free software writes "MANILA - A Filipino American anti-corruption watchdog has urged President George W. Bush not to give safe haven to President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and her congressmen allies because of their alleged corruption.
In an eight-page manifesto, the
Philippine Anticorruption Movement in the USA Inc. (Pamusa) led by its
president Francisco Wenceslao, invoked Bush’s Presidential Proclamation 7750
which suspends entry into the US of individuals involved in public corruption
“that has a serious adverse effect in specified US interests.”
PP 7750 gives authority to the secretary
of state to identify who should be barred entry for involvement in corruption.
Pamusa, formed only this year, has sent copies of the manifesto “for
appropriate action” to the offices of US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
Josh Bolten, Ambassador to the Philippines Kristie Kenney and the UN Convention
Against Corruption based in Vienna, Austria. The organization has also
sent copies to Vice President Noli de Castro, Senate President Manuel Villar,
Senate minority leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr., Speaker Jose de Venecia, House minority
leader Francis Escudero and leaders of various non-government, business and
community organizations. The group asked that the House give the new
impeachment complaint against Arroyo due course by sending it to the Senate for
trial.
Pamusa said PP 7750 could be used against
Arroyo and her allies because it prevents “such people from coming into the United States to enjoy the fruits of their
corruption and sends a strong message that the United States is committed to
supporting international efforts in combating public corruption wherever it
occurs.” It said the Bush administration’s “No Safe Haven” policy may indeed be
“a gift to the Filipino people at this crucial junction in history when
democracy, liberty and freedom for which our forebears made the supreme
sacrifice would be upheld over largesse.”
“For the policy is a sword of Damocles’
hanging over the heads of the Speaker and members of the House to ensure that
Arroyo’s impeachment doesn’t again become a farce,” it said. “Any
irregularity that taints the proceedings and voting in the House offers an
opportunity for enterprising observers to dig into a House member’s corruption
in the past in order to deny him or her entry to the US and other G8 (Group of
Eight) nations.”
The other G8 nations are Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan,
Russia and the United Kingdom.
More than 137 other countries that have adopted the policy. The House in
plenary is expected to vote today on whether to uphold the decision of the
House committee to dismiss the complaint for being insufficient in substance or
to send the complaint to the Senate for trial once the minority musters the 78
needed signatories.
One of the charges against Arroyo in the
new impeachment complaint is graft and
corruption where she and her family have been accused of accumulating
ill-gotten wealth, including a multi-million bank account in Germany.
The bank account was exposed last Friday by House deputy minority leader
Alan Peter Cayetano (Taguig-Pateros). The money supposedly owned by
“immediate members” of the Arroyo family and deposited at the Hypo- und
Vereinsbank in Munich, Germany under account No.
87570-23030-32100-6271-571, was reported to amount to $500 million.
While it is not a party, the US has
adopted the resolution for ratification of an ad hoc committee which was tasked
to craft the rules of procedures for United Nations Convention Against
Corruption’s (UNCAC’s) Conference of the States Parties. Bush’s “No Safe
Haven” policy was highlighted in his speech before the recent meeting of the G8
where he declared war against “kleptocracy” through his administration’s
“National Strategy to Internationalize Efforts Against Kleptocracy.” “Our
objective is to defeat high level public corruption in all its forms and to
deny corrupt officials access to the international financial system as means of
defrauding their people and hiding their ill-gotten gains,” the group quoted
Bush as saying.
By Wendell Vigilia
Vol. XV, No. 20"