Allies of Philippine President Gloria Arroyo forced the government to approve a telecommunications contract that would have given them US$130 million in kickbacks, a Senate hearing was told yesterday.
Rodolfo Lozada, an electronics engineer brought in to assess the national broadband deal, told the inquiry he was told to reduce the kickbacks to Arroyo's allies and to "moderate their greed."
The US$329 million contract, which was won by the Chinese firm ZTE has since been scrapped amid allegations of bribery and corruption involving senior government officials and the president's husband, lawyer Jose Miguel Arroyo.
Lozada, often wiping tears from his eyes, told the inquiry how he feared for his life.
The fallout from the scandal has cost former Arroyo ally Jose de Venecia his seat as speaker of the House of Representatives and seen the resignation of the chairman of the election commission, Benjamin Abalos, who brokered the deal.
Lozada said Abalos, a close friend of the president's husband, demanded the contract be awarded to the Chinese.
"The trouble started when Abalos came to me to sell the ZTE proposal in September 2006," Lozada said under oath.
He said Abalos had told him "you have to protect our 130 [million dollars]."
"I warned him, that would stick out but we might be able to get 65 [million dollars]," Lozada said.
Lozada said Economic Planning Secretary Romulo Neri, who eventually approved the revised contract to ZTE, instructed him to "moderate their greed."
Over the next 16 months Lozada said he met Abalos, de Venecia's son Joey de Venecia, ZTE officials, a lawyer from the Chinese embassy in Manila and the president's husband to discuss the project.
De Venecia's son, who lost out to the Chinese last year, had previously told the Senate about bribes and kickbacks and the roles of Abalos and Arroyo's husband in the deal.
Arroyo spokesman Ignacio Bunye on Thursday said the senate inquiry was nothing more than "grandstanding."
Lozada said that when it initially appeared that the Chinese proposal would lose out, Abalos called him in January last year and said: "Don't ever show your face at Wack Wack [a central Manila golf course] or I will have you killed."
The witness told the senate he asked to be taken off the project evaluation team after that.
"This is not worth risking my life for," he said.
A French-Algerian man went on trial in France on Monday for burning to death his wife in 2021, a case that shocked the public and sparked heavy criticism of police for failing to take adequate measures to protect her. Mounir Boutaa, now 48, stalked his Algerian-born wife Chahinez Daoud following their separation, and even bought a van he parked outside her house near Bordeaux in southwestern France, which he used to watch her without being detected. On May 4, 2021, he attacked her in the street, shot her in both legs, poured gasoline on her and set her on fire. A neighbor hearing
DEATH CONSTANTLY LOOMING: Decades of detention took a major toll on Iwao Hakamada’s mental health, his lawyers describing him as ‘living in a world of fantasy’ A Japanese man wrongly convicted of murder who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate has been awarded US$1.44 million in compensation, an official said yesterday. The payout represents ¥12,500 (US$83) for each day of the more than four decades that Iwao Hakamada spent in detention, most of it on death row when each day could have been his last. It is a record for compensation of this kind, Japanese media said. The former boxer, now 89, was exonerated last year of a 1966 quadruple murder after a tireless campaign by his sister and others. The case sparked scrutiny of the justice system in
DITCH TACTICS: Kenyan officers were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch suspected to have been deliberately dug by Haitian gang members A Kenyan policeman deployed in Haiti has gone missing after violent gangs attacked a group of officers on a rescue mission, a UN-backed multinational security mission said in a statement yesterday. The Kenyan officers on Tuesday were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch “suspected to have been deliberately dug by gangs,” the statement said, adding that “specialized teams have been deployed” to search for the missing officer. Local media outlets in Haiti reported that the officer had been killed and videos of a lifeless man clothed in Kenyan uniform were shared on social media. Gang violence has left
‘HUMAN NEGLIGENCE’: The fire is believed to have been caused by someone who was visiting an ancestral grave and accidentally started the blaze, the acting president said Deadly wildfires in South Korea worsened overnight, officials said yesterday, as dry, windy weather hampered efforts to contain one of the nation’s worst-ever fire outbreaks. More than a dozen different blazes broke out over the weekend, with Acting South Korean Interior and Safety Minister Ko Ki-dong reporting thousands of hectares burned and four people killed. “The wildfires have so far affected about 14,694 hectares, with damage continuing to grow,” Ko said. The extent of damage would make the fires collectively the third-largest in South Korea’s history. The largest was an April 2000 blaze that scorched 23,913 hectares across the east coast. More than 3,000