No images? Click here MOBILE HOME It’s a clear case of K-9 overload, but the scene ceases to be amusing once it is understood that this pedicab also serves as a makeshift shelter for a family who, along with seven pet dogs, was recently evicted from an apartment on Legarda Street in Manila for failure to pay rent. A House bill would extend help to similarly situated renters who have lost their sources of livelihood because of the pandemic. —Marianne Bermudez NewsTough virus policy stops 100K casesCarlito Galvez Jr., the chief implementer of the national action plan against COVID-19, says the government’s aggressive isolation policy has prevented more than 100,000 coronavirus infections. He says the government, with a budget of P4.5 billion, is looking to convert more hotels in Metro Manila, Central Luzon and Calabarzon into quarantines for the isolation of 128,000 COVID-19 patients. —STORY BY JEANNETTE I. ANDRADE Read more: http://bit.ly/inq-plus NewsDu30 to settle issue on seating gaps if . . .Top officials publicly disagree with each other on easing physical distancing rules on public transportation, with many arguing that it is key to reviving the economy and few warning that it could cause a surge in coronavirus infections. President Duterte will resolve the dispute if the interagency task force in charge of dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic is unable to settle the disagreement. —STORY BY JULIE M. AURELIO AND DJ YAP Read more: http://bit.ly/inq-plus RegionsTourist rush leads to tighter rules People wanting to take a quick weekend breather in Tagaytay should expect stricter security checks starting this week, with visitors required to present a police-issued travel authority before they could enjoy the city’s restaurants and parks overlooking Taal Volcano. Checkpoints will be set up to regulate the entry of visitors after thousands of tourists flocked to Tagaytay last week despite travel restrictions. —STORY BY MARICAR CINCO Read more: http://bit.ly/inq-plus 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 storyDOJ: More PhilHealth officials may be charged By Dona Z. Pazzibugan Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra on Tuesday said the investigation of alleged massive corruption in Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) would continue and “more people may be charged.” Malacañang also said the recommendation of a task force led by the Department of Justice (DOJ) to bring criminal charges against top PhilHealth officials was “only the beginning,” holding out hope that Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, the PhilHealth chair, had not ridden out liability for the mess at the state-run health insurer. On Monday night, President Duterte approved the task force recommendation to file criminal charges against former PhilHealth president and CEO Ricardo Morales; senior vice president (SVP) for information technology Jovita Aragona; acting senior manager for information technology Calixto Gabuya Jr.; SVP for fund management Renato Limsiaco Jr.; SVP for health finance policy Israel Francis Pargas; executive vice president, chief operating officer and acting president Arnel de Jesus; and division chief Bobby Crisostomo. The charges were graft, malversation and illegal use of public funds, and gross misconduct and gross neglect, among other offenses that allegedly had cost PhilHealth P154 billion in losses to corruption since 2003. Several senators expressed disappointment on Tuesday at the task force’s decision not to recommend charges against Duque, whom an investigation by the Senate committee of the whole found liable for negligence that had led to the losses that brought PhilHealth to the brink of bankruptcy. “I’m dumbfounded,” said Senate President Vicente Sotto III, who led the “Article 217 of [the Revised Penal Code] is very clear. Perhaps the Ombudsman would have a better perspective of the [PhilHealth irregularities],” Sotto said. He was referring to the law penalizing malversation of public funds, which states that government officials who allowed the misappropriation of taxpayer money with consent or “through abandonment or negligence” should be held criminally liable. Sotto earlier said Duque’s claim that he had no knowledge of the alleged misuse of PhilHealth funds was a virtual admission of the health chief’s negligence as head of the health insurance company. “It’s a good thing that the Ombudsman does not rely [on task forces for its investigations]. They have motu proprio powers,” Sotto said. ‘Initial findings’ “Further investigations will be conducted and more people may be charged,” Guevarra said when asked why Duque and PhilHealth SVP for the legal sector Rodolfo del Rosario were not found liable. He said the composite teams created by the task force would continue the investigation and file criminal or administrative complaints “when the case buildup or evidence gathering is completed.” Justice Undersecretary Markk Perete said the liability of health-care institutions that benefited from irregular reimbursements “is one of the aspects they (composite teams) are looking at.” The complaints against Morales and the six other PhilHealth officials will be filed in the Office of the Ombudsman, the concerned prosecutors, and PhilHealth for administrative cases, he said. Guevarra said representatives from the Ombudsman, Commission on Audit and the Civil Service Commission, who are pursuing their own investigations, attended the task force’s seven hearings “like guest participants.” “They had no hand in the evaluation and recommendations made by the DOJ,” he said. Perete explained that DOJ members on the task force did the “fact-finding,” and that it would be up to the prosecutors to “independently and objectively assess and evaluate the evidence that will be presented.” Admonition for Duque, board In Malacañang, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque, asked if Duque was not yet absolved, said: “This is only the beginning. The report states that the National Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Health will continue their investigation, and the Ombudsman will continue its own investigation.” In a statement issued on Tuesday, PhilHealth said it would continue to cooperate with the investigators as it expressed hope that the filing of charges against its top officials would allow those “innocent” of the crime they had been accused of a chance to clear their names. Sen. Christopher “Bong” Go, chair of the Senate health committee, said the task force’s investigation should lead to corrupt PhilHealth officials being thrown in jail as the President had directed. In its report to the President, the task force said the board of directors and the executive committee “who are supposed to set the policies and operational guidelines for the management of PhilHealth have not shown the due diligence required of them in the discharge of their duties.” “While it found the board negligent in some of its decisions, the task force nevertheless noted that such negligence was mitigated by the active concealment of vital documents and the apparent misrepresentation by those who have sought the board’s approval,” it said. The probe focused on three issues: the interim reimbursement mechanism (IRM), the purchase of information and communications technology (ICT) equipment, and the failure to prosecute and penalize erring PhilHealth personnel, health-care institutions and medical professionals. The task force said it found “negligence” on the part of the executive committee and the board in implementing the IRM, a special financial assistance program to health-care providers. Insufficient guidelines It said the executive committee members deliberately concealed “important information or audit documents” to get board approval of their requested budget to procure certain ICT equipment. One request that involved a budget of over P730 million did not meet the legal requirement to be included in PhilHealth’s information system strategic plan. The task force also flagged PhilHealth’s policy to grant “wholesale amnesty” in favor of health-care institutions with claims that are no longer enforceable against the company. It found cases where payments for health-care institutions were diverted to a private account or to an undisclosed account, but PhilHealth did not file a criminal complaint against the perpetrators. Sen. Panfilo Lacson, who initiated the Senate inquiry along with Sotto, declined to comment on the task force’s recommendations, saying he had yet to read the full report. But he said the documents and other evidence that the Senate committee of the whole had submitted to Guevarra had been “put to good use at the very least.” “This is good reason enough to feel gratified that we did our share in taking the first big step in making those criminally and administratively liable for the misuse and abuse of public money accountable,” Lacson said. Sen. Francis Pangilinan said Duque’s exoneration was “no longer surprising” as the Duterte administration had a long record of protecting its allies implicated in corruption. “The list of corrupt and incompetent untouchables in this administration is getting longer,” Pangilinan said. —WITH REPORTS FROM MARLON RAMOS, JULIE M. AURELIO AND JOVIC YEE
Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialSimon-pureThe old trick of branding activists as “commies” has reached a novel point, leading to the suspension on Sept. 9 of deliberations in the House of Representatives on the 2021 budget of the Presidential Communications Operations Office. What snagged the budget proceedings was Communications Undersecretary Lorraine Badoy’s supposed use of her position and government resources in tagging members of the Makabayan bloc in the House as “high-ranking members” of the Communist Party of the Philippines, its armed wing the New People’s Army, and its political arm the National Democratic Front. Badoy made the accusation in Facebook posts although she offered no evidence to back it; she likewise called on the representatives of the party list groups ACT Teachers, Bayan Muna, Gabriela and Kabataan to drop the supposed pretense of being lawmakers and admit to membership in the CPP-NPA-NDF. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
DOJ: More PhilHealth officials may be charged. Inquirer Newsletter September 16, 2020
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