MASSIVE CORRUPTION UNDER THE DUTERTE
ADMINISTRATION
MONEY
TALKS
Philippine
Daily Inquirer / 04:35 AM March 06, 2020
The
plot thickens in the open secret of huge amounts of money being spirited into
the country, supposedly to be used for “casino” and “investment.” Sen. Richard
Gordon, who tipped the Inquirer last week on the more than $160 million (about P8 billion) brought in by a handful of Chinese
nationals from Dec. 17, 2019, to Feb. 12, has further disclosed that over $447 million entered the Philippines
through both Chinese and Filipino couriers during the period September-February.
The
operations—including a case in which one Filipino courier flew in and out of
the country multiple times and brought in as much as $34.7 million—apparently occurred under the gaze of customs and
airport personnel made benign by pelf. There seems no end to illegal
moneymaking ventures under this administration that claims nausea over a mere
whiff of corruption.
As
chair of the Senate blue ribbon committee, Gordon is presiding over an inquiry
into this state of affairs with which, two days after the senator’s initial
disclosure of money laundering last Feb. 27, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez
III rather languidly said he was “familiar,” and on which Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin Diokno would not comment.
Contrast the curious detachment last week of the leading lights of President
Duterte’s economic team with their decidedly perky stance this week, with
Dominguez mouthing things like the Bureau of Customs and the Anti-Money
Laundering Council chaired by Diokno embarking on a “vigorous” investigation
and monitoring of the huge cash inflows, as endorsed by the President.
It’s
about time. As early as September, Gordon would have everyone know, Customs
Commissioner Rey Leonardo Guerrero notified the BSP, Department of Finance, and
Bureau of Internal Revenue of attempts by certain persons to bring huge amounts
of cash in US currency into the country. Why
have Dominguez and company taken so long to suspect big-time chicanery,
even if only in press releases?
As
it happens, Dominguez and company have given Gordon full opportunity to chew them out. “This is mercantile imperialism. They are buying our
people. … I am chagrined that this is happening to our country. This is
totally unacceptable,” the senator said early this week in a privilege speech,
adding that authorities had actually
been tolerating money laundering
operations.
Indeed.
And Guerrero could not just be talking through his hat when he pointed out that
big money entering the country through Chinese and Filipino couriers could be used for terrorism and organized crime.
With the state-sanctioned gambling conducted by Philippine offshore gaming operators (Pogos), Chinese nationals in the tens of thousands have literally been flooding in, primarily to work in the
gambling centers or to take advantage of the vice in which they are legally
banned from indulging in their own country. As a sorry consequence of this
business enterprise that the Philippine government has wholeheartedly embraced
for the supposedly stupendous tax revenues it has brought and will bring, crime
in various forms involving Chinese nationals are being committed on local soil.
…According
to Senate Minority Leader Franklin
Drilon, “Chinese syndicates have been emboldened
in making our country a haven for money laundering.”
Gordon
amps up the volume, saying China is
“riding on Pogos” to beef up its
intelligence network in the Philippines so that it would “be ready whatever
happens.” Earlier he warned that enough money was being brought in to finance a
fifth column in the Philippines—a
scenario now flirting with the realm of the possible in the wake of the murder
of a Chinese online gaming worker by other Chinese men bearing IDs as members
of the People’s Liberation Army.
…To
be sure, money talks.
Duterte’s
principal concern with just a little over two years left in his term is how to
avoid impending retribution under the succeeding administration. He will not,
if he can help it, make the mistake of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who was jailed,
albeit under the elite privilege of house arrest, by Noynoy Aquino. Right now Duterte’s
main occupation is how to extend his stay in power, or failing that, how to
elect a candidate—he has tentatively placed his bet on Bong Go—who will shield
him and his cohorts from the hammer of justice, or should we say, the club of
vengeance.
Duterte
has already successfully pilot test his plan to accomplish electronic cheating,
the pieces of which fell into place smoothly during the Senate 2019 elections, encountering
just minor bumps along the way. The salient casualty of this operation was Bam
Aquino.
See: https://oddsandendsgonzalinhodacosta.blogspot.com/2019/05/java-error.html
Duterte’s
obedient Ygor now sits at the head of Comelec ready to do his bidding.
As
in any battle, to guarantee your win, you have to blast your enemy to
smithereens. Among Duterte’s nuclear options is to buy out everyone, including big
chunks of the electorate, with the help, of course, of Communist China money.
Is
it any wonder then that Duterte is maintaining the Pogos, courtesy of his feudal
patron?
When
Stalin robbed a Georgia bank of 3 million dollars in 1907, the money went a
long way toward funding the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.
Meaning,
it doesn’t require high intelligence to seize power and to maintain it. But it
does require ruthlessness and the utter absence of scruples.
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