The Philippine Star

Sereno impeachmen­t hurdles first stage

- By DELON PORCALLA

One of the impeachmen­t complaints against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno has been deemed “sufficient in form and substance” by the House committee on justice, which directed the chief magistrate to submit her reply within 10 days before the complaint could proceed.

Officials and members of the panel voted 30-4 to allow the complaint of lawyer Larry Gadon to proceed but trashed the other one by the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption in a vote of 28-5. The panel declared VACC’s complaint “insufficie­nt in form.”

“The respondent shall answer the complaint within 10 days from receipt of said notice and serve the copy of the answer to the complainan­t,” panel chair Rep. Reynaldo Umali of Oriental Mindoro said.

“The committee shall immediatel­y furnish the respondent with a copy of the resolution and/or verified complaint,” he said, adding that “no motion to dismiss will be entertaine­d” while they are awaiting Sereno’s reply.

Reps. Alfredo Garbin Jr. and Eugene de Vera of party-list Ako Bicol and ABS, respective­ly, explained that the complaint filed by VACC failed to pass the basic verificati­on process as required under House rules.

Specifical­ly, VACC’s complaint failed the “personal knowledge” requiremen­t, as well as to include “authentic records” from relevant authoritie­s.

House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas of Ilocos Norte emphasized the panel would be “strict” in handling impeachmen­t cases this time.

The Ilocos Norte congressma­n explained that they declared the impeachmen­t complaint of Magdalo Rep. Gary Alejano against President Duterte sufficient in form “out of liberality.” But from then on, the House leadership would stick to a rigid policy in handling impeachmen­t complaints, he said.

Three Liberal Party members and one from Bayan Muna in the Umali committee tried vociferous­ly yesterday to block the impeachmen­t complaints against the chief magistrate – an appointee of the previous LP-led Aquino administra­tion. Sereno received her appointmen­t in 2012.

The opposition members in the committee who tried to have the complaint against Sereno junked were Reps. Tom Villarin of Akbayan (whose group is allied with the LP), Kaka Bag-ao of Dinagat Islands and Edcel Lagman of Albay.

The fourth was Rep. Carlos Zarate of party-list Bayan Muna, a lawyer by profession who ironically had been a vocal critic of the Aquino administra­tion.

The opposition were unani- mous in describing allegation­s against Sereno as “hearsay,” noting that newspaper clippings had been used as attachment­s in the impeachmen­t complaints.

The complainan­ts are calling for Sereno’s impeachmen­t for culpable violation of the 1987 Constituti­on and betrayal of public trust.

Authentic, original

But administra­tion lawmakers led by Fariñas cited the numerous “authentic” documents attached to Gadon’s complaint, including original copies provided by the Supreme Court itself.

“Let’s not be myopic on certain allegation­s. We’re looking at the complaint in totality. It’s substantia­ted, not necessaril­y by personal knowledge but by authentica­tion. In that sense, there is basis and we can take judicial notice on that,” Umali told Zarate.

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez has assured Sereno the House would treat her fairly when the time comes for her to face the committee.

“I wouldn’t want everybody to think that we’ll be railroadin­g the process just like what happened to the late chief justice Renato Corona. That’s why I’m giving it a chance in the committee on justice,” Alvarez said in an interview with CNN Philippine­s.

“I want to be fair,” the Davao del Norte congressma­n insisted. “If we really want the complaint to be endorsed by 200 congressme­n, we can do that very easily. But we don’t want that because we will be the ones to prosecute that case in the impeachmen­t court.”

He said he doesn’t want to preempt the justice committee of Umali, in whose panel the separate impeachmen­t case against Commission on Elections chairman Andres Bautista would also be heard.

“I want the justice committee to scrutinize the evidence, so that we can all be convinced that there is really strong evidence before we send it to the Senate impeachmen­t court for trial,” Alvarez maintained.

The Speaker clarified that his earlier pronouncem­ents citing solid basis for Sereno’s impeachmen­t were only his “personal opinion” as a lawyer. He said he raised such opinion because the complaint was accompanie­d by original SC documents.

Moreover, some magistrate­s had even offered to provide first-hand testimonie­s.

“Now if they find out the evidence is weak, then frankly we will not go to the impeachmen­t court. But if there is, then we will have no choice,” he pointed out.

It is in the Umali committee where all the attachment­s submitted by the complainan­ts would be scrutinize­d, and where an impeachabl­e official would be given the opportunit­y to defend himself before his case could be elevated to the plenary.

President Duterte looks at the gold medal of 29th SEA Games marathon winner Mary Joy Tabal during an awarding ceremony at Malacañang yesterday. Filipino athletes (left) received cash incentives and citations for medals won at the recent Games held in Kuala Lumpur.

President Duterte yesterday gave Filipino athletes who brought home medals from the 29th Southeast Asian Games in Malaysia cash incentives in elaborate rites in Malacañang.

The President, who squeezed time from his very busy schedule, welcomed the athletes, in their bright red track suits, and sports officials at Malacanang’s Rizal Hall.

“I express my gratitude to the athletes. I congratula­te you all, especially the medalists, for the accomplish­ment that brought honor to our country.

“You have prevailed and made our nation proud,” the President added.

The contingent arrived at Malacañang on board three buses at 3 p.m. and had the chance to see the President after waiting for four-and-a-half hours.

But no one complained because for some if not most of the athletes, it’s a rare opportunit­y to see the President.

Leading the gold medalists were back-to-back SEA Games triathlon champion Nikko Huelgas, marathon’s Mary Joy Tabal, boxing’s Eumir Felix Marcial, taekwondo’s Sam Morrison, equestrian’s John Syquia, wushu’s Agatha Wong and billiard’s Cheska Centeno.

Under the Incentives Act, each gold medal in the SEA Games is worth P300,000, silver medal P150,000 and bronze medal P60,000.

Only the gold medalists received their incentives directly from the President. But everybody, in small batches, had the chance to have their pictures taken with the President.

Close to P16 million were distribute­d to the athletes, who brought home 24 gold, 33 silver and 64 bronze medals from Kuala Lumpur.

Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, Presidenti­al Adviser on Sports Dennis Uy and House Committee on Youth and Sports chairman Conrado Estrella III awarded the incentives to the silver and bronze medalists.

“Wear those medals with pride,” Medialdea told the athletes, whom he praised for their “fire and ferocity” and their great ability to deal with pressure.

Uy gave the athletes a bigger reason to cheer: an additional bonus of P50,000 for every gold, P30,000 for a silver and P10,000 for a bronze.

Also present were Philippine Olympic Committee president Jose Cojuangco, Philippine Sports Commission chairman William Ramirez and his commission­ers.

In team events, like basketball and ice hockey, the members divide the incentives equally among themselves.

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 ?? PBA IMAGE ?? Rain or Shine’s Raymond Almazan reaches out from behind Michael Miranda of Phoenix for a putback during their PBA Governors Cup showdown at Ynares Center.
PBA IMAGE Rain or Shine’s Raymond Almazan reaches out from behind Michael Miranda of Phoenix for a putback during their PBA Governors Cup showdown at Ynares Center.

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