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As much as P5 billion from government coffers could have been used to
promote Arroyo's candidacy, PCIJ research shows. The Department of Agriculture
(DA) was the biggest source of the funds — about P3 billion worth of DA
funds was released mainly to pro-Arroyo local officials and congressmen
from February to May 2004.
Another P2 billion came from the Overseas Workers' Welfare Administration
(OWWA) Fund and the Motor Vehicle Users' Charge and was used to pay for
Arroyo billboards as well as government patronage programs during the
elections like temporary health insurance and temporary employment programs.
The DA fund releases included over P1 billion that came from the portion
of the Marcos wealth that had been confiscated by the government. The
law says that money recovered from the Marcoses should go to land reform.
In April 2004, part of these funds were transferred from the Department
of Land Reform to the Department of Agriculture.
Up to now, the DA cannot account for these funds, which were supposed
to be used to buy seeds and to finance community irrigation projects.
Farmers' groups allege the money was instead diverted to the presidential
campaign. "Stolen money has been stolen again," says Manuel Quiambao,
president of the farmers' group Peace Foundation.
It took years to lay the groundwork for mobilizing government resources
for the president's election. It entailed, first of all, the appointment
of allies to government agencies with pots of funds that could be tapped
for the campaign. It also entailed the identification of those funds and
their release at the right time. Such strategic planning, in the words
of Senator Sergio Osmeña III, "was so systematic, it's mind boggling."
But Arroyo wasn't the first to have done this. Most incumbents who ran
for reelection made Filipino taxpayers foot their campaign expenses. In
1969, in what was touted as the costliest and dirtiest of Philippine elections
till then, the incumbent Ferdinand Marcos spared no expense to get himself
reelected. Massive election spending that year triggered a balance of
payments crisis and a currency devaluation.
The temptation to use taxpayers' money for an incumbent's reelection
campaign is one reason the 1987 Constitution banned sitting presidents
from seeking another term.
An incumbent, after all, has power over the government's vast organization
and resources, including the funds in the national treasury intended for
government services. He or she has a built-in advantage no other candidate
can equal.
Most of the fund releases that were allegedly diverted to the Arroyo
campaign began in early February, just before the start of the 90-day
campaign for the presidency, and continued till April. But huge chunks
of money were already released to local officials even in late 2003. The
amounts involved are huge, and they included the following:
It is hard to make an exact accounting of other government funds used to finance Arroyo's campaign. For one, it is difficult to tell which expenditures were incurred in the natural course of her work as president and which went to promoting her candidacy. For instance, Cabinet secretaries were actively involved in the Arroyo campaign. Former Social Welfare and Development Secretary Corazon 'Dinky' Soliman herself admits the town hall meetings dubbed "Pulong Bayan" that Arroyo conducted during the campaign were organized by the DSWD from funds provided by the Office of the President. Those town hall meetings would have been part of the normal discharge of the president's functions, except they also became automatic public relations events that upped Arroyo's visibility. In April 2004, President Arroyo also signed Executive Order 307 launching her post-secondary scholarship program for poor but deserving students. The program was called "Iskolar ng Mahirap na Pamilya (Poor Family's Scholar)" that was to be implemented by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) and the Technical Education Skills Development Authority (TESDA). Under the presidential order, both CHED and TESDA were authorized to issue "certificates/vouchers" entitling poor families to one scholarship worth P10,000. No specific funds were identified for the purpose, although the President said the money was to come from "any available source under the CY 2004 General Appropriations Act or from any applicable funding source to cover the initial funding requirement of the program." In the scheme of things, however, the DSWD, CHED and TESDA may not have been that vital to the campaign. For fund-raising purposes, the agencies that mattered were those awash with cash and could serve as channels of patronage from Malacañang to local officials who could be called upon to marshal the votes for the president. In fact, early in the Arroyo presidency, some government officials were already saying that Gloria and Mike Arroyo were strategically placing their most trusted lieutenants in the most cash-rich and well-positioned government agencies in preparation for a 2004 campaign. More than all other agencies, those in the agriculture sector made the most disbursements during the 2004 election campaign. Apart from the DA, a major source of funds was the Department of Land Reform (DLR), the lead agency implementing the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP), which is funded by the Marcos wealth. On January 30, 2004, the Philippine National Bank remitted to the National Treasury $624 million, equivalent to P35 billion, representing the biggest amount recovered so far from the fabled Marcos billions. Just days earlier, the Supreme Court had declared with finality that the amount belonged to the government, denying an appeal from the Marcos family. Under the law, this money is to be used only for CARP, specifically for land acquisition and other activities to help land reform beneficiaries. Part of it eventually went to the DA. A hearing conducted by the House Oversight Committee earlier this year found that as of October 2004, nearly P9 billion of the Marcos money had already been spent. The bulk of this went to buying land from landowners, while the rest went to program beneficiaries, and expenses under the nebulous DAR-Fund 101. Farmers' groups, however, say there were two questionable disbursements made from the Marcos wealth. On March 8, 2004, then DAR officer-in-charge Jose Mari Ponce signed a Memorandum of Agreement with Agriculture Secretary Lorenzo allowing the DA to use P544 million from the Marcos wealth supposedly for "seed assistance" to agrarian reform beneficiaries, again under the Ginintuang Masaganang Ani (GMA) Hybrid Rice Commercialization Component. On April 28, the amount was released by the DBM. On March 18, the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) asked the DBM to again draw from the Marcos wealth, again for the DA. The amount was P541 million and the ultimate beneficiary was supposed to be the DA agency, the National Irrigation Administration (NIA). "The amount shall finance various ongoing and new CARP irrigation projects," said the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council. Although Ponce's name appears as signatory, being DAR officer-in-charge and PARC vice chairman, the letter did not bear his signature. It had only that of Jeffrey Galang, a PARC secretariat member Ponce supposedly authorized to seek the release of P500 million in CARP funds. Farmers' groups say strange things seem to be happening with the Marcos wealth and they even fear the money might already have disappeared. But they suspect that both amounts, totaling over P1 billion, were spent for the campaign. The P544 million was meant for buying seeds for 600,000 hectares of land for 2004. Yet when the money arrived, the target coverage was slashed to 300,000 hectares. As of March 2005, says Manuel Quiambao of the farmers' group Peace Foundation, only 162,000 hectares had received the GMA seeds. Moreover, instead of purchasing the seeds directly and then distributing them to farmers, DA regional units suspiciously released the money to local officials. This violates the spirit of the agreement signed by the DLR and the DA, which states that the money should be used to purchase seeds to be given directly to land reform beneficiaries. Quiambao also complains that up to now the NIA has not released the list of farmers who benefited from the P541-million fund intended for small, communal irrigation projects. "According to our investigation, the DA used these funds for the elections," he says. "That's why we're reviving the 'Bantay Marcos Wealth.'" This year, the farmers' group Ugnayan ng mga Nagsasariling Organisasyon sa Kanayunan or UNORKA represented by its secretary-general Enrico Cabanit, filed a malversation case against former NIA Administrator Jesus Emmanuel Paras. UNORKA said "these funds were released to the National Irrigation Administration on the representation by the respondent (Paras) that these would be used only for activities related to the Program Beneficiaries Development Component of the CARP and only in the areas listed." Yet, the group said, Paras "whimsically and capriciously" distributed the funds to areas that were not included in the original list of beneficiaries, or areas that did not need it. "To date, no complete liquidation nor comprehensive performance or financial audit, terminal or otherwise, could be submitted by respondent on the program or funds released and received, indicating that these funds were malversed," UNORKA said. — with additional reporting by Alecks Pabico and Yvonne T. Chua
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