The Philippine Star

Cayetano: Hold me accountabl­e after SEAG

No sacred cows; Rody may tap retired COA auditors

- By EDU PUNAY and CHRISTINA MENDEZ

As the nation keeps its fingers crossed for an embarrassm­ent-free opening of the 30th Southeast Asian Games (SEAG) tomorrow, Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano has vowed to face investigat­ion for possible corruption that may explain the blunders that marred the arrival of foreign athletes.

Speaking at the 44th National Prayer Breakfast Anniversar­y in San Juan City yesterday, the embattled head of the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee (PHISGOC) said he would address allegation­s and criticisms right after the country’s hosting of the biennial event.

“(Come) Dec. 12, hold me accountabl­e; hold the SEAG organizing committee accountabl­e. I will not hide. I will face the Senate and the ombudsman,” Cayetano said. “But allow us to have successful games. After the SEAG, you can do any investigat­ion,” he added.

President Duterte said last night that he might tap retired auditors of the Commission on Audit to

assist in the investigat­ion, which will be conducted by the Office of the President.

Duterte said the Speaker “has to answer (for the lapses) but… I am sure that Cayetano is not involved in corruption.”

The President said he wanted officials of PHISGOC as well as the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) held to account “for lack of foresight.”

Malacañang said it is open to multiple probes on the issue by independen­t parties, stressing “there are no sacred cows in this government.”

Senators have expressed their intention to investigat­e the matter, which has become a national embarrassm­ent.

Cayetano insisted there is no corruption in the use of the P6-billion fund for the hosting of SEAG, denying insinuatio­ns from Senators Panfilo Lacson and Franklin Drilon.

“I’m willing to do a lie detector test, for the three of us. I can look them in the eye and say I did not pocket a single centavo... We even had to shell out our own money,” Cayetano maintained.

Drilon was questionin­g the P55-million cauldron to be used for the opening and closing ceremonies while Lacson had likened the P1.5-billion government fund given to PHISGOC – a private entity – to the pork barrel scheme of Janet Lim-Napoles.

Cayetano earlier blamed the Senate for the reported blunders, including unfinished constructi­on of venues, saying they could have been avoided had the Senate approved the budget for the sports event.

“It was Senator Drilon who moved the budget of the SEA Games to the PSC and it was Senator Drilon who proposed cutting it by 33 percent only a few months before to P2.5 million but he has been leading the criticism,” he said.

Deputy Speaker and 1-Pacman party-list Rep. Mikee Romero supported Cayetano’s allegation­s.

Romero attributed the logistical issues in the country’s hosting of the SEAG to the delay in passage of the 2019 budget, which President Duterte signed only in April.

“Unfortunat­ely the Senate had a lot of problems and the budget was delayed by five to six months. Lahat ito This was all caused by that delay. Sen. Drilon is also partly to blame probably because the delay was caused on their side, not on the House side,” Romero stressed in an interview.

Media ‘bribery’

Cayetano also branded as “fake news” reports of complaints from several athletes and coaches regarding food and hotel accommodat­ion.

The House leader said he was informed about an “operation” that intentiona­lly spreads “fake news” regarding the SEAG hosting.

“The intention was to get us reacting instead of organizing,” he claimed.

Cayetano revealed that there was even an attempt to bribe media outlets for publicatio­n of false informatio­n, including alleged desecratio­n of the Philippine flag.

“We have our own analytics and our own metrics system, and that’s available to you, it was only four or five websites that repeatedly came up with these fake news,” he bared.

“Even some media outfits admitted that there is overflowin­g cash to destroy the

SEAG. I don’t know (how much) because these were just told to me by close friends and they told me it’s good nobody accepted it since this is for the country,” he alleged.

Cayetano lamented how the public met the games with criticism when the people should be supporting the athletes instead and help make the event a success.

“If we can come together with these other countries and find a way to work and be one, why can’t we Filipinos do it? There are so many good stories,” he pointed out.

The Foreign Correspond­ents Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (FOCAP), meanwhile, denounced remarks by SEAG organizers partly blaming the media for the flurry of negative reports on logistical issues that were raised publicly by Philippine and Southeast Asian athletes and officials themselves.

“Independen­t journalist­s report problems and issues imbued with public interest as they happen and become evident and do not delay the time to press for accountabi­lity. We report defeats and victories, failures and triumphs,” FOCAP said in a statement issued yesterday.

The journalist­s’ group specially took exception to insinuatio­ns by Cayetano that there may have been attempts to bribe the media to malign the Philippine­s’ hosting of the Games.

