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Saturday, July 2, 2011

Philippines Charity PCSO not singling out Catholic Church Corruption- Audit Exposé

Malacañang Palace, Manila -  reiterated that no one was above the law but clarified it was not singling out the Catholic Church with the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office’s exposé on bishops who allegedly received sport utility vehicles as donations from the agency.

Deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte, however, said over radio dzRB that the bishops, despite being part of the religious sector, would not be immune from any criminal liabilities.

“Not only the Catholic Church, (but) for any religion, sect or denomination. The Constitution prohibits that (allotment of public funds to any religious sect or affiliation) because of the principle of separation of Church and state,” she said.

She cited Article 6 Section 29 (2) of the Constitution, which states that “No public money or property shall be appropriated, applied, paid, or employed, directly or indirectly, for the use, benefit, or support of any sect, church, denomination, sectarian institution, or system of religion, or of any priest, preacher, minister, or other religious teacher, or dignitary as such, except when such priest, preacher, minister, or dignitary is assigned to the armed forces, or to any penal institution, or government orphanage or leprosarium.”

Valte said no one would be above the law in terms of criminal liability.

“Certainly if it’s a criminal offense, nobody is above the law and nobody is immune from suit,” she said.

Valte said it would be up to PCSO chief Margie Juico to take the necessary steps as regards the filing of cases against those allegedly involved in the anomalies discovered during the previous administration.

She said the allegations were based on the Commission on Audit report in 2008 and 2009 “so it’s not personal.”

“The money should not have been disbursed because it’s violative of the constitutional prohibition,” Valte said.

“Apparently from the face of that document, there were no donations made to other denominations at least for 2009,” she said.

Discrediting the Church

The president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), Tandag, Surigao del Sur Bishop Nereo Odchimar, said last Friday he was not discounting the possibility that the issue that some prelates accepted vehicles from PCSO was somehow linked to moves aimed at discrediting the Catholic Church.

“There may be some ploy to also discredit the Catholic Church. It’s a possibility,” he said.

Odchimar said the issue will be taken up during the plenary assembly scheduled next week.

He claimed not having any personal knowledge on the issue since the alleged requests for the delivery of vehicles were not coursed through the CBCP. The requests were reportedly directly made to the PCSO.

When asked if he would discuss the matter with Cotabato Archbishop and former CBCP president Orlando Quevedo and Butuan Bishop Juan de Dios Pueblos, who were reported to have received vehicle donations from the PCSO, Odchimar said, “If they would be around, we would also be asking their positions.”

He said the CBCP does not have any authority to summon its member bishops.

Nothing unusual

Quevedo said in a statement that the practice of asking for PCSO assistance for social action is not unusual and has been going on since the time of former President Corazon Aquino.

“It has been reported that Cardinal Sin himself, in defense of the PCSO assistance given to him for his projects for the poor, said he would even accept money from the devil in order to help the poor. I myself would not hesitate to ask for PCSO assistance for a very poor individual who needs a costly medical operation but cannot afford it,” said Quevedo.

Odchimar urged the PCSO to validate its report since the implicated Catholic Church officials have denied that the vehicle donations by the government-run gambling institution were for personal use and not for social action programs.

“They (PCSO) should be accurate because names are being destroyed. It would rather be irresponsible to be implicating names. They were just made suspects,” he said.

Former CBCP president Fernando Capalla, on the other hand, challenged the PCSO to identify other religious organizations that are receiving financial aid.

No follower

Meantime, Quevedo recalled that some 10 years ago, the bishops in a plenary assembly made a collective decision not to solicit or accept donations from legal and illegal gambling.

“Such a decision was not universally followed. The needs of the poor in the minds of many people in the Church, bishops included, simply transcended such a decision. After all, the bishops also knew that gambling is not immoral per se. It becomes immoral because of circumstances,” he said.

‘Sa pari’ SAFARI vehicles

The issue on SUVs given to priests has rekindled an old joke in remote areas of Mindanao that the 4x4 vehicles going to the hinterlands are called “sa pari (owned by priests),” tribal leaders recalled yesterday.

