By Delon Porcalla
MANILA – You want President Arroyo convicted?
Do the spadework, and if possible, find a whistle-blower, prosecutors of convicted plunderer former president Joseph Estrada advised Arroyo critics.
Take it from the experts, who sent a popular ex-president to prison on a life sentence.
If there is one important thing the enemies of Mrs. Arroyo should learn, it is to stop organizing rallies, stop holding press conferences and avoid the limelight, if they really want her to suffer the same fate as the deposed president.
“They
should do their homework. Hindi iyung puro press-con, hindi puro
reklamo at rally lang. (Not too much press-con, not too much whining
and rallies) They have to do the spadework. That’s what we did
here. Even my friends from civil society, that’s what I tell them,"
former ombudsman Simeon Marcelo told The STAR.
He
stressed that building up a case against anyone, more importantly on
a powerful official of the land, is no joke, as they have to “look
for and gather evidence, prepare and interview witnesses, draft
pleadings and do legal research."
“We
really need those who work, people who are willing to do the hard
work. You really need hard work, preparation," Marcelo adds.
“What is needed are partners who will be part of the solution and
who do not mind doing concrete, even tedious work."
Human
rights lawyer Arno Sanidad, a private prosecutor in the Estrada
plunder case, agreed. “We never thought we would be able to prove
the next to impossible. If they are able to come up with the proof,
then they should go ahead," he told The STAR.
Another
thing, which his brother Pablito also highlighted, was the importance
of a whistle-blower like former Ilocos Sur governor Luis “Chavit”
Singson, Estrada’s buddy who spilled the beans on his alleged
jueteng kickbacks and multi-billion-peso ill-gotten wealth.
“They
(anti-GMA forces) should get a whistle-blower. If they have no
whistle-blower, that’s nothing," said Arno. “It has to start
with somebody who will put his life and limb on the line no matter
what. If you don’t have a Chavit, forget it, nothing will happen,"
countered Pablito.
Special
Prosecutor Dennis Villa-Ignacio and Marcelo, under whose watch the
plunder case was mostly tried, paid tribute to the public and private
prosecutors who selflessly placed the case above and ahead of their
individual careers.
Marcelo
said that this effective collaboration between private and public
prosecutors in the battle against graft and corruption should
continue at the Sandiganbayan, where cases against public officials
are being tried.
“In
continuing what has already been initiated, it is a critical
necessity to institutionalize the fruitful collaboration between
public and private prosecutors to wage an effective war against
corruption," he said.
“The
public prosecutors need active partners who would buckle down to work
when necessary. The bottom line is this: the problem of graft and
corruption is a shared responsibility. The private sector should not
abandon the government in its fight against corruption," he
said.
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