The Philippine Star

Speedy release of P10.6 B to NTF-ELCAC questioned

- By PAOLO ROMERO

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon yesterday questioned what he described as the speedy release of P10.6 billion to the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict, which was transferre­d within just two months or when calls were made to deClose fund the NTF-ELCAC and realign the budget to the government’s COVID-19 response.

Citing data from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM), Drilon said the total fund releases to the NTF-ELCAC amounted to P10.68 billion as of April.

The task force has a total appropriat­ion of P19 billion under the 2021 General Appropriat­ions Act (GAA). Of the amount, P16.4 billion will go to its Barangay Developmen­t Program, wherein over 800 barangays will receive P20 million each.

Drilon said while the country’s ayuda (cash aid) of P8,000 for private sector workers remains a proposal and unfunded, the controvers­ial task force has received a total of P10.68 billion.

Of the P10.68 billion, P7.54 billion was released in April alone, following calls to defund the task force due to the red-tagging of community pantry organizers.

“Why the seeming rush to release

the budget? Why is the release of funds for Marawi rehabilita­tion slow? Where will the P10.68 billion be used?” Drilon asked.

He said he found the disburseme­nts sneaky as “there is a clear haste in the releases” due to demands to realign the anti-insurgency funds. On March 24, the NTF-ELCAC received P3.14 billion. Drilon said defeating the COVID virus and addressing the effects of the pandemic such as unemployme­nt and hunger should be the priority of the Duterte administra­tion.

He said 62 percent of Filipino households experience­d hunger and 4.4 million lost their jobs in 2020 due to the pandemic.

“Yet, the government is giving priority to NTF-ELCAC’s anti-insurgency program rather than use the funds to expand ayuda, buy vaccines and feed the poor,” Drilon said. There is a pending Bayanihan 3 measure in Congress that will provide a bigger economic stimulus. But its passage is surrounded by uncertaint­y over the availabili­ty of funds, he said.

Drilon questioned the lack of transparen­cy on the budget of NTF-ELCAC as he reiterated his call for the submission of a quarterly report on the utilizatio­n of the P19-billion fund as mandated under the 2021 GAA. The 2021 GAA provides that the implementi­ng agencies and NTFELCAC should submit to the Office of the President, DBM, House of Representa­tives and the Senate, either in printed or electronic form, quarterly reports on the utilizatio­n of funds and physical accomplish­ments.

Drilon said the task force submitted the report to Senate President Vicente Sotto III, Sen. Panfilo Lacson, who chairs the committee on national defense and security, and Sen. Sonny Angara, chairman of the finance committee.

Angara said he would ask for a more detailed report from the NTF-ELCAC.

Meanwhile, Defense Undersecre­tary Reynaldo Mapagu, chair of Task Force Balik-Loob, said defunding the NTF-ELCAC would jeopardize the government’s efforts to end the country’s insurgency problem.

Mapagu said the whole-of-government approach being taken to end the insurgency problem must be supported and sustained.

He said the creation of the NTFELCAC heralded the beginning of a proactive and inclusive approach to the problem and violence perpetrate­d by what the government now considers as a communist terrorist group.

“As we make headway in our advocacies, especially for the communitie­s that have been overlooked for the longest time and forced to grapple with the insurgency problem on their own, many of our fellow Filipinos have already benefited from the programs facilitate­d and enabled by the NTF-ELCAC,” Mapagu said.

“Defunding the task force and the programs it facilitate­s will jeopardize the progress we have made over the past years, especially the Barangay Developmen­t Program for our communitie­s as well as our localized reintegrat­ion program for former rebels,” Mapagu, chair of the enhanced comprehens­ive local integratio­n program and amnesty program cluster of the NTF-ELCAC, said.

Senators sought to defund the NTFELCAC after Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade and Communicat­ions Undersecre­tary Lorraine Badoy, both spokespers­ons for the anti-insurgency body, linked organizers of community pantries to the communist group.

The NTF-ELCAC was created by President Duterte in 2018 by issuing Executive

Order 70 to solve the insurgency problem through peaceful means.

During a visit in Leyte last week, Sen. Bong Go said he was not amenable to the proposal of his fellow senators to defund the NTF-ELCAC. “Whatever good efforts in developmen­t, under the antiinsurg­ency campaign, will be retarded if the NTF-ELCAC will have no funds at all,” Go said.

The government allotted budget for developmen­t projects in the barangays, said Go.

“The campaign should continue. The NTF-ELCAC is doing good,” he said.

Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomez opposed moves in Congress to defund NTF-ELCAC. Gomez, chair of the House disaster resilience committee, said that while she supports calls for accountabi­lity of NTFELCAC over the red-tagging issue, she believes defunding the anti-insurgency body is drastic and will not solve the issue.

She cited the P16-billion budget earmarked for the Barangay Developmen­t Program, which helped many former rebels return to mainstream society.

She said the budget is a major headway toward achieving peace, especially in the countrysid­e. “It does not have to be one or the other. We can support community pantries at the same time continue our successful programs toward achieving peace through the NTF-ELCAC. While I strongly agree that public officials should be held accountabl­e for their actions and statements, let us take rational actions that will not jeopardize localized programs to end insurgency,” she said. Gomez reminded NTF-ELCAC officials that red-tagging community pantry organizers stifles much needed efforts to feed hungry families affected by the pandemic.

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