Pimentel says public must be outraged by intel funds
Government

Pimentel says public must be outraged by intel funds

Nov 20, 2022, 3:11 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

The people must be incensed with the massive confidential and intelligence funds being sought by offices not related to peace and order and national security, amid a ballooning debt and a worsening condition of poverty and food hunger brought about by soaring inflation.

As the country grapples with ballooning national debt and soaring inflation virtually pushing more people into a worsening poverty and food hunger, the public must be outraged by billions of pesos of confidential and intelligence funds (CIFs) sought by agencies that have nothing to do with national security or law enforcement.

This after Senator Aquilino Pimentel and fellow oppositionist Sen. Risa Hontiveros seem to be losing their fight against the removal of P500 million for the Office of the Vice President and P150 million for the Department of Education, both of which are the offices of Sara Duterte, daughter of former President Duterte.

Another P19.2 million of CIF is being allotted to the Office of the Solicitor General.

Pimentel expressed concern over the P9.3 billion worth of CIFs earmarked in the proposed budget for next year spread out across various offices, including P669.2 million for three agencies that had nothing to do with national security.

He questioned the “enormous amounts” being allotted for the CIFs in next year’s budget, even when the Marcos administration has been harping on a government policy to “exercise prudent macroeconomic and fiscal management in prioritizing expenditures.”

Prone to abuse

Of the total P9.3-billion CIF allocation, P4.5 billion is set to go to the Office of the President (OP).

In a previous interview, Pimentel had said that these funds were “prone to abuse and discretion.”

“Generally speaking, we discourage the allocation for CIFs, primarily because these are lump-sum funds and, secondly, the auditing is very minimal,” he said.

Pimentel proposed that the Senate reduce the CIFs to cut the bulging budget deficit or to fund items that were more needed by the people.

He said that while he agreed that some of the government’s security-related agencies such as the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police deserved to get CIFs, such justification could not apply to the OVP, DepEd and OSG.

Pimentel said the public must oppose such massive allocations as the country is deep in debt and people are already so burdened with inflation and lack of job opportunities.

“We hope (fellow lawmakers will join us), especially once they feel the mounting public pressure that the people are now alarmed why we are giving P500 million in confidential funds for the OVP (Office of Vice President) and another P150 million for the DepEd,” he said.

Pimentel said the ordinary Filipino taxpayers should also question the propriety of appropriating confidential and intelligence funds to agencies with no clear mandate to use them. “This is the time our people should now take part, first by understanding what confidential funds are,” he added.

One of the main features of such funds is that they are not audited in the same transparent way that funds of other agencies are, making them open to misuse, abuse and corruption.

COA refusal

At a budget hearing in the House of Representatives in September, opposition Rep. Edcel Lagman questioned the refusal by the Commission on Audit (COA) to disclose details of the use of confidential funds, including liquidation reports.

Lagman warned that if the post-audit was “covered by secrecy and not disclosed to this very House that appropriates funds, that makes the audit more imaginary and possibly not being done seriously and effectively.”

Last week, he called for a purge of “unnecessary, excessive” CIFs, saying that “no stretch of the imagination or flexibility of logic” could justify P9.3 billion for confidential and intelligence spending by several government agencies.

These funds are “shrouded in mystery” and the COA itself could not disclose to the Congress and the public how these are used, the Albay representative said.

“These funds breed corruption, and the more enormous the funds are, the greater the magnitude is for the possibility of graft,” Lagman pointed out.

Pimentel said he and Hontiveros would likely propose amendments to the P5.26-trillion general appropriations bill for 2023 mainly to rechannel some of the P9.3-billion CIF allocation to important but unfunded items.

The senator questioned how the Department of Budget and Management, with all its staff, could have missed seeing the “glaring disparity” in the distribution of government funds.

Dwarfs AFP, PNP, PDEA

“If on one hand, we cannot justify the funding for some agencies that are glutted with funds, while other important programs are hungry for funds, then there is something wrong with our budget process,” Pimentel said.

Budget documents showed that of the P9.3-billion CIF, the Office of the President would get the biggest share amounting to P4.5 billion—P2.25 billion for intelligence and P2.25 billion for confidential funds.

The CIF that President Marcos is getting is larger than the combined amounts allocated for the intelligence fund of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (P1.74 billion), the Philippine National Police (P800 million) and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (P500 million).

The National Bureau of Investigation was allocated P175.4 million in intelligence funds, while the government’s main prosecutorial arm, the Department of Justice, had an allotment of P168 million in confidential funds, according to budget records.

The government’s premier intelligence unit, the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency will get P141 million in intelligence funds, which is P9 million less than the proposed confidential fund for DepEd.

No CIF for DICT

Pimentel said the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT), which would need funds for surveillance to combat online fraud, was not given any CIF.

He said the agencies and programs that lacked funds included the senior citizens’ pension fund, which needed at least P25 billion, and Philippine Postal Corp. which should have gotten P500 million as reimbursement for the government’s mailing services.

For some agencies that are entitled to CIF, the Senate minority will appeal that these be set at reasonable amounts. For others that received huge sums, they will seek a reduction, Pimentel said. --- With stories from Inquirer and Business Mirror

Tags: #CIFs, #publicoutrage, #OVP,OP,OSG, #breedinggroundforcorruption


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