The Philippine Star

100 more Customs men being probed — official

- By EVELYN MACAIRAN

Aside from the more than 50 officials and employees of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) suspected of corruption, more than 100 others are being probed.

Customs Associate Commission­er Vincent Philip Maronilla said they are now looking into the activities of 100 more personnel in the agency.

Maronilla made the admission after President Duterte announced last Thursday that 100 more personnel might be relieved from their posts for alleged corrupt practices.

“Sixty-four of them will be terminated next week, and 100 are coming,” the President said.

Maronilla confirmed there are “preliminar­y discussion­s” on the status of the 100 Customs personnel.

In the event the President orders them relieved or suspended, Maronilla said it would not affect the agency’s operations.

“Internal administra­tion is prepared for these kind of contingenc­ies and we assure the public that operations of BOC will continue to remain normal,” he said.

The National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) is also stepping in to the probe.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra on Friday instructed the NBI to conduct a case build up.

The Office of the Ombudsman is also reportedly conducting its own investigat­ion and may place these erring BOC officials and personnel, who are already on floating status, under preventive suspension.

Ombudsman Samuel Martires said he is just waiting for the initial findings of the panel that they created last Tuesday before he decides if he would issue a suspension order against them.

Maronilla assured the Office of the Ombudsman of the BOC’s cooperatio­n in its probe.

Meanwhile, the Bureau of Customs Employees Associatio­n (BOCEA) issued a statement last Friday afternoon saying that the list of the 52 officials and personnel that was given to the President only contained the names of those who have already retired or died, while others were only facing minor offenses.

“Sadly, the list given to the President contains employees who are retired and dead already. Some are only charge with insubordin­ation, purely administra­tive matters. There were also cases already dismissed and for dismissal due to lack of sufficient evidence to sustain the charges,” BOCEA said.

The employees’ group also said that while their organizati­on is one with the Duterte administra­tion’s campaign against corruption, it slammed the manner by which their colleagues were publicly shamed and that they were denied their right of presumptio­n of innocence.

It said, “Their names and faces were published and shown in social media; forever destroying their reputation­s and gravely affecting their families without respect to their rights to presumptio­n of innocence and due process.

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