The Philippine Star

Imee avoids detention; Ilocos 6 released

- By JESS DIAZ

All’s well that ends well for Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos and her six provincial officers ordered detained by the House of Representa­tives for 55 days for refusing to answer questions at a committee hearing on her alleged misuse of P66.5 million in tobacco funds. The eldest daughter of the late president Ferdinand Marcos evaded arrest and detention by the House committee on good government and public accountabi­lity by showing up at its hearing yesterday.

On the other hand, the detained six provincial

officers gained their freedom by recalling the three huge cash advances they received and their procuremen­t of 40 minicabs, five buses and 70 mini-trucks.

It was majority leader and Ilocos Norte Rep. Rodolfo Fariñas who asked the committee chaired by Surigao del Sur Rep. Johnny Pimentel to free the six.

Fariñas and Reps. Juan Pablo Bondoc and Aurelio Gonzales Jr. of Pampanga, who are deputy majority leaders, authored the resolution seeking probe on alleged misuse of tobacco funds and procuremen­t of vehicles through cash advances and without public bidding in violation of the law.

Marcos also avoided being cited in contempt by apologizin­g to House members for spreading “fake news” that the “yellows,” referring to Liberal Party, have put up a P100millio­n fund to be distribute­d among congressme­n so they would arrest and detain her.

“This statement was not true, and I am apologizin­g to the House, former president Benigno Aquino III, who was my colleague here, and to Liberal Party members,” she said.

She once served as representa­tive of Ilocos Norte’s second district, now represente­d by her mother, former first lady Imelda Romualdez Marcos.

She was forced to admit making up the story after Fariñas threatened her four times with contempt if she does not reveal her source.

She initially refused to disclose the source of her informatio­n but after consulting with her lawyers during a brief break, she admitted her statement was untrue.

Former senator Juan Ponce Enrile, who is facing plunder and graft charges in the Sandiganba­yan for his alleged misuse of hundreds of millions in pork barrel funds, led her legal team for yesterday’s hearing.

In the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals, she and her six provincial officers had another top-notch legal panel led by Marcos-era solicitor general Estelito Mendoza.

The Marcoses came to the hearing in full force. Her mother, her sons Borgy and Mathew Manotoc, and her cousin former Leyte congressma­n Ferdinand Martin Romualdez accompanie­d the governor.

Freed from House detention were Josephine Calajate, treasurer; Evangeline Tabulog, budget officer; Eden Battulayan, accountant; Pedro Agcaoili, planning officer and head of the bids and awards committee; and Genedine Jambaro and Encarnacio­n Gaor, special disbursing officers in the treasurer’s office.

It was Jambaro and Gaor who received the P66.5 million in three cash advances in 2011 and 2012 and who paid for the 115 vehicles in cash.

The Pimentel committee detained them on May 29 for their “evasive” answers on the disburseme­nts and vehicle procuremen­t. They claimed that they could not remember the transactio­ns and refused to confirm their signatures on photocopie­s of documents, saying they had to see the originals.

They remembered the details of the transactio­ns and owned their signatures on the photocopie­s yesterday in the presence of their governor.

“In view of the fact that they have regained their memory, I am moving that we lift our contempt charge on them and release them,” Fariñas said.

He apologized to his provincema­tes, telling them the committee had to hold them so it could ferret out the truth from them.

Questionin­g Gov. Marcos, Bondoc said he found it irregular that she signed the checks for the purchase of 70 minitrucks and 40 minicabs even before bidding could be held.

Marcos responded that she could not remember the exact dates when she signed the checks and the scheduled bidding, and that she relied on her staff work.

She said the supposed public bidding did not push through because the bids and awards committee recommende­d “direct contractin­g” after only one company offered to supply the vehicles.

Meanwhile, farmers in Ilocos region are urging lawmakers to investigat­e how local government units spend their shares of tobacco excise taxes.

Farmer-representa­tives of the Solidarity of Peasants Against Exploitati­on (STOP Exploitati­on) trooped to the House of Representa­tives yesterday to air their demand while the House committee on good governance and public accountabi­lity was conducting hearing on the tobacco fund issue.

“If P400,000 merits the indictment for graft, then P26.45 (million) and P26 million are more than enough to jail these erring officials,” he pointed out.

“While the investigat­ion and immediate prosecutio­n of (Gov. Marcos) is welcome, the inclusion of bigger fund misuse and corruption in other provinces, and indictment of the officials involved, are important steps to ensure that truth and justice for the farmers will prevail,” Zaldy Alfiler, STOP Exploitati­on’s secretary general, said.

He said the tobacco fund controvers­y is but “the tip of the widespread and largescale corruption of the funds intended to uplift the lives of tobacco farmers.”

The anti-graft court Sandiganba­yan recently indicted former Sta. Catalina, Ilocos Sur mayor Carlos Asuncion for appropriat­ing P400,000 to different organizati­ons not related to tobacco farmers.

In 2013, Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales also recommende­d the filing of graft and corruption charges against former Ilocos Sur governors Luis “Chavit” Singson and Deogracias Victor Savellano for misusing P26 million from Ilocos Sur’s tobacco excise tax share.

 ??  ?? Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos shakes hands with House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas as her legal adviser former senator Juan Ponce Enrile looks on during a probe on the alleged misuse of tobacco excise taxes at the House of Representa­tives yesterday....
Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos shakes hands with House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas as her legal adviser former senator Juan Ponce Enrile looks on during a probe on the alleged misuse of tobacco excise taxes at the House of Representa­tives yesterday....
 ??  ?? Members of the Ilocos 6 attend the House hearing on the misuse of tobacco funds yesterday. MICHAEL VARCAS
Members of the Ilocos 6 attend the House hearing on the misuse of tobacco funds yesterday. MICHAEL VARCAS

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