The Philippine Star

Sandigan convicts Sarangani NGO execs for pocketing aid

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO

Two officials of a non-government organizati­on (NGO) in Sarangani have been sentenced to up to a year in prison for pocketing P350,000 in provincial government funds.

In a decision promulgate­d on Oct. 28, the Sandiganba­yan’s Sixth Division said Umbra Macagcalat and Hadji Mangelen, president and treasurer, respective­ly, of the Kamanga Muslim-Christian Fishermen’s Cooperativ­e, were convicted of failure to render accounts under Article 218 of the Revised Penal Code.

The court also ordered the two to pay a fine of P6,000 each.

Macagcalat, Mangelen and four former Sarangani provincial government officials were originally charged with graft and malversati­on of public funds in connection with fictitious financial assistance to the NGO in 2002.

In a plea bargain deal entered into with the Office of the Special Prosecutor in July, Macagcalat and Mangelen agreed to withdraw their not guilty plea in the malversati­on case and to plead guilty to the lesser offense of failure to render accounts.

The two also agreed to pay the government, through the cashier of the Sandiganba­yan, P350,000, representi­ng the amount of public funds involved in the cases.

In exchange, the prosecutio­n dropped the graft and malversati­on charges against the two NGO officials.

Conviction for graft carries a penalty of six to 15 years in prison while malversati­on of public funds carries a penalty of up to seven years in prison.

Filed by the Office of the Ombudsman in 2011, the cases stemmed from the disburseme­nt of provincial funds, which investigat­ion showed the cooperativ­e neither requested nor received as financial assistance.

The ombudsman said Mangelen and Macagcalat, in conspiracy with the accused provincial officials, encashed the check “for their own personal use and benefit.”

The court dismissed the charges filed against former Sarangani vice governor Felipe Constantin­o following his death.

Former provincial treasurer Cesar Cagang, provincial accountant Maria Camanay and executive assistant to vice governor Amelia Carmela Zoleta were the other respondent­s in the cases.

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