Commission on Audit’s
Heidi Mendoza, again, failed to get the green light from the Commission on
Appointments. So, what’s the CA’s excuse this time?
“Senator Jinggoy
Estrada was absent.” And the senator, who is mired to his neck in the pork
barrel scam, wanted to lob questions at Mendoza. At his own good time, of
course.
Hindi siya nag-iisa. Mendoza is not alone in the CA freezer.
Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo, the 2000 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee for
good governance, went to his grave with confirmation snarled for years by
Camarines Sur politicians.
Rep. Luis R.
Villafuerte, an uncle of Robredo had a falling out with his nephew. A disqualification
complaint against Robredo, in the Commission on Elections was rehashed, when he
ran for mayor in 2007. In the other corner was Jojo Villafuerte, the
congressman’s nephew.
“We were deprived the honor of confirming a
great man, one of the best in the Cabinet,” said Rep Roilo Golez (Parañaque).
“His place in the history of public service is secure.... But it took two years
before confirmation of Robredo, could even be scheduled.
There was wailing
and gnashing of teeth by Villafuerte and all those who undercut Robredo.
That’s par for a heavily politicized Commission of Appointments.
It often resembles what Ali Baba called “a den of thieves.”
Mendoza is
discovering that integrity and competence mean nothing in the CA. So did
Robredo and Justice Secretary Leila de Lima before her. Concession is the
only currency spoken there.
Earlier, de
Lima slammed Estrada over reports that the senator would block her
confirmation. She is a key prober in the pork scam. And her confirmation, like
that of Mendoza, has been shunted aside by the CA for four years now.
Estrada’s
statement was “practically blackmail, the justice secretary snapped... If
non-confirmation is the price that I have to pay for doing my job, so be it...
I serve at the pleasure of the President. And I’ll continue as long as I have
his trust and support of the public.
“Iyon ang importante sa akin, hindi 'yung
isang naghahari-harian lang sa Senate or sa CA,” De Lima said. (That’s what is important to me, not someone
who lords it over the Senate or the CA.)
Belatedly, Estrada
called up De Lima to deny he’d block the secretary’s confirmation—which is now
possible this time around.
In 2011, then
Senator Panfilo Lacson said he’d grill De Lima after she ordered a manhunt for
Lacson over the Dacer-Corbito double murder case. Lacson went into hiding for
14 months. And he questioned De Lima’s stand that the court decision, clearing
him, was not final and executory then. From fugitive on the lam, Lacson morphed
into Presidential Assistant for Rehabilitation and Recovery.
Tiene cojones. “She has balls” was the irreverent accolade people
heaped on Heidi Mendoza. A COA officer for 22 years, she audited the comptroller’s
office of the Armed Forces and documented plunder of AFP funds. That
included a P200-million reimbursement check from the United Nations for
Filipino peacekeepers.
Mendoza’s report
was stashed in the freezer. She resigned from a comfortable Asian
Development Bank job to testify, on an almost P510-million AFP loss she
traced, before by congressional hearings, Former Major Gen. Carlos Garcia is in
prison today.
So, why is
Mendoza still unconfirmed, asked Inquirer’s columnist Solita Monsod two
years back. And when did Mendoza get into the gunsight of Vice
President Jejomar Binay and his attack squads?
Rewind 12 years back,
Monsod suggests. COA then formed a “Special Task Force “to go thru
contracts involving purchases and infrastructure projects of Metro Manila local
government units. Mendoza was assigned Makati. And her team went thru contracts
for office partitions and furniture of the Makati City government, as well as
city hospital for the years 2000 and 2001.”
The audit
nailed Makati overlords. Award on furniture was made on Sept 15, two days
before the bidding on Sept. 17... Bidding companies had the same owners but
different addresses. The warehouse of one bidding company is located at the
same address used by the City of Makati in sending a letter of invitation
intended for another bidding company, ad nauseam.
Then, why did the
Sandiganbayan dismiss one of the four cases filed against Elenita Binay,
asked Monsod. “Sandiganbayan found that the prosecution came
to court with “shoddy evidence... It might however, be germane that the
Sandiganbayan dismissed the case in 2011, when Binay was already VP.
So, the real question
is: Why years after she was appointed as COA commissioner, is she still
unconfirmed? “She was with the COA for 22 years, before she quit in 2006—and
her record is spotless. That she quit the ADB is a testament to her complete
indifference to financial security. Her statements of assets, liabilities and
net worth show no unexplained wealth.”
Ah, there’s the
rub. It is an open secret, in the COA secretariat, that the one responsible for
this situation is—guess who?—the Binay camp, Monsod adds. “If Binay &
Co. think Mendoza wants her job so much she can be persuaded to
soft-pedal on her findings Makati and the corruption there, it has
another think coming.”
Now, Binay
lusts to be President in 2016. And guess who he floats as his vice
president after Batangas Governor Vilma Santos-Recto said no thank
you sir?
Jinggoy Estrada.
That’s who. Pag may tiktik, may aswang,
the old Pilipino proverb says. Whenever there is a tiktik (bird), there is
a witch (aswang).
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