No images? Click here ONLINE CAMPUS TOUR In time for online classes, freshmen can explore University of Santo Tomas’ hallowed halls without stepping out of their homes and worrying about catching the virus, thanks to a popular sandbox adventure game. —SCREENSHOT FROM UST’S VIDEO TEASER WorldShooting of Black man sparks protestsKENOSHA, WISCONSIN—Hundreds of people spilled into the streets of Kenosha for a second night Monday to protest the wounding of Jacob Blake by police, throwing bottles and shooting fireworks at law enforcers guarding the courthouse. Police first fired the tear gas about 30 minutes after the 8 p.m. curfew took effect and protesters refused to disperse. But hundreds of people stuck around, lighting fires. —STORY BY AP Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/World NewsVirus reinfection still unsure–WHOHong Kong has reported the first documented case of coronavirus reinfection, but the World Health Organization (WHO) says more studies need to be done to determine how long a person’s immune response to the COVID-19 agent can last. The WHO’s Maria Van Kerkhove says the UN agency has advised countries to do sequencing of the virus to better understand how it affects the population. —STORY BY JOVIC YEE Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/Jovic Yee SportsJames, Lakers tab ‘emotional’ winAn emotional LeBron James faced the media after leading his top-seeded Los Angeles Lakers to a commanding 3-1 lead over the Portland Trailblazers. James gave a splendid performance to honor his dear departed friend Kobe Bryant a day after his birthday. However, his celebrations were tempered because of the real battle outside the bubble: another Black man, Jacob Blake, was shot at the back by police in Wisconsin. —STORY BY AP Read more: sports.inquirer.net Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19 and the enhanced community quarantine. Banner storyDuterte tells PhilHealth president: Time to resignBy Dona Z. Pazzibugan, Julie M. Aurelio and Marlon Ramos President Duterte has asked Ricardo Morales, president of Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) to resign, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said on Tuesday. He said Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea “had talked earlier to Morales, and that the latter said he would understand if he had to be replaced.” The President’s move came after the Senate had concluded its latest inquiry into alleged corruption in PhilHealth, particularly those involving funds for a P2-billion information technology project and a P30-billion interim reimbursement mechanism (IRM) to hospitals that had not treated COVID-19 patients, which the emergency measure was intended for. In a televised speech on Tuesday, the President said he would spend the rest of his years in office to prosecuting and punishing those involved in irregularities in PhilHealth. “All must be prosecuted and jailed,” he said. Mr. Duterte said all of the company’s procurement must be published “even if it’s just a paper clip.” “Put it out in the newspaper for people to read. So I hope that I have made myself clear on this. More measures will come,” the President said. He said his task force had created teams composed of the National Bureau of Investigation, Commission on Audit, Anti-Money Laundering Council and the Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission to conduct lifestyle checks on certain key PhilHealth officials. Sen. Francis Pangilinan said Mr. Duterte could show he was serious in cleaning up the agency by firing Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, PhilHealth’s chair, and jailing those behind the irresponsible use of the agency’s funds. “While Duque is there, it is hard to believe the President is serious in eliminating corruption,” Pangilinan said. Asked if he was hoping the President would be able to jail corrupt PhilHealth officials as promised, Sen. Richard Gordon said “the proof of the pudding is in the eating.” Real ‘mafia’ The chair of the Senate blue ribbon committee said PhilHealth’s “Mindanao Group” of regional vice presidents was the real “mafia” that had pocketed 20 percent in kickbacks from multibillion-peso rackets. Gordon said this was among the findings of his committee’s investigation last year of the “ghost” dialysis scam and other fraudulent PhilHealth transactions, which was triggered by the Inquirer’s exposé on alleged irregularities that cost the company P154 billion since 2013. He said the corrupt practices had turned PhilHealth into “FailHealth” as its “economic life has become fragile.” “All these [fraud] could not have been perpetrated without their cooperation or maybe even principal leadership. There existed sufficient safeguards in the system that could have caught these criminal schemes had they performed their jobs faithfully and honestly,” Gordon said. The senator recommended the filing of malversation of public funds and other criminal cases against former Health Secretary Janette Garin, former Budget Secretary Florencio “Butch” Abad, former PhilHealth President and CEO Alexander Padilla and several others. Among those he named “PhilHealth mafia” members were regional vice presidents Paolo Johann Perez, Valerie Anne Hollero, Masiding Alonto Jr., Khaliquzzaman Macabato, Dennis Adre, William Chavez, Miriam Grace Pamonag and Jelbert Galicto. Except for Pamonag and Galicto, these officials temporarily stepped down last week in deference to Guevarra’s call as his task force’s investigation gathered momentum. ‘Good mafia’ Adre insisted that they were the ones who initiated reforms and consistently fought against “illegal orders” issued by past PhilHealth chiefs. “We are the good mafia. We were never charged due to corruption,” Adre said in a phone interview. He said Gordon’s claims “are all false.” Adre said he had helped Keith and former Marine Col. Etrobal Laborte, who also blew the whistle on irregularities in PhilHealth, in investigating the overpriced supply contracts and other corruption issues in PhilHealth that Morales allegedly failed to solve. In their testimony during the Senate hearing on Aug. 11, Cabading and Keith both rejected claims that Perez, Hollero, Alonto, Macabato, Adre and Chavez were responsible for the massive corruption in PhilHealth. “They were [called] the mafia, but in my definition they are the … modern-day heroes,” Cabading said. Gordon proposed the immediate replacement of all PhilHealth regional vice presidents and a reorganization through a law that would ensure lasting reforms in the state insurer. In a text message, Padilla denied Gordon’s allegations that he had diverted PhilHealth funds. “That never happened. There was no such fund and therefore no fund diversion,” he said in a text message. Abad said the allegations against him were “baseless,” pointing out that he was never invited by Gordon’s panel or asked to submit his position paper on the issue.
Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialSame old storyOnly 25 health care workers expressed interest in the hiring program that the DOH launched in April, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said in an online forum last week. He forthwith appealed to "the sense of nationalism, the sense of patriotism, of every health care worker." He reminded them that there was "a war" going on, and "who will take care, look after, or treat our fellow Filipino but us?" He said it was urgent to "help each other," to "be united," to "be selfless." For one wild moment—the irony being so sharp—the weary observer could have sworn Duque was talking to the plunderers of PhilHealth. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
Duterte tells PhilHealth president: Time to resign. Inquirer Newsletter. August 26, 2020
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