The Standard - 2015 June 14 - Sunday

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RotaRy club of manila newspapeR of the yeaR 2015 VOL. XXIX NO. 116 3 Sections 24 Pages P18 SuNday : JuNE 14, 2015 www.manilastandardtoday.com editorial@thestandard.com.ph

‘I WON’T BE VINDICTIVE’

Senate panel probes case of Wang Bo

SENATOR Teofisto Guingona III has sought an investigation into claims that Chinese national Wang Bo gave immigration officials P400 million to stop his deportation and to buy the approval of the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) in the House of Representatives. Guingona filed Senate Resolution No. 1397 directing the Blue Ribbon Committee to conduct an inquiry into the report that Wang allegedly used the amount to bribe some Bureau of Immigration officials to “reverse” the BI’s order to deport him. Guingona cited a report that the alleged P400 million bribe money was used “to pay off pro-administration members of the House special ad hoc committee to vote for the approval of the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) for plenary debate.” “It is incumbent upon the Bureau of Immigration to control and regulate the movement of persons to, Next page

By Vito Barcelo

SMARTING from the continuing Senate hearings against him, Vice President Jejomar Binay vowed that if he is elected President next year, he will pursue corruption charges against government officials only if there is strong evidence against them. “I wish I will be remembered as a President who was not vindictive, a President who can be called a unifying President,” Binay told reporters at Polillo Island in Quezon province even as he stressed the need for genuine justice. “I am a lawyer. I was a litigation lawyer. If there is evidence, charges must be filed. It’s part of the fight against corruption,” he said. “Before we talk about sending someone to jail, we should first see if there is evidence,” Binay said. “If there is no evidence and you just send someone to jail, you will only be going around the need to present evidence. That means you only filed a case because you wanted someone in jail although you know there is really no evidence,” he said. Binay cited the cases of Senators Juan Ponce Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada and Bong Revilla, all opposition leaders who are now detained for supposed misuse of their Priority Development Assistance Fund. The Vice President urged the Aquino administrationto be fair in handling their case because it will “test if the drive for reforms will be blind to political motives.” “If it stops with the filing of the plunder cases against three senators, who are not political allies and confines itself to the [Janet] Napoles case, it will create the impression of being selective, and that political partisanship – not justice – is the sole motivation behind these charges,” he said. Binay noted that the Department of Justice has yet to file charges against other lawmakers involved in the alleged P10-billion scam although it has been a year after the first of three batches of cases were filed. Next page

Vice President Jejomar C. Binay political motives.

says the administration’s handling of corruption cases will test if the drive for reforms will be blind to

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