

Tan said COA was able to secure confirmati­ons from Senate Minority Leader Juan Ponce Enrile and Senators Ramon Revilla Jr. and Gregorio Honasan II regarding the signatures on the letters, which were either their own or their representa­tives’.

She said Sen. Jinggoy Estrada did not respond to the COA’s request for his confirmati­on.

According to Tan, the usual authorized signatorie­s for the letters were either the chiefs of staff or their deputies.

The senators involved cannot be compelled to attend the hearings but when asked if their chiefs of staff and other employees could be invited, Guingona said they would allow them.

The congressme­n who were linked to pork barrel fund scam are not likely to appear before the Senate hearing.

While private citizens and government officials can be subpoenaed to the investigat­ion, the Senate cannot use its coercive power on members of the House of Representa­tives.

The Senate cannot even compel any of its members to appear in its inquiry.

The two chambers of Congress are bound by tradition not to subpoena or investigat­e each other’s members.

This practice is what lawmakers call inter-parliament­ary or inter-chamber courtesy.

Nothing in the rules, however, prevents each chamber from inviting any of the other house’s members. Alternativ­ely, a member being linked to an irregulari­ty or scandal can volunteer to appear in an investigat­ion.

This was what then Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Villafuert­e did in 2010, when he voluntaril­y testified before the Senate to deny his alleged links to jueteng operators in his province.

There are more than 200 former and incumbent House members linked by the COA to the pork barrel scam.

Of the P6.2 billion in pork barrel funds that the COA found to have ended up with 82 NGOs, including 10 associated with Napoles, four to five senators accounted for about P1.5 billion. The rest came from congressme­n.

The COA said most of the NGOs were bogus and most of the supposed projects they undertook were non-existent.

Congressme­n would have their own time to clear things up if the House eventually decides to conduct its own probe.

As of now, House leaders are not disposed to start their own inquiry, preferring to let state agencies finish their investigat­ion.

On the other hand, a group of journalist­s are calling for an independen­t probe on the pork barrel scam.

The Associatio­n of Philippine Journalist­s/Samahang Plaridel is calling for the creation of an independen­t truth commission to ensure a fair, impartial and exhaustive investigat­ion into the issue.

In a resolution signed last Thursday at the 163rd birth anniversar­y of Marcelo H. del Pilar, the group urged Malacañang to issue an executive order forming an independen­t truth commission to investigat­e the use and misuse of public funds of government and submit their findings and recommenda­tions within six months.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines