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While Congress has been busy looking into allegations that jueteng lord
Bong Pineda contributed P300 million to the Arroyo campaign, far less
attention has so far been devoted to charges that the President’s biggest
donor was actually the Filipino taxpayer.
The Marcos wealth, we found out, was also tapped. The DA fund releases
included over P1 billion that came from the portion of the Marcos money
confiscated by the government. In April 2004, part of these funds were
transferred from the Department of Land Reform to the DA. Up to now, the
DA cannot account for these funds, which were supposed to be used to buy
seeds and to bankroll community irrigation projects. Farmers groups allege
the money was instead diverted to the presidential campaign.
In all, as much as P5 billion from government coffers could have been
used to promote Arroyo’s candidacy, PCIJ research shows. While the bulk
of this amount came from the DA, other sources included the Overseas Workers
Welfare Administration (OWWA) Fund, which financed the issuance of temporary
Philhealth cards. Millions of these cards bearing the President’s photo
were distributed during the campaign. In addition the Motor Vehicles User’s
Charge was used to pay for GMA billboards and to provide temporary jobs
in an effort to win votes.
So when Makati Rep. Teodoro Locsin Jr. was asked last week how he used
his P3-million allocation from the DA, he quickly denied ever having received
it. "Where did the money go because it sure didn't go to, well, at least
(Las Piñas Rep.) Cynthia Villar and me?" Locsin asked in a privilege speech
last Monday.
Part of the answer, according to records obtained from the Office of
the Ombudsman and the Commission on Audit (COA), confirms what government
critics and farmers' groups have long been saying: that most of the money
went to pro-administration governors, mayors and congressmen who were
expected to support President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's election.
What the Ombudsman and the COA have so far discovered is that at least
P120 million found its way to 15 obscure or nonexistent private foundations
that had nothing to do with agriculture, but were apparently used as conduits
for campaign funds. The investigators still have not traced where hundreds
of millions more in DA funds ended up, but these too, they say, were likely
diverted to the campaign.
COA auditors were initially baffled by the manner in which the money,
disbursed beginning in February 2004, just a week before the start of
the 90-day presidential campaign, up to early May, flowed from the national
coffers to the DA's regional and local offices and then to the foundations.
But after months of research, the auditors, who asked not to be named,
now say they have uncovered an intricate plot to use the DA's network
to divert money to private groups and entities beyond government control
and exempted from the rigors of state accounting procedures.
"It was a well-planned project involving national and local officials
and the DA itself, with its nationwide machinery, which ensured easy distribution
throughout the country," said a COA source involved in the investigation.
Questions over the use of agriculture funds are not new. Last year, several
cases of plunder related to the use of DA funds were filed against President
Arroyo and officials of the agriculture and budget departments.
Since last year, the Ombudsman and the COA have been discreetly following
the money trail of the DA's cash-rich Ginintuang Masaganang Ani or GMA
Project, a program with several components that include rice-and-corn,
livestock and seeds program.
One of these components was the P728 million released on February 3,
2004, supposedly for the agricultural projects of congressional districts,
towns and provinces. Another component of the GMA Project is the P1.1
billion, released on February 11, 2004 supposedly for "maintenance and
operating expenses."
Both of these funds, according to former Solicitor General Fancisco Chavez,
went to legislators, governors and mayors to support the president's election.
Chavez said these were "in reality, an infusion into the political kitty"
of Arroyo. He alleges that the president committed plunder when she used
government funds for her campaign.
Crucial to the project was Jocelyn "Joc-joc" Bolante, a close friend
of First Gentleman Mike Arroyo and his fellow Makati Rotarian. Bolante
was named DA undersecretary for finance and administration shortly after
Arroyo took over the presidency from Joseph Estrada in 2001. He was in
fact the first Arroyo appointee to the department and was already put
in charge even before the agriculture secretary, Leonardo Montemayor,
was named.
Bolante's power over the agriculture department was widely known. Last
year, just before the start of the campaign, it was he — and not then Agriculture
Secretary Luis Lorenzo — who sent letters to various congressmen and local
officials informing them of the availability of funds under the DA's GMA
Project.
In that letter, Bolante directed these officials to coordinate with his
office "to discuss all the requirements to facilitate the said project
fund." Bolante's letter is dated February 3, 2004, the same day that the
Special Allotment Release Order or SARO for the fund was made available
by the budget department.
