Posted: 05
Sep 2013 10:26 PM PDT
In light of the pork barrel scandal rocking the country today, Pinoy Weekly launches a series examining the proposed 2014 national budget. Here we look at how pork barrel is maintained, but also how public funds may be misused, misallocated or denied from social services needed by impoverished Filipinos. First in the series: On the budget for “defense” used for political repression and corruption.
Human rights groups held a picket in front of
the House of the Representatives while the Department of National Defense
proposed budget for 2014 is being deliberated. The groups called for zero
budget for the Defense Department. (Contributed Photo)
Public anger against rampant corrupt practices
in government involving pork barrel funds was unleashed in a protest gathering
of hundreds of thousands in Luneta on August 26. Many of those who went to
Luneta asserted their call to abolish all pork barrel, including the
President’s pork barrel, and insisted that the exposed scam was just the tip of
the iceberg.
By all indications, this is true in the
national budget proposed by the Aquino administration for next year, 2014.
A study from Kabataan Party-list estimates the
president’s pork barrel funds – meaning lump sum funds that are discretionary
to the President in nature — range from PhP1.3 Trillion to a maximum of
PhP1.5-T. This, of course, is equivalent to more than half of the annual
national budget.
But aside from these, Kabataan was alarmed at
some “hidden” pork barrel funds within budgets of line agencies. Included in
these agencies are the military and the police. The Department of National
Defense (DND) enjoys a P1.775 Billion increase in the 2014 proposed budget. The
group said that from almost PhP90-B in 2013, it is proposed to balloon to
almost PhP93-B. It can even run to as high as P162-B, Kabataan estimated.
For 2014, the Department of Budget and
Management (DBM) placed the defense budget at P81,777,178. But Kabataan and
human rights group Karapatan scrutinized items in the proposed budget and found
out that aside from the institutions directly under DND, lump-sum amounts where
inserted in the national budget – distributed in different government line
agencies and programs.
* * *
Department of National
Defense
|
2014
proposed budget
|
Office of the Secretary
|
725,
913
|
Government Arsenal
|
920,
383
|
National Defense College
|
60,
367
|
Office for Civil Defense
|
665,
962
|
Philippine Veterans’ Affairs
Office
|
385,
382
|
Veterans’ Memorial Medical Center
|
876,
565
|
Philippine Army
|
40,
878,732
|
Philippine Air Force
|
11,
904 798
|
Philippine Navy
|
13,
815,844
|
General Headquarters, AFP and AFP
Wide Service Support Units
|
11,
542,232
|
Total
|
81,
777, 178
|
Source:DBM
* * *
Prone
to corruption
Cristina Palabay, Karapatan secretary general,
in an interview with Pinoy Weekly, called the defense budget
as a “license (from the President) to kill and steal.”
Palabay noted the P7,217,664,000 budget
alloted for Payapa at Masaganang Pamayanan (Pamana) projects as pork barrel for
AFP generals. “These (funds) are not itemized, and a lump sum appropriation
that can be considered as general pork,” Palabay said.
Pamana is the national government’s
multi-sectoral approach program for peace and development in areas affected by
armed conflict, and implemented in 48 provinces.
Administered by the Office of the Presidential
Adviser for Peace Process (OPAPP), and monitored by the Department of Intertior
and Local Government, Pamana’s three objectives include “improving local
governance, reducing poverty through delivery of basic social services and
empowering local communities.”
But Karapatan said that Pamana has been part
of the counter-insurgency program Oplan Bayanihan. The program is supposedly
part of “winning hearts and minds” of communities through dole-out projects
aimed at areas where there supposedly is strong rebel presence.
“It’s a fund to soften the ground under the
framework of Oplan Bayanihan,” said Palabay. She stressed that Pamana funds are
distributed in different line agencies, some of which had budget for social
services, like the Department of Health and the Department of Social Welfare
and Development.
Palabay also claimed that there’s no line item
specification on Pamanas’ allocated budget. “What is happening is that local
government units can nominate or submit project proposals depending on what
they allegedly need in solving peace and order problems and national security
questions in localities,” said Palabay.
The group believed that the funds are prone to
corruption and encourage patronage politics.
The Pamana website shows projects implemented
in regions such as roads, water system, livelihood and others as part of the
so-called transparency and accountability of the program. But Palabay pointed
out that Pamana is a counter-insurgency program guised as economic projects.
