The Philippine Star

Abad on raps vs Noy: Go ahead, sue us

- By DELON PORCALLA and EDU PUNAY

Threats of criminal charges from militant groups no longer bother President Aquino and his officials, Budget Secretary Florencio Abad said yesterday. “Marami na silang sinampang kaso laban sa

amin (They’ve filed many cases against us). What’s one more?” Abad said.

Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate earlier vowed to file corruption charges with the Office of the Ombudsman against Aquino and some of his key officials – including Abad – when they step down on June 30.

Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales is an appointee of Aquino. She took over from Merceditas Gutierrez after the latter resigned.

For his part, Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. said Aquino is unfazed by such threats as he and his officials have always followed the 1987 Constituti­on in the discharge of their duties.

But Zarate said they have enough documentar­y evidence to prove Aquino and his officials have violated the law, particular­ly with their utilizatio­n of the unconstitu­tional Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program.

Coloma also brushed aside insinuatio­ns the outgoing Chief Executive campaigned vigorously for Roxas due to fears that he might end up like his predecesso­rs Gloria Arroyo and Joseph Estrada if a less-friendly administra­tion takes over.

“President Aquino does not have such fear because he has served with loyalty and integrity. He has pushed for the election of leaders who can continue good governance and the daang matuwid (straight path),” he said in Filipino.

In a speech in Chicago in May 2015, Aquino himself acknowledg­ed the possibilit­y of his being charged in court and eventually incarcerat­ed.

Aquino’s father and namesake was jailed by the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos during martial law in the 1970s while his grandfathe­r, Benigno Sr., was also incarcerat­ed by the Japanese during World War II.

“I’m the only politician in my family’s generation, I might be the next to be jailed,” he joked.

Appointmen­ts questioned

Meanwhile, the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s (IBP) is questionin­g the appointmen­t of two junior magistrate­s in the Sandiganba­yan last January for alleged violation of the Constituti­on.

The IBP said President Aquino violated the constituti­onal rule in handpickin­g Associate Justices Geraldine Faith Econg and Michael Frederick Musngi from the same shortlist submitted by the Judicial and Bar Council (JBC).

The IBP specifical­ly cited Article VIII Section 9 of the Constituti­on, which provides that “members of the Supreme Court and judges of the lower courts shall be appointed by the President from a list of at least three nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar Council for every vacancy.”

The IBP is set to submit today to the Supreme Court a 27-page petition seeking the voiding of the appointmen­t of Econg and Musngi.

The group will also ask the high court to issue a temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) enjoining the two “from exercising and performing their duties and functions.”

It urged the high tribunal to exercise its power to review the appointmen­ts so it can trace the supposed grave abuse of discretion on the part of the executive department, a co-equal branch of government.

“While the Constituti­on grants the President leeway to exercise his discretion in appointmen­ts to the judiciary by requiring the JBC to submit a list of at least three nominees for every vacancy, this discretion is necessaril­y restricted by requiring him to select only from the list submitted and to select only a single nominee considerin­g the vacancy is similarly solitary,” read the petition.

“In the questioned appointmen­ts, President Aquino violated Section 9, Article VIII of the 1987 Constituti­on when he did not appoint anyone from the shortlist submitted by the JBC for the vacancy for the 16th associate justice of the Sandiganba­yan; and appointed Undersecre­tary Musngi and Judge Econg, whose names were from the same shortlist submitted for the position of the 21st associate justice of the Sandiganba­yan,” the IBP said.

The IBP described the President’s action as a “culpable violation of the Constituti­on,” which is a ground for impeachmen­t.

“To be sure, the acts of respondent­s set a dangerous precedent which opens the door to abuse and oppression. These are the very evils proscribed by our Constituti­on, and are a clear act of grave abuse of discretion subject to the honorable court’s review,” it stressed.

Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno, chair of the seven-member JBC, had allowed the questionab­le appointmen­t and even administer­ed oath of office of three of the six justices last Jan. 25.

The JBC submitted to the Palace in October last year six separate shortlists for each of the six vacancies in the Sandiganba­yan based on Republic Act 10660 (An Act Strengthen­ing the Functional and Structural Organizati­on of the Sandiganba­yan), which created two new divisions in the antigraft court.

Last January, the President appointed the six new justices of the anti-graft court: Assistant Solicitor General Karl Miranda, Sereno’s staff Zaldy Trespeses, Palace undersecre­tary Reynaldo Cruz, Judge Ma. Theresa Mendoza-Arcega, Econg and Musngi, his undersecre­tary for special concerns.

The STAR then reported that Musngi and Econg belonged to the same shortlist.

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