"My conscience is clear. I did not receive any money. I have nothing to hide," the First Gentleman said, reading a prepared statement in Filipino upon his arrival at 3:05 a.m. on a Philippine Airlines flight from San Francisco, California.
Arroyo, 55, welcomed the ongoing preliminary inquiry of the Ombudsman on accusations that he received the P50 million in exchange for working for the withdrawal of a presidential veto of the franchises awarded to PCCI and APC Wireless Interface Network (WIN).
"I am now ready to give my affidavits and whatever other requirements. I will help the Ombudsman and whatever committees in order for my countrymen to know the whole truth," Arroyo said.
He said he himself suggested to the Pre-sident that the bribery scandal be referred to the Ombudsman although he was not a government official.
"I will submit myself to (the Ombudsmans) jurisdiction. Its faster and better this way because it is a criminal proceeding so that we can immediately know whether or not I really have any involvement," he said.
The First Gentleman also denied forging a secret deal with his accuser, former pre-sidential correspondence secretary Veronica Rodrigo, while he was in the US.
Arroyo said the accusations against him, which flew thick while he was out of the country, were all politically motivated. He, however, refused to elaborate.
"Perhaps these issues were all mudslinging and pure politics. I really dont know why because all I do is charity work only," he said.
Arroyo also denied that he endorsed the appointment of friends to the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) and the Light Rail Transit Administration (LRTA).
President Arroyo and two of their children, Mikey and Luli, welcomed back the First Gentleman at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) after undergoing medical treatment in the US.
Arroyo said he underwent minor surgery on his right leg and the recurrence of his backache problems.
"My right leg was getting numb. I have this pinched nerve which caused the numbing and I was taken to an operating room and injected with cortisone. I can walk now but it was really painful before," he explained.
He also said his slipped disc problem, caused by a helicopter accident in Benguet in 1998, recurred after he carried heavy loads during a recent anti-dengue drive.
He said he needs to return to the US in three months to undergo surgery if his back condition does not improve.
Arroyo said he also had bronchitis and a case of sleep apnea, or temporary cessation of breathing during sleep for normal or abnormal reasons.
Meanwhile, Presidential Spokesman Rigoberto Tiglao disclosed yesterday Arroyo will soon designate an official spokesman to facilitate the release of public statements.
Tiglao explained he needs to have his own spokesman because he is technically not a government official who can make use of the governments press relations facilities.
Estrada said in the statement that "a parallel inquiry of the Senate is necessary in order for the truth to come out."
He told reporters after his pre-trial hearing at the Sandiganbayan yesterday that he immediately called for a Senate inquiry when his wife, now Sen. Luisa Ejercito, and son former San Juan Mayor Jinggoy Estrada were dragged into a controversy involving PCSO funds and projects.
An investigation by the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, then under Senator Aquilino Pimentel Jr. eventually cleared mother and son.
But Pimentel himself said the Senate would have to shelve a probe by the Senate Blue Ribbon after Rodrigo denied first-hand knowledge that Arroyo indeed received the P50-million bribe.
Tiglao, for his part, said Malacañang has no business telling the Senate what to do but reiterated the Presidents appeal to the opposition to let the Ombudsman handle the investigation of the bribery
"We cannot tell the Senate what to do. Its their (senators) sole prerogative to pursue any investigation which they think is necessary," Tiglao said.
"Lets stop attempts at political grandstanding and for the Congress to start working on the legislative agenda," he said.
Its just an appeal," Tiglao stressed. "The Senate is an independent body. It has its own decisions. An appeal is an appeal, its just a request - not to stop it but to cease from making this a political circus."