It was an apparent pun on the four-wheel drive vehicle Safari, manufactured by Nissan.

Locals said the use by priests of these vehicles is not new particularly in far-flung areas where they hold Masses.

Aside from SUVs, priests are also known to use motorcycles called “habal habal.”

 

Surge in investment in the Philippines shows return of investor's confidence

As a clear indication of the return of investor's confidence in the Philippines, the country's top two investment promotion agencies - the Board of Investments (BOI) and the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) - have reported an aggregate of P259.94 billion ($6 billion) worth of investments in the first five months of this year.

The figure is 189 percent higher compared to the P90 billion ($2.07 billion) approved investments generated in the same period of last year.

The BOI figure showed a staggering increase of 338 percent, from P43.65 billion ($1 billion) for the first five months of last year to P191.35 billion ($4.41 billion) for the same period of this year. PEZA, on the other hand, was able to increase investments by 48 percent, from P46.35 billion ($1.07 billion) to $68.59 billion ($1.58 billion) during the five-month period.

Earlier, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), the country's central bank, also reported that the Philippines continues to attract foreign investments, with foreign portfolio investments posting a $2.3 billion net inflow as of June 18 this year.

Data released by the BSP showed recently, the net inflow of " hot money," a term used to describe portfolio investments because of the speed that it can be poured and taken out of the economy, was more than thrice the $696.52 million in the same period in 2010.

Total inflows of foreign capital into the country as of June 18 amounted to $8.57 billion, more than twice the $4.08 billion last year, the BSP said.

But, according to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), the major sources of new investments were local investors with committed investments worth $224.57 billion ($5.18 billion), accounting for 86 percent of total investment approvals, while foreign investors contributed only $35.37 billion ($816 million) or a measly 14 percent. Officials said that the 390 approved projects are expected to create 74,266 additional jobs when fully operational, a 76 percent increase from last year' s 42,105.

A report by the state-owned Philippines News Agency (PNA) said that the manufacturing sector cornered the highest committed investments worth $120.79 billion ($2.79 billion), or a whopping 439 percent increase compared to the P22.41 billion ($517 million) posted in the same period last year.

One of the biggest projects to be undertaken this year is the modernization and conversion of the Bataan oil refinery of Petron Corporation, which is 99.47 percent Filipino-owned. Petron, which is an existing industry participant under the Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Act of 1998, has infused new investments worth P74.78 billion in its Bataan project. Another notable project is New Carcar Manufacturing, Inc. (100 percent Filipino- owned), a new producer of steel billet, which has committed P10.57 billion ($244 million) worth of investments. The company's production facilities are proposed to be located in La Union, Cebu, Panabo City and Davao del Norte.

The electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply sector, which came in second with investments amounting to P70.17 billion ($1.62 billion), doubling the amount of investments for last year, remains bullish, garnering a 27 percent share of total investment approvals in the first five months of 2011.

The real estate activities sector also generated P51.77 billion ($1.19 billion) worth of investments in the first five months of 2011, posting an increase of 92 percent over last year's same period.

But it was the administrative support and service activities sector that posted the highest increase in investment approvals of 6,457 percent to P5.55 billion ($4.9 million). Accommodation and food service activities sector also posted a positive increase of 122 percent to P3.21 billion ($74 million).

Meanwhile, the implementation of the public-private partnership (PPP) program, a flagship project of President Benigno Aquino III, has hit another snag.

Newly-designated Transportation and Communications Secretary Mar Roxas said that he still would like to study first the bidding of the contract to operate Metro Manila's two railway systems - Light Rail Transit (LRT) 1 and Metro Rail Transit (MRT) 3 - which was scheduled on July 11.

Roxas said that the postponement of the first PPP bidding, which was ordered by his predecessor in the DOTC, was okay with him.

According to Roxas "I am comfortable with the postponement because I am not yet fully up to speed on it. It's a P15-billion ($346 million) project, mostly outflow, so we need to be very careful and sure about this.

President Aquino also said that 10 PPP projects would be bid out this year (2011).

 

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