The Philippine Star

Duterte never OK’d Nayong Pilipino lease

- JARIUS BONDOC

If they say a project has presidenti­al clearance, it doesn’t. That’s the lesson to be learned from the firing of the entire board of Nayong Pilipino. The government firm had leased out its 9.6-hectare Manila Bay-front estate to a Hong Kong casino operator. The price was but a fraction of market rates, yet duration was for 75 years. No land appraisal had been made, competitiv­e offers solicited, or NEDA approval secured. The board minutes simply stated that the deal “has the President’s blessing.”

Groundbrea­king ceremonies were rushed yesterday. As the Nayong Pilipino chairwoman was feting executives of Hong Kong-listed Landing Internatio­nal Developmen­t Ltd., Malacañang announced her sacking.

Presidenti­al Spokesman Harry Roque couldn’t give details when he met Palace reporters. He had just talked to President Rody Duterte, who was very exasperate­d with corruption. The Nayong Pilipino deal was “grossly disadvanta­geous,” Roque quoted Duterte as saying about the 75 years -- “beyond everyone’s lifetime.” All board trustees and managers were dismissed, the President conveyed; lease cancellati­on was to follow.

The deal broke basic rules, going by state auditors’ findings last June. Nayong Pilipino had granted Landing a build-lease-manage contract for a resort casino by mere negotiatio­n. The lease initially was set at P150 per square meter, without adjacent property appraisals or invitation­s for alternativ­e offers. It was withdrawn from open bidding as Public-Private Partnershi­p, without consent of the National Economic Developmen­t Authority. Consisting of Cabinet men and chaired by the President, NEDA must ensure the best deals for the public interest. (See Gotcha, 30 July 2018: https://www.philstar.com/ op inion /2018/07/30/1837975/ na yong pi lip in o-lease-casino-o k-n ed a)

A distant niece of Duterte, whom the Nayong Pilipino chairwoman barred entry to the board, had exposed the mess in May. The build-lease-management was for 50 years, extendible by another 25. Discoverin­g adjacent leases to be P500 per square meter, she said government would lose P517 million a year, or P25.85 billion in half a century. She charged the trustees with graft before the Ombudsman, for junketing all-expenses-paid to Landing’s resort-casino in Jeju, Korea. Broadcaste­rs talk of an accidental inflight spill of wads of dollars from the private jet’s bin.

The deal also defied Duterte’s repeated pronouncem­ents that May. One, he had fired two top officials of Aurora Pacific Economic Freeport for granting 70-year casino licenses. Two, he was very much against gambling, so had cancelled two casino franchises in Boracay. Three, he prefers public Swiss Challenges in government contractin­g.

Last July, Landing publicized having gotten a 15-year casino permit, after it cured the build-lease-manage deal. Supposedly the President had okayed a higher P350-per-squaremete­r lease and shorter 25-year term – but still without proper appraisals and competitiv­e bids.

A month later yesterday Duterte’s spokesman stated the contrary.

* * * No, despite their misery, Filipinos will never revolt against their misrulers. They find them so entertaini­ng.

Last July 23 people were drowning in floods when Congress put up a comedy skit on national television. With magistrate­s, bureaucrat­s, and foreign diplomats as live audience, an ex-President-turned-congresswo­man deposed her former transport minister as Speaker. The latter was at the time welcoming the President at the Batasan helipad, for the supposedly solemn State of the Nation Address. Inside the plenary hall the microphone was turned off as the former was taking her oath as new Speaker. She had to cup her mouth with both hands, silent videos of which became viral memes on what she could have been yelling.

Among the funniest was one captioned, “When I say ‘Hello,’ everyone shout ‘Garci’.” It recalls an equally hilarious post-election of a plunderous Presidency. Filipinos laughed so hard that it hurt, watching exposé after exposé of $200-million “tong-pats” (overprice) on $129-million works, and original proponents being ordered to “back off.”

The Speakershi­p comedy was followed by theater of the absurd – as flood survivors were being hospitaliz­ed for lethal leptospiro­sis. Four congressio­nal factions vied for the Minority Leadership. To resolve it, Congress employed the laughably most idiotic solution: it let the Majority decide who the Minority should be.

Last weekend spread – with matching critiques – an info-video on federalism, using “pepe” and “dede” to explain the complex idea. “Pepe” is slang for vagina and “dede” for breast. People are reeling from rising consumer prices, and economists forecast the administra­tion’s switch to federal government to lead to Argentina-Brazil-Mexico-type 2500-percent hyperinfla­tion. A Malacañang communicat­ions assistant secretary had produced the video. Malacañang aides say she had the best intentions, but the federal project could have been explained in better – cornier? – ways.

No, please, don’t stop. Filipinos are enjoying the show.

* * * Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882-AM).

Gotcha archives on Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/pages/Jarius-Bondoc/1376602159­218459, or The STAR website https://beta.philstar.com/columns/134276/gotcha

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