A copy of Bolante's letter was part of the documents submitted by Chavez
to back up his plunder charge. A similar case was filed by the Kilusang
Magbubukid ng Pilipinas and other farmers' groups.
Former DA Undersecretary Ibarra Poliquit admitted Bolante had a hand
in determining how the GMA Project funds were spent. He said former DA
chief Luis Lorenzo "authorized Bolante to decide on the realignment of
funds." Although the DA has a list of officials whose "proposed projects"
were to be funded by the GMA Fund, Bolante was given the authority to
drop them and replace them with others.
Assistant Secretary and DA Spokesperson Jose Montes insisted "the money
was put to good use" funding projects that were proposed by congressmen,
governors and mayors themselves. He even cited the growth of the agricultural
sector in 2004.
Montes also added that "the election had nothing to do with the timing
(of the release of the funds). Ang timing namin always
is kung kelan kailangan ng agrikultura yung pera, dun dapat natin
ilabas. Hinahabol naming production targets, planting season ng
April and May (Our timing is dictated by the needs of the agriculture
sector. That's when we release funds. We have to meet production targets
and the April and May planting season)."
Urban areas also need farm implements, Montes said. In the case of Parañaque,
the money went to shredders for composting. And contrary to the impression
that there aren't any farms or rice paddies in Parañaque, Montes said
there is "urban agriculture" composed of what he called "vacant-lot farming"
and the growing of ornamental plants.
Chavez said that the P728 million was disbursed to 105 congressmen, 53
governors, and 23 city and municipal mayors. He showed a list obtained
from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) attesting to the releases.
He also revealed that some of these recipients received actual cash and
not farm inputs, as DA rules had prescribed.
It now appears from COA findings that part of the agriculture funds went
to questionable foundations. In the Metro Manila and Southern Tagalog
region, COA auditors traced the funds to groups like the Gabaymasa Development
Foundation, Magsasaka Foundation and Aaron Foundation.
Records of the Securities and Exchange Commission show Gabaymasa's purpose
is "to undertake integrated rehabilitation and restoration activities
in areas affected by natural and man-made calamities." Yet the DA issued
to the foundation checks worth P23.1 million, supposedly to purchase farm
inputs in Quezon, Marinduque, Oriental and Occidental Mindoro, Palawan
and Paranaque.
Aaron Foundation, on the other hand, is listed in the SEC as engaging
in livelihood projects and daycare centers for street children. It received
P5.2 million, supposedly for agriculture projects in Batangas and Palawan.
The SEC has no record of a Magsasaka Foundation but it is listed as the
recipient of P6.5 million for farm projects in Palawan.
In the Visayas and Mindanao, the agriculture funds went to various foundations,
among them Ikaw at Ako Foundation (P13 million for projects in Bohol,
Biliran and Agusan del Norte), Philippine Social Development Foundation
(P31 million for projects in Agusan del Sur and del Norte and Surigao
del Norte), Matatag na Republika Cooperative P3.2 million for Biliran)
and People's Organization for Progress and Development, Inc. (P5.2 million
for Agusan del Sur and Surigao del Sur).
The other findings of the COA and the Ombudsman on these disbursements
reveal that:
DA Assistant Secretary Felix Jose Montes insisted no cash disbursements were made from the GMA Project. But COA records show that several provinces, including Rizal, Laguna and Batangas received cash transfers of P3 million to P5 million each during the campaign. Former Pampanga Gov. and now Senator Lito Lapid also admitted getting P5 million in cash, which he said was put by the provincial government in a trust fund that was used to buy fertilizers and other farm inputs. A Pampanga farmers' group, however, denied ever getting any support from the provincial government. — with additional reporting by Cheche Lazaro, Booma Cruz, Yvonne Chua, Vinia Datinguinoo, Avigail Olarte, Alecks Pabico and BR Guiruela
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Print this article RELATED DOCUMENTS DA Report on Farm Inputs/Implements Program as of January 31, 2005 Articles of Incorporation of Gabaymasa Development Foundation, Inc. Articles of Incorporation of Aaron Foundation RELEVANT LINKS Department of Budget and Management Overseas Workers Welfare Administration
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