“Our problem with this budget (Pamana) is that
it is framed in combat, a militaristic approaches to solving the causes of
civil strife in the country,” Palabay said.
* * *
BUDGET FOR PAMANA IN THE FF
AGENCIES
|
2014
|
DILG
|
1,547,470,000
|
DSWD
|
922,014,000
|
DAR
|
196,350,000
|
DOE
|
19,332,000
|
CHED
|
4,000,000 (as per KPL data)
|
ARMM
|
2,660,110,000
|
DA
|
1,735,562,000
|
Office of the Secretary
|
1,721,512,000
|
Bureau of Fisheries &Aquatic
resources
|
14,050,000
|
DOH
|
132,826,000
|
TOTAL BUDGET FOR PAMANA
|
7,217,664,000
|
* * *
“Offering social services to people while
pointing guns at them is not a geniune public service,” she explained.
The funds are also susceptible to corruption
because of utter lack of transparency in using and accounting for of the funds.
Palabay challenged the Commission on Audit to look into the past three years
budget of the defense. “Aside from the presidential pork, there is a big stake
here in what we call generals’ pork ” Palabay said.
In recent years, several AFP officials were
exposed to be involved in controversies regarding alleged misuse of military
funds. Former military budget officer and retired Col. George Rabusa exposed
the pabaon system (send-off money) and conversion of military
funds in 2011.
In 2007, then-Lt.Sg. Nancy Gadian exposed
anomalies in the use of a PhP46-Million fund for RP-US Balikatan military
exercises. This year, a former director of the Philippine National Police, Gen.
Avelino Razon, was charged in gthe Sandiganbayan for the alleged “ghost repairs
and maintenance” of armored vehicles costing PhP385.48 Million.
In a privilege speech on September 2 calling
for the abolition of the pork barrel system, Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Javier
Colmenares explained that in 2009, the DND-AFP budget of PhP56.5-B was delayed
due to the delayed approval of the General Appropriations Act (GAA). The
DND-AFP spent PhP14-B from January to March from its “re-enacted 2008 budget”.
But instead of deducting this from the approved regular budget, the Arroyo
government added it, making PhP70.431-B the 2009 appropriations and obligations
for the military and police.
“All the while, Congress thought it only
appropriated PhP56.5-B to the DND-AFP,” explained Colmenares.
Colmenares also claimed in his speech that the
PNP-DILG and the AFP recieved funds from Malampaya during the Arroyo
administration. “Pres. Arroyo gave the PNP one SARO for PhP1.6-B and another
for PhP540-M, a lump sum amount of PhP2.14-B for the vague and generalized
purpose of enabling the PNP to respond immediately to emergencies in times of
natural calamities,” the lawmaker said.
For the DILG-PNP, according to Colmenares,
more than PhP2-B was given for “disaster preparedness”. But this was allegedly
spent on rubberized boats and other overpriced projects in 2009. This was
exposed during the budget deliberation for DILG in 2012, upon the
interpellation of Bayan Muna
The Bayan Muna lawmaker added that the DND
managed to get more than PhP1-B for AFP modernization fund in 2009 right before
the elections.
However, there appears to be no Special Allotment Release Orders, or SARO, for the account, according to the Department of Energy. Meanwhile, another P198-M was spent to buy a “generator set” and repair the roofs and structures of the Philippine Military Academy.
However, there appears to be no Special Allotment Release Orders, or SARO, for the account, according to the Department of Energy. Meanwhile, another P198-M was spent to buy a “generator set” and repair the roofs and structures of the Philippine Military Academy.
In a separate interview, Colmenares claimed
that he personally unearthed a nearly P40-B unliquidated amount of the AFP’s
modernization fund.
“The AFP cannot account for this amount. And
yet, they are asking again for a higher budget,” he said. Colmenares also pointed
out that there are other unsolved controversies in the military institution,
ranging from allegations of officers maintaining “ghost soldiers”, corrupt
practices such as the “pabaon system”, among others. “These (cases) were
never (closed). Is there anyone who prosecuted?” Colmenares rhetorically asked.
He noted that the vague lump sum amounts like
that of the Pamana fund, is also a source of graft and corruption due to
discretionary nature of it. “You can disperse the fund to your favored
municipalities or allies (at your own pleasure),” he said.
“By some stroke of it, if it was not corrupted
still it was anomalous to favor allies. What if some municipalities need
hospitals, you deny it because officials are not your allies?” Colmenares said.
