As far back as May 2004 the names of Rose Lingan, Jimmy Paule, Lenny Aquino and Jane Fabian already came up as fixers for ghost suppliers. Their job consisted of signing up NGOs of congressmen and local officials as "beneficiaries" of fertilizer doles from the agriculture office. With commissions paid in advance, they then bribed budget department contacts to release swiftly the fertilizer funds. The supplies never reached the farmer NGOs. But selected congressmen, governors and mayors got P5-P30 million as share of the loot. Total releases reached more than P788 million.
Lingan and Paule had run ghost deliveries of books and computers at the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao in 1992. The cases are under investigation by the Ombudsman. Lingan and Paule also have pending fraud cases at the Makati and Cagayan regional courts, respectively. But the show goes on.
"They are holier than thou in preaching goodness and criticizing state officials," she fumes, "yet they demand incentives to procure our books or other education materials. They ask for cars, plane tickets (ostensibly for educational tours), cell phones and outright cash."
In the case of public schools, the taxpayers end up covering the cost of under-the-table commissions. In private schools, the parents must cover the added costs of their schoolchildrens materials.
The reader listed five major corrupting publishers. They happen to be the same as those in the ARMM textbook scam exposed by then-education regional finance chief Abdul Malik Ampatuan. They also are the five outfits that, educator Antonio Calipjo Go denounced, continue to publish rubbish on Science, History and English.
Soon after the contract awarding, one niece ceded all her interests in the supplying corporation to one Alejandro Malabag. Gotcha reports on this cover-up prompted several e-mails from readers, all stating that Malabag is a known jueteng runner in Batangas.
The fixers transact with equally corrupt private enterprises as buyers and suppliers. The suppliers, aware of their inferior textbooks, fertilizers or drugs, offer "favors" to purchasing officers to land huge contracts.
In some cases the suppliers are kith or kin of the buyers, which eases the fixers job. This is especially true in instances where the buying official is into narcotics or illegal numbers games, and thus needs to launder his money.
Any which way, the ordinary folk end up the losers.
The x-ray inspectors thought they could pull their trick on this old woman, for she had arrived on a wheelchair. Fortunately, they failed. When they said they had detected two small metal objects in her carry-on bag, she threw a fit and demanded to know if, as had been exposed in the papers as a new modus, they had slipped in two bullets in order to mulct her.
Rackets everywhere, one balikbayan grumbled.