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Philippines
Philippines impeachment trial
Evidence mounts of Estrada's involvement in illegal gambling
racket
By Peter Symonds
16 December 2000
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this version to print
Just over a week into the impeachment trial of President Joseph
Estrada in the Philippines Senate there appears to be considerable
evidence that he was at the centre of a racket to take millions
of pesos a month in protection money from the operators of the
country's illegal numbers game jueteng.
A series of witnesses have begun to pin down the various stages
of the money trail, which led from the so-called jueteng lords
through the employees of Luis Singson, governor of Ilocos Sur
province, to Singson himself and then either directly or indirectly
into the pocket of the president.
Singson was one of Estrada's late night drinking and gambling
buddies before falling out over the president's decision to grant
the franchise for a new legal form of jueteng, known as Bingo
Two-Ball, to one of Singson's political rivalscousin Eric
Singson.
In early October, Luis Singson accused Estrada of accepting
over $US8.6 million of jueteng payoffs as well as a cut of $2.8
million from provincial tobacco taxes. He claimed that he decided
to go public after an attempt was made on his life. Other allegations
against Estrada include the purchase of several luxury mansions
and that he attempted to block an investigation into a stock manipulation
scandal to protect a business associate.
Over the last three days, Singson, the key witness in the impeachment
trial, gave evidence before the Senate, which has been convened
as a court with Supreme Court Chief Justice Hilario Davide sitting
as the presiding judge and the Senators as the jurors.
In his testimony, Singson said Estrada had organised the jueteng
payoffs shortly after taking office as president in mid-1998 through
Charlie Ang, one of his business cronies. Ang had met with all
of the country's jueteng operators sometime in 1998 and ordered
them to pay protection money corresponding to 3 percent
of the total [bet] collection for each province.
Later in 1998, Singson took over Ang's job as Estrada's bagman.
He produced a ledger covering the period from November 1998 to
July 1999, which included details of payments to Estrada's sons
Jose and Jude Ejercito, presidential assistants Anton Prieto and
Jaime Policarpio, as well as to a Asiong Salonga.
According to Singson, Asiong Salonga, the title of
the 1961 film that propelled Estrada to fame, was the codename
for the president.
Singson said he first delivered payoffs to Estrada in October
1998, adding, ever since I've been in and out of his house
for cash deliveries. He also identified a five million peso ($US100,000)
cheque, which he had given to Estrada in February 1999. He testified
that he had transferred another 200 million pesos via one of the
president's lawyers, Edward Serapio, to a foundation set up by
Estrada for the education of Muslim youth. Serapio was the foundation's
corporate secretary.
According to Singson, Estrada's plan for Bingo Two-Ballset
up in the name of fighting the illegal racketswas a more
lucrative scam. Those running the legal Bingo Two-Ball were the
former illegal jueteng operators and Estrada stood to increase
his monthly earnings from 35 million pesos to at least 165 million
pesos. A dummy corporation, Prominent Management, run by Estrada's
business friend Charlie Ang, was to take a hefty slice of the
Bingo Two-Ball revenue in return for acting as a consultant to
the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation.
Shortly after Singson's accusations became public in October,
Estrada suspended the operations of Bingo Two-Ball and then shut
it down completely a week later. Singson named members of the
president's cabinet and other officials who had known about his
involvement in illegal gambling and had tried to dissuade him
from making his allegations public. These included Interior Secretary
Alfredo Lim, his predecessor Ronaldo Puno and Agriculture Secretary
Edgardo Angara.
The evidence given by other witnesses over the last week was
equally damning.
* Former Philippine national police chief Roberto Lastimoso
told the Senate that Estrada had instructed him to go easy on
illegal gambling and to co-ordinate jueteng issues
with Singson. He said he had halted operations against the racket
but had continued to make anti-jueteng statements to appease the
president's critics. We were trying to insulate him because
we receive a lot of flak from civic sectors, from the church,
he said. Naturally we had to make it appear that we were
conducting operations.
* One of Singson's employees, Emma Lim, testified that she
had once delivered a bag with five million pesos directly to Estrada's
secretary at the presidential palace. She said she had collected
money on three occasions from the president's son, San Juan Mayor
Jinggoy Estrada, who, according to Singson, was involved in the
jueteng racket without his father's knowledge. She also claimed
to have deposited what she was told was jueteng money from presidential
assistant Anton Prieto into a Manila bank account.
