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I still believe in, trust Faeldon, Rody proclaims By MJ Blancaflor, Macon Ramos-Araneta and Rey E. Requejo
‘BuCor Mafia’ exposed
NO LAUGHING MATTER.
Star witness Yolanda Camelon taps Ramoncito Roque, head of the BuCor’s documents division, to point to him as part of the ‘organized mafia’ at the prison before the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee hearing on Friday. Lino Santos
Witness bares GCTA sold for P50k, P1.5m
PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte on Friday said he still believes in Nicanor Faeldon, despite firing him as Bureau of Corrections chief three days ago. “Tarong ina na tawo. (He’s a good person.) I still believe in him,” Duterte said in his speech during the groundbreaking ceremony of housing projects for victims of a landslide in Naga City, Cebu. The President, who sacked Faeldon over the early release of heinous crime convicts for supposed good conduct, praised the former Marine captain for exposing cigarette firm Mighty Corp. for faking tax stamps. He also said that if Faeldon had been corrupt, he would be mum on the operations of Mighty Corp. In other developments: • The President revealed Friday that he had ordered the transfer of highprofile inmates who testified against detained Senator Leila de Lima from the New Bilibid Prison to the Marine barracks in Taguig City. Duterte said he had ordered this because De Lima, who has been detained for two years over her alleged involvement in illegal drugs, may have allies inside the national penitentiary who could threaten the 10 inmates. The high-profile inmates moved by BuCor to Marine custody last June 12 included Peter Co, who the President had tagged as one of the top suppliers of the illegal drug shabu in the country. • Senator Francis Pangilinan questioned the transfer of 10 high-profile inmates from the New Bilibid Prison to Marine barracks in Taguig.
By Macon Ramos-Araneta
S
ENATE President Vicente Sotto III on Friday said convicted drug lords have allegedly paid P1.5 million each for their release on good behavior, while Senator Panfilo Lacson revealed the existence of an “organized mafia” within the Bureau of Corrections.
net’s Twitter and Facebook accounts on Sept. 3 during a Senate inquiry on the Good Conduct Time Allowance Law. “Inquirer.net posted Secretary Panelo’s clarification upon receipt of his statement on the matter. The updated reports stated that he merely referred the request of Sanchez’s family to Bayang,” it added.
Sotto and Lacson said the syndicate members demand P50,000 up to P1.5 million from each prisoner for their early release based on good conduct credits. They said the amount being exacted depends on the prisoner’s financial capacity. “It is a big and organized mafia involving officials of the BuCor. The Senate will not stop until we crack these shameless acts wide open and hold to account those responsible no matter who they are,” Lacson said. This developed as Philippine National Police chief Oscar Albayalde said they might tap Interpol in the hunt for 1,914 inmates who were convicted of heinous crimes but who were released on good behavior. President Rodrigo Duterte has given them 15 days to surrender, but so far, only about 33 have done so as of Friday. After the President fired Nicanor Faeldon as BuCor chief, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra designated Assistant Secretary and Deputy Director General Melvin Ramon G. Buenafe as officer-in-charge of the BuCor. He also created a committee headed by DOJ Undersecretary Deo L. Marco, with Assistant Secretaries Neal V. Bainto and George Ortha II to exercise close administrative supervision over the Bureau pending appointment by the President of a new director general. Senator Richard Gordon, chairman of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee, said the PNP must also be furnished a
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Next page VOL. XXXIII • NO. 205 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
Panelo rejects Inquirer.net apology, slams ‘unacceptable’ wording THE online news site Inquirer.net apologized Friday to Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Salvador Panelo for reporting that he had recommended executive clemency for his former client, convicted rapist and murderer Antonio Sanchez. But Panelo rejected the apology. “The apology as worded is unaccep-
table. The apology prefaced it with an alleged clarification from me of what I meant in referring the letter of the daughter of Sanchez,” he told Manila Standard in a Viber message. Panelo previously threatened to file libel suits against Inquirer.net and Rappler if they did not issue public apologies and rectified their reports.
“Inquirer.net apologizes for reporting on its social media platform that Secretary Salvador Panelo wrote a letter to BPP executive director Reynaldo Bayang recommending executive clemency for former Calauan Mayor Antonio Sanchez,” the news site’s statement read. The report was posted on Inquirer.
SIX MINUTES. House Majority Leader and Leyte Rep. Martin Romualdez (right) congratulates Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea (left) after a Committee on Appropriations budget briefing on the 2020 budget of the Office of the President at the House of Representatives that lasted only for six minutes. Ver Noveno
PCOO lops off budget for fed info campaign MEET-AND-GREET. President Rodrigo Duterte applauds after meeting officers of the Metrobank
Foundation and the Metrobank Foundation Outstanding Filipinos during the Meet-and-Greet in Malacañang on Thursday while the President (inset) acknowledges the gesture of respect of a daughter of one of the Outstanding Filipino Soldier Awardees. Presidential Photo
ready flooded with imported rice. In an interview with local radio station Bombo Radyo Cauayan on Thursday, Subia also chided the Department of Agriculture for blaming them for the continued high price of rice due to hoarding.
THERE will be no information drive on federalism next year since it is not included in the budget proposal of the Presidential Communications Operations Office, an official said Friday. “The information drive on federalism won’t proceed in 2020. We do not have a budget for it, PCOO Assistant Secretary Marie Banaag said. She was speaking before the House Committee on Appropriations during the budget hearing of the PCOO’s proposed P1.6-billion budget for 2020. In other developments: • House Majority Leader and Leyte Rep. Martin Romualdez on Friday backed a higher budget for the Office of the President to further boost President Rodrigo
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Court orders Rice millers claim imports hurt them, too arrest of Joma, 37 other Reds By Abe Almirol and Rio N. Araja
CAUAYAN CITY—Like farmers who are currently suffering from low farmgate prices of unmilled rice or “palay,” rice millers are also victims of imported
By MJ Blancaflor
MALACAÑANG on Friday urged communist leader Jose Maria Sison to “unchain himself from his exile” and face charges against him over a massacre in Leyte during the 1980s. This came after the Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 32 ordered the arrest of Sison and 37 others who were accused in the “Inopacan massacre,” a supposed purge of Communist Party of the Philippines members tagged in various offenses. Dubbed by the CPP-armed wing New People’s Army as “Oplan Venereal Disease,” the massacre reportedly claimed the Next page
rice flooding into the country, the president of a regional association said. Ernesto Subia, who heads the Rice Millers Association of Region 2, said they can’t hoard because they can hardly sell their milled rice, as the market is al-
By MJ Blancaflor
Facebook unveils new dating service
Rabbi’s daughter opens ‘Kosher sex’ shop
WASHINGTON—Is love the answer on Facebook? The huge social network rolled out its online dating service for the United States and 19 other countries—including the Philippines—on Thursday, a move to take on rivals
TEL AVIV, Israel—At first sight, the store in the heart of Tel Aviv can appear to be a highend boutique—until the door opens onto a selection of vibrators and dildos. “Kosher Sex” shop owner Chana Boteach, the daughter of a well-known and controversial
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