The Philippine Star

DOJ summons Noy, others to answer Dengvaxia raps

- By EDU PUNAY

The Department of Justice (DOJ) has summoned former president Benigno Aquino III and two former Cabinet secretarie­s to answer criminal charges filed against them over the reported deaths and serious illnesses of children inoculated with the anti-dengue vaccine Dengvaxia.

In a subpoena, the panel of investigat­ing prosecutor­s directed Aquino, former health secretary Janette Garin and former budget secretary Florencio Abad to appear before the DOJ on March 23 for preliminar­y investigat­ion hearing on the complaint filed by the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) and Vanguard of the Philippine Constituti­on Inc. (VPCI) last month.

Aquino, Garin and Abad will be required to submit their respective counter-affidavits to the charges of multiple homicide and physical injuries under the Revised Penal Code, malversati­on of public funds, and violations of Republic Act 3019 (Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act) and RA 9184 (Government Procuremen­t Reform Act).

The DOJ panel chaired by Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Rossane Balauag also summoned other incumbent and former government officials and personnel who were also named respondent­s in the charge sheet.

They are Department of Health undersecre­taries Carol Tanio, Gerardo Bayugo, Lilibeth David and Mario Villaverde; former undersecre­taries Nemesio Gako, Vicente Belizario Jr. and Kenneth Hartigan-Go; assistant secretarie­s Lyndon Lee Suy and Nestor Santiago; former financial management service director Laureano Cruz; incumbent DOH directors Joyce Ducusin, May Wynn Belo, Leonila Gorgolon, Rio Magpantay, Ariel Valencia and Julius Lecciones; and Garin’s former executive assistant Yolanda Oliveros.

Summons were also sent to senior

executives of French pharmaceut­ical firm Sanofi Pasteur, the developer and manufactur­er of Dengvaxia, as well as Zuellig Pharma, DOH’s supplier of the vaccine. The summons were issued last March 1. In a related developmen­t, while all the attention has been on the alleged culpabilit­y of Aquino and Garin, former health secretary Paulyn Ubial could be just as liable for continuing the vaccinatio­n program.

The Senate Blue Ribbon committee concluded an inquiry into the Dengvaxia controvers­y and is set to release its committee report soon.

During the hearings it was learned that Garin’s successor, Ubial, continued the program and even expanded its coverage.

The DOH under Ubial administer­ed over a million Dengvaxia vaccine doses in the expanded program, which was significan­tly higher than the 493,000 doses given out during the term of Garin.

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