* Maria Carmencita Itchon told the Senate she had been hired
as an accountant by Singson last year for a casino company called
Fontain Bleau, which had been set up by Estrada using 65 million
pesos from jueteng money. She said Estrada's partners in the casino
included his friend and businessman Jaime Dichaves and Yolanda
Ricaforte. Itchon testified that Estrada had appointed Ricaforte,
an accountant, to audit jueteng collections coming to Singson's
Manila office.
Estrada denies charges
Estrada continues to deny all charges and insist that he is
innocent but his explanations have been meagre. Several weeks
ago he admitted at a press conference that he had been offered
a bribe of jueteng money but claimed that he had turned it down.
He admitted that money had been deposited in the Erap Muslim Youth
Scholarship Foundation (Erap or Buddy
is Estrada's nickname), a front run by his brother-in-law, but
said that he had not touched it. Estrada is still deciding whether
or not to testify before the Senate.
A two-thirds majority is necessary to dismiss Estrada from
office. Up until October when the scandal broke, the president
had solid majorities in both the Senate and House of Representatives
but he has since been deserted by close political allies in both
houses as well as by a number of cabinet members and advisors.
When the political crisis hit the Philippine peso and the economy,
all the major big business groupings publicly called on Estrada
to resign immediately.
Vice President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who quit her cabinet
post but retains the vice-presidency, is constitutionally the
next in line if Estrada is removed. She heads a disparate alliance
of corporate chiefs, church leaders, political opposition figures
including former president Cory Aquino, trade unions, a rightwing
military group and radical groups that has been organising protests
to demand Estrada's resignation.
While Estrada continues to retain the backing of key business
figures associated with former Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos,
significant sections of the ruling class are concerned that he
has failed to press ahead with economic deregulation and that
the allegations against him are now damaging the country's prospects
for attracting foreign investment.
Leading businessman Jose Conception told the Far Eastern
Economic Review: If Estrada from the day when this exploded
took radical steps and said All my cronies, get out; taxes,
go after them' probably people would have thought there would
be a change. But that didn't happen. According to the magazine,
business figures were particularly enraged at the accusation that
Estrada had taken a slice out of provincial tobacco-tax revenue.
One of the key criticisms has been that his government has failed
to rein in the country's large budget deficit.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) indicated its displeasure
with Estrada last week. In a leaked confidential memorandum, the
IMF stated that even in the best-case scenario it
did not envisage the Estrada administration being able to achieve
a budget surplus by the end of his term in 2004. The IMF had earlier
criticised the government for failing to rein in spending and
increase tax revenue.
Economic commentators have forecast that the Philippine economy
and the peso will deteriorate further under the impact of higher
oil prices and falling demand for electronics exports, compounded
by the country's political stalemate. Economist Ponciano Intal
told AsiaWeek at the end of November: The Philippines'
economic performance is 100 percent linked to its political crisis.
He pointed out that to stay competitive in hi-tech electronic
exports you need foreign investmentand foreign investment
won't come unless Estrada resigns.
Even if the Senate acquits Estrada, he will face ongoing opposition
from powerful sections of big business, both inside the Philippines
and internationally. Guillermo Luz, executive director of the
influential Makati Business Club, explained in the Far Eastern
Economic Review: People will not go back to business
as usual, that's pretty clear. If the president is acquitted,
people will have to see that there was a very impartial process
and that is going to take some doing.
One indication of what is in store is a report that surfaced
in the German magazine Der Spiegel. It reported that German
secret police had tapped mobile phone conversations between Estrada's
negotiator Roberto Aventajado and Abu Sayyaf leadersthe
Islamic fundamentalist group in southern Mindanao that kidnapped
a number of tourists and employees from a Malaysian tourist resort
earlier this year. The article quoted German police as saying
that Estrada and Aventajado had taken 40 percent and 10 percent
respectively from the $20 million ransom payment for the release
of the hostages.
The government has vehemently denied the accusations and Estrada
has ordered a law suit against Der Spiegel. But it is a
further sign that there will be no let up in the pressure from
ruling circles on Estrada to resign even if he does manage to
survive the current impeachment trial.
See Also:
Senate removes obstacle to a speedy impeachment
trial for Filipino president
[2 December 2000]
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