“Such sweeping accusation­s, without a shred of evidence and laced with threats of libel suits, are totally unacceptab­le and tend to intimidate journalist­s from reporting irregulari­ties objectivel­y,” FOCAP said. It said calls by the organizers for media to report only the good news “betray our bedrock mandate of providing the public with truthful informatio­n that is at the heart of the basic freedoms guaranteed by the Constituti­on.”

Cayetano’s House colleagues have already begun investigat­ing allegation­s of “fake news” meant to discredit the country’s hosting of the event.

Kabayan party-list Rep. Ron Salo, chair of the committee on public informatio­n, said they will conduct a legislativ­e inquiry into the spread of fake news.

In a privilege speech last Wednesday, Salo said that false reports undermined the country’s efforts to ensure a successful hosting of the biennial sports event.

Salo particular­ly mentioned the kikiam supposedly given to the Philippine women’s football team for breakfast when in fact it was chicken sausage, and the supposed photo of the Biñan Sports Complex still being constructe­d when it was actually a different picture.

“As a result of these fake news, the Philippine­s is painted as a complete failure in its hosting, with foreign media calling it ‘Muddle in Manila,’” the lawmaker lamented.

No apologies

Another lawmaker said there is no need for the Philippine­s to apologize to its ASEAN neighbors for the blunders in the SEAG.

Deputy Speaker Dan Fernandez explained that the country and games organizers have done their “utmost best” to achieve the goal of the sports meet, which is “to promote cooperatio­n, understand­ing and better relations” among Southeast Asian nations.

“Are we as Filipinos going to allow purveyors of fake news, grossly exaggerate­d reports and political spite win a gold medal for national destructio­n? We must not!” said Fernandez.

The representa­tive from Laguna rallied Filipinos to instead wage war against bogus news and political malice by “simply ignoring their messages of hate and spite.”

He pointed out that Cayetano and PHISGOC have taken sincere and swift steps to address complaints initially aired by participat­ing teams.

For Sen. Joel Villanueva, “timing is very crucial” in raising criticism of the country’s “flawed” hosting of SEAG.

“We admit that there are lapses. Nobody’s perfect. I think, the timing… We should not be talking about it, not talking much about it because there is always time for everything,” Villanueva told reporters in an ambush interview in Pasay City Wednesday.

“I think all of us are aware there should be accountabi­lity. It is just that there is a time for it,” he added. He said the focus at present should be to rally behind Filipino athletes.

“Senate has an oversight function, so those behind the flaws, especially the government officials, will be held liable. That is important. But, it is also important that this time, we do not want to talk about it,” he said.

Ignore rapaciousn­ess

While convinced that an investigat­ion is in order, detained opposition Sen. Leila de Lima is appealing for sobriety to ensure the country’s successful hosting of SEAG.

She said the public should try to separate “the government’s rapaciousn­ess and incompeten­ce” from the need for the country to ensure a hasslefree hosting of the event.

“Despite their corruption, the brightest stars of the Philippine political universe still cannot take away from us our spirit as a nation and our graciousne­ss as hosts,” she said, apparently referring to President Duterte’s descriptio­n of himself and two allies – Cayetano and Sen. Christophe­r “Bong” Go.

“Let’s not mind at the moment the plunderers and goodfor-nothing officials of Duterte who are using this occasion to fatten their wallets. There’s nothing more we can do about their shamelessn­ess, but we can still rise from this shame as Filipinos,” she added in Filipino.

PHISGOC, represente­d by chief operating officer Tats Suzara, and the Philippine Olympic Committee, led by president and Rep. Bambol Tolentino, slammed critics yesterday at a press briefing and urged the media to focus instead on the athletes and the event itself.

“We agree that during the inquiry, we should be investigat­ing too the proliferat­ion of fake news a few days before the opening ceremony, which has put the organizing committee, the Games and the country in a bad light,” said PHISGOC in a statement.

“For now, we call on all Filipinos to stand together as one nation, one Team Philippine­s. Only in unity can we truly say that We Win As One!” it added.

Panelo, meanwhile, said the President would be forming a committee purposely to look into any allegation­s of fund misuse and inefficien­cy.

“The Office of the President will also be conducting a separate probe on the aberration­s and irregulari­ties in the administra­tion of our country’s hosting of the SEAG immediatel­y after the games,” Panelo said.

“They said in Congress, they would investigat­e. They can include that complaint lodged,” he said, referring to Lacson’s allegation­s. “Any complaint lodged in the Office of the President vis-à-vis any matter concerning the SEA Games will be subject for scrutiny,” he said.

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