Boncodin had P10-B for roads to nowhere
January 8, 2006 | 12:00am
ROADS TO FOLLOW: There is this campaign story of congressional candidate promising the townspeople at a miting de avance to build a bridge for them. When the mayor whispered to him that there was no river or creek in the area that might need a span, the candidate was unfazed.
Its all right," he supposedly went on, "we build the bridge first, then worry about the river later."
This line seems to have been rewritten to "Lets build the bridge first, the roads will follow" as it has been shown that under the "Tulay ng Pangulo sa Kaunlaran" (The Presidents Bridges to Progress) program, some bridges were built even when there were no roads yet to connect to them.
An opposition senator who had no sense of humor promptly snatched the anomaly and went to town ridiculing in a Powerpoint presentation what he said were the "Bridges to Nowhere" of President Gloria Arroyo.
But it ceased to be funny when we read later in a report of the UK-based Guardian that the bridges built by the British firm Mabey & Johnson had cost more than £429m (P40 billion), that they were overpriced and that some smart operators with Palace connection made a fortune from the program.
P10-B OKAYED: After I took off from the Guardian and revisited the "Bridges to Nowhere," a number of people stepped forward with documents purporting to show that the bridges program, indeed, needs some cleansing and deodorizing and that some crooks must go to jail or on exile.
From a Malacañang mole came documents showing among other things that just before then Budget Secretary Emilia Boncodin joined disgruntled Cabinet officials in resigning last July 8 and asking for President Gloria Arroyo to step down, she approved the release of another P10 billion for the bridges program.
The DBMs Forward Obligational Authority (FOA) dated June 28, 2005, signed by Boncodin confirmed budget approval for another Mabey & Johnson project under the "Tulay ng Pangulo sa Kaunlaran" program.
Ten billion pesos is a lot of money to spend on rickety temporary Bailey bridges especially as a few of them were reportedly put up in zero-traffic sites where roads to connect to them still had to be built as if in an after-thought.
OVERPRICE: Just 30 percent of that fresh P10-billion release is P3 billion in you know what! It was gross, considering that the country was in fiscal crisis at the time and the government was left scraping the bottom of the barrel after the massive May election spending.
And then, as a POSTSCRIPT reader asked, why is the Arroyo administration unusually interested on assembling temporary Lego-like spans that are priced much higher than solid permanent bridges that could last a lifetime?
Quoting highways department internal figures, the Guardian reported that Mabeys steel superstructures cost about £4,800 (P442,000) per lineal meter.
In comparison, the British paper said an Austrian firm, Waagner-Biro, won a small contract from the highways department to supply comparable superstructures for only £3,138 (P288,000). A UK consortium, Balfour-Cleveland, was quoting £2,899 (P266,000), it added.
To whom did the apparent overprice go? Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez would be able to tell us taxpayers if she mustered enough courage to look under the bridge despite her known closeness to the First Family.
(To get the peso values above, I used the exchange rate of £1=P92. But in the DBM papers signed by Boncodin, the exchange rate applied was £1=P100.)
CRY FOR VENGEANCE: Lawyers having taken over the rape case brought before an Olongapo court against four US servicemen and the Filipino driver of the van allegedly used to grab and rape the victim at the Subic Bay Freeport last Nov. 1.
With that, the well-known short span of attention of Filipinos has taken over and the case is now hardly reported on the front pages.
This may be a welcome respite for some, considering that there have been more weird rape cases, such as one involving a small girl raped and killed by drug-crazed teeners, but these stories that cry to heaven for vengeance do not get to the front pages or the TV evening news.
From the point of view of humanity, what values would the Subic rape case have that set it high above that of an innocent girl mangled by maniacs and left unnoticed by an uncaring society?
I cannot answer that question. Maybe readers would have their individual responses to it.
SEARING SCRUTINY: Looking at the case of the four GIs one more time, I concede that my view of the violation of a Filipino woman in Subic allegedly by US servicemen was heavy on the political level, specifically in the realm of bilateral relations with the US.
While that does not diminish the heinous nature of that alleged rape in Subic, assuming it was rape, the fate of that innocent girl gang-raped by maniacs cries louder not only for justice, but even for vengeance.
The Subic case is made more reprehensible by the immoral antics of Philippine officials who belittled the incident, and shamelessly made statements tending to favor prematurely and extra-judicially the suspects.
That was one of the reasons why I felt the Subic case should be exposed to the searing light of public scrutiny.
We insist that top officials of the departments of foreign affairs and justice stop commenting on the case so as not to mislead those tasked to investigate and decide the case.
BALANCE: To balance the picture, here is one of several e-mails I have received from readers overseas.
From Bill Foskey, writing from Atlanta, Georgia: "I read your column frequently, and enjoy it, even when I disagree. Your January 3rd column was one of those.
"I am a retired detective in the US, and hate crime of any kind, committed by anyone. That said, I take exception to your column for two reasons: (1) Trials should be held in court rooms, and not newspapers. I, nor you, know exactly what transpired in the alleged rape. If, however, the Marine is guilty, then he should certainly be punished.
"(2) Im really more concerned (though your newspaper obviously isnt) about the 15-year-old twin sisters whose home was invaded and robbed, and they were gang raped by five men. I think that story was on Page 10, and only once. Any suspects arrested yet? Any follow up by the police? Any follow up by any newspaper?
"I also read of the rape and murder of a three-year-old, and that was on Page 12. One of your congressmen said 3,500-4,000 women are raped there every year, one-third of them? If they cant get on TV, or quoted in the newspapers, they could not care less about those unfortunate people.