More violations, abuses
Karapatan said that the proposed amount in the
2014 defense budget will be used to stiffle legitimate dissent and further
escalate human rights violations.
Palabay echoed the popular clamor to redirect
huge amounts of government funds to social services like public hospitals and
medical care for the poor, education and subsidies to public colleges and
universities and, housing facilities where people can access the funds directly
and benefit from it.
“(They can do this) instead of (the mondy) ending
up either in the generals’ pockets or used to bomb communities—as what is
happening now in Sagada, Mountain Province,” Palabay said.
The group cited that the amount allocated to
AFP Medical Center is PhP 1,218,835,000. This is used primarily for soldier-patients.
Compare this to the alloted budgets of special hospitals whose services are
being accessed by the poor, like Jose Reyes Memorial Medical Center (with
PhP541,302,000 allocation), National Children’s Hospital (PhP286,914,000);
Philippine Orthopedic Center (PhP519,871,000); Quirino Memorial Medical Center
(PhP356,531,000) and Tondo Medical Center (PhP255,966,000).
Despite wide and persistent clamor for the
disbandment of paramilitary groups, civilian volunteers groups and private
armies, the administration allocated PhP2-B for Civilian Armed Forces
Geographical Units (Cafgu). Since 2010, according to Karapatan, paramilitary
groups have been involved in extrajudicial killings and human rights
violations, such as the incidents involving Datu Jimmy Liguyon, Fr. Fausto
Tentorio, and the massacre of Juvy Capion and her two children. These cases
were committed despite President Aquino’s promise to dismantle paramilitary
groups, and calls from several states including the European parliament in the
Universal Periodic Review in 2012.
“Similarly, the operations of the Special
Cafgu Active Auxiliary (SCAA) units, which are co-funded and organized by the
AFP and mining/transnational corporations, have continued, with Pres. Aquino
categorically giving the go-signal for it on October 20, 2011. The question
then is why are we still funding CAFGUs and SCAAs?” Palabay asked.
The latest victim of paramilitary group was
Anting Freay, 60, a Blaan tribal chieftain. Freay and his 16-year-old son were
allegedly killed by the elements of the AFP’s 39th Infantry Battalion and Task
Force Kitaco (Kiblawan, Tampakan, Columbio). Task Force Kitaco was created
under the 1002nd IB-PA to secure the areas covered by the SMI-Xstrata’s mining
project.
“Public funds are being used to kill the
people and perpetrate thousands of rights violations. Under Aquino’s
counter-insurgency program Oplan Bayanihan,” Palabay said.
Lately, the Philippine Air Force used MG520
planes to bomb suspected lairs of the New People’s Army in Sagada, Mountain Province.
Miltary and police officials claimed there were no collateral damage in the air
strikes. But indigenous groups condemned the air strikes and said it destroyed
their communal hunting grounds, swidden farms and watershed areas.
* * *
FUND
|
2014 (proposed)
|
DND
|
82,195,121,000
|
PNP (DILG)
|
71,945,660,000
|
Support for Peace and Order
Councils (DILG)
|
33,830,000
|
Comprehensive Local Integration
Program (DILG)
|
74,036,000
|
NICA
|
590,956,000
|
OPAPP
|
351,547,000
|
NSC
|
88,584,000
|
BUDGET FOR PAMANA
|
7,217,664,000
|
TOTAL
|
P162,497,398,000
|
* * *
Karapatan also questioned the allocation of
funds for intelligence units, including the allocation of intelligence funds of
President Aquino himself. Despite millions of pesos spent on intelligence
units, fugitive public officials and erring military officers like Palparan
remain at large.
The supposed surrender of Janet Lim-Napoles
proved the futility of the intelligence community, according to Palabay. “The
Aquino government uses the intelligence funds to curtail the rights and freedom
of the people, instead of using it to arrest the likes of the butcher
Palparan,” Palabay said.
She cited the recent Court of Appeals decision
to release security guard Rolly Panesa, who was arrested, tortured and tagged
as a high ranking official of the NPA.
Karapatan has documented 142 cases of
extrajudicial murders and 164 frustrated killing; 16 incidents of enforced
disappearances; 76 cases of torture; 540 cases of illegal arrest; and more than
30,000 victims of forced evacuations in three years of the Aquino administration.
It fears that it will escalate once the budget
is approved. Thus, the group called for “zero budget” for the Defense
Department.
***************
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