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VP Duterte firm she need not explain where P612M went

VP Sara firm she need not explain where P612M went

Vice President Sara Duterte answers questions from reporters during the media Thanksgiving party at the Office of the Vice President headquarters in Mandaluyong City on Wednesday, December 11, 2024.
INQUIRER PHOTO / GRIG C. MONTEGRANDE

Vice President Sara Duterte has insisted that she will not publicly explain how she spent the millions of confidential funds of the Office of the Vice President (OVP) and the Department of Education (DepEd) when she headed it as she maintained that the money used was for 鈥渘ational security.鈥

Duterte also stressed that she would only answer to the Commission on Audit (COA) about how she used her confidential funds and pointed out that the House of Representatives had no mandate to question how she utilized the secret discretionary funds.

Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday in the OVP central office in Mandaluyong City, Duterte refused to explain the unusual names seen in the acknowledgment receipts (ARs) of her confidential funds in the past two years.

鈥淣o, no, I will not explain,鈥 Duterte told reporters when asked about the veracity of the names in the receipts.

No records

The House said the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) found no records of them in the national registry.

鈥淚 will not give an explanation because it will entail that I will [have to] explain intelligence operations. It will really compromise how they work,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o, no, no explanation will be given to members of the House of Representatives.鈥

The House committee on good government and public accountability has been looking at the expenditures of a total of P612.5 million in confidential funds by the OVP and DepEd in 2022 and 2023.

The committee found several acknowledgment receipts that contained names that they and even the public found unusual, like 鈥淢ary Grace Piattos,鈥 which suspiciously looks like a composite of a local restaurant and a popular snack brand.

The PSA confirmed that 鈥淢ary Grace Piattos鈥 had no birth, death, or marriage records. It said 405 other names were nonexistent.

Legal basis

Duterte insisted that she would have to give out secret information if she disclosed the true identities of the recipients of the confidential funds.

鈥淚 cannot explain confidential funds because it will entail explaining intelligence operations, and there is a law that prohibits officials who gathered information because of their office to divulge it in public,鈥 she said.

She referred to the antigraft and corruption law, which penalizes state employees who divulge 鈥渋nformation of a confidential character, acquired by his office or by him on account of his official position to unauthorized persons, or releasing such information in advance of its authorized release date.鈥

The Vice President added that any responses she may give about the supposed fictitious names may 鈥渁dd to the cases that may be filed against me.鈥

Two impeachment complaints have been filed against her.

She also said she had 鈥渘othing to do with the preparation of the ARs.鈥

鈥淚t went down to the grassroots level. So, I had nothing to do with the preparation of the ARs. I was up here in the structure, and the money went down for information,鈥 Duterte said.

鈥淭he confidential funds we used for our work had to do with national security. All the programs and projects of the Office of the Vice President target poverty alleviation,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here is a direct correlation between poverty and national security.鈥

鈥楾hreats to education鈥

As for DepEd, Duterte explained that 鈥渢here are still so many threats to education, not just insurgency.鈥

鈥淲e wanted to target projects of the Department of Education as well in the most vulnerable areas and schools, that is why we needed confidential funds,鈥 she said.

Lawmakers and observers are comparing not just Duterte鈥檚 confidential funds but her entire budget allocations with those of her predecessors.

READ: Secret fund use hits P10B; OVP outspends 4 security agencies

Her immediate predecessor, Leni Robredo, got P428.618 million with no confidential funds.

All of the most recent vice presidents鈥擩ejomar Binay, Noli de Castro, Teofisto Guingona, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Joseph Estrada鈥攔eceived much smaller allocations during their first full year in office after ethe lection compared to her whopping P2.3-billion budget for 2023.

Four of them got confidential funds鈥擝inay (P6 million), De Castro (P6.59 million), Guingona (P5.1 million) and Arroyo (P3 million)鈥攄uring their second year as vice president. 鈥擶ITH A REPORT FROM INQUIRER RESEARCH

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