"You say in your story (para 12), If he, or we, cannot perform that basic act of justice, we would be the laughing stock of the watching world.
"First, how often have you ever seen justice performed there? Second, you assume that anyone else in the world really cares what happens there, and third, if your Presidents taping the muzzles of guns didnt make the Philippines the laughing stock of the world, I assure you, nothing ever will. Even my Pinoy friends here thought that was more hilarious than anything Dolphy ever did. Youve really got to be proud of a leader (?) like that.
"Keep up your good work (youre good, whether I always agree, or not)."
ePOSTSCRIPT: You can read POSTSCRIPT at www.manilamail.com even before it sees print. Old columns dating as far back as five years ago can be accessed in the ManilaMail archive. E-mail comments to [email protected]. You can also use your cellphone. Type POSTSCRIPT, (space), followed by your name and message (not to exceed 149 characters), and send to 2960
Its all right," he supposedly went on, "we build the bridge first, then worry about the river later."
This line seems to have been rewritten to "Lets build the bridge first, the roads will follow" as it has been shown that under the "Tulay ng Pangulo sa Kaunlaran" (The Presidents Bridges to Progress) program, some bridges were built even when there were no roads yet to connect to them.
An opposition senator who had no sense of humor promptly snatched the anomaly and went to town ridiculing in a Powerpoint presentation what he said were the "Bridges to Nowhere" of President Gloria Arroyo.
But it ceased to be funny when we read later in a report of the UK-based Guardian that the bridges built by the British firm Mabey & Johnson had cost more than £429m (P40 billion), that they were overpriced and that some smart operators with Palace connection made a fortune from the program.
From a Malacañang mole came documents showing among other things that just before then Budget Secretary Emilia Boncodin joined disgruntled Cabinet officials in resigning last July 8 and asking for President Gloria Arroyo to step down, she approved the release of another P10 billion for the bridges program.
The DBMs Forward Obligational Authority (FOA) dated June 28, 2005, signed by Boncodin confirmed budget approval for another Mabey & Johnson project under the "Tulay ng Pangulo sa Kaunlaran" program.
Ten billion pesos is a lot of money to spend on rickety temporary Bailey bridges especially as a few of them were reportedly put up in zero-traffic sites where roads to connect to them still had to be built as if in an after-thought.
And then, as a POSTSCRIPT reader asked, why is the Arroyo administration unusually interested on assembling temporary Lego-like spans that are priced much higher than solid permanent bridges that could last a lifetime?
Quoting highways department internal figures, the Guardian reported that Mabeys steel superstructures cost about £4,800 (P442,000) per lineal meter.
In comparison, the British paper said an Austrian firm, Waagner-Biro, won a small contract from the highways department to supply comparable superstructures for only £3,138 (P288,000). A UK consortium, Balfour-Cleveland, was quoting £2,899 (P266,000), it added.
To whom did the apparent overprice go? Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez would be able to tell us taxpayers if she mustered enough courage to look under the bridge despite her known closeness to the First Family.
(To get the peso values above, I used the exchange rate of £1=P92. But in the DBM papers signed by Boncodin, the exchange rate applied was £1=P100.)
With that, the well-known short span of attention of Filipinos has taken over and the case is now hardly reported on the front pages.
This may be a welcome respite for some, considering that there have been more weird rape cases, such as one involving a small girl raped and killed by drug-crazed teeners, but these stories that cry to heaven for vengeance do not get to the front pages or the TV evening news.
From the point of view of humanity, what values would the Subic rape case have that set it high above that of an innocent girl mangled by maniacs and left unnoticed by an uncaring society?
I cannot answer that question. Maybe readers would have their individual responses to it.
While that does not diminish the heinous nature of that alleged rape in Subic, assuming it was rape, the fate of that innocent girl gang-raped by maniacs cries louder not only for justice, but even for vengeance.
The Subic case is made more reprehensible by the immoral antics of Philippine officials who belittled the incident, and shamelessly made statements tending to favor prematurely and extra-judicially the suspects.
That was one of the reasons why I felt the Subic case should be exposed to the searing light of public scrutiny.
We insist that top officials of the departments of foreign affairs and justice stop commenting on the case so as not to mislead those tasked to investigate and decide the case.
From Bill Foskey, writing from Atlanta, Georgia: "I read your column frequently, and enjoy it, even when I disagree. Your January 3rd column was one of those.
"I am a retired detective in the US, and hate crime of any kind, committed by anyone. That said, I take exception to your column for two reasons: (1) Trials should be held in court rooms, and not newspapers. I, nor you, know exactly what transpired in the alleged rape. If, however, the Marine is guilty, then he should certainly be punished.
"(2) Im really more concerned (though your newspaper obviously isnt) about the 15-year-old twin sisters whose home was invaded and robbed, and they were gang raped by five men. I think that story was on Page 10, and only once. Any suspects arrested yet? Any follow up by the police? Any follow up by any newspaper?
"I also read of the rape and murder of a three-year-old, and that was on Page 12. One of your congressmen said 3,500-4,000 women are raped there every year, one-third of them? If they cant get on TV, or quoted in the newspapers, they could not care less about those unfortunate people.
"You say in your story (para 12), If he, or we, cannot perform that basic act of justice, we would be the laughing stock of the watching world.
"First, how often have you ever seen justice performed there? Second, you assume that anyone else in the world really cares what happens there, and third, if your Presidents taping the muzzles of guns didnt make the Philippines the laughing stock of the world, I assure you, nothing ever will. Even my Pinoy friends here thought that was more hilarious than anything Dolphy ever did. Youve really got to be proud of a leader (?) like that.
"Keep up your good work (youre good, whether I always agree, or not)."
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