BY DENNIS GADIL
WALK-IN ZTE witness Dante Madriaga yesterday
said the Senate should again summon Finance Secretary Margarito
Teves who he said "knows a lot" about the alleged initial
payment by the Arroyo government to China’s ZTE Corp.
Madriaga said the information related to the
initial payment is contrary to government claims that no single
centavo from the taxpayers has been spent on the national
broadband network project.
Madriaga said the payment could amount to at
least $49 million or 15 percent of the $329 million total
contract price, which according to businessman Jose de Venecia
III and ZTE witness Rodolfo Noel Lozada Jr. included an
overprice of some $130 million.
Citing ZTE sources, Madriaga said Teves could
confirm if the $49 million was indeed paid to the ZTE Corp.
He claimed Teves has long wanted to testify
to this but has been prevented from doing so.
Madriaga said the initial payment came barely
eight days after President Arroyo witnessed the signing of the
supply contract with ZTE officials in Boao, China. The signing
took place April 2007.
He said the China government, which owns and
controls ZTE, apparently wanted the initial payment before it
could release the loan to the Philippine government.
Teves testified in September last year that
former Elections chair Benjamin Abalos Sr. and some ZTE
officials went to his house in Alabang, not to discuss the NBN
project, but to discuss their plans for Mindanao.
The Senate Blue Ribbon committee has not
issued a new summons to Teves.
Senate President Manny Villar said warrants
of arrest will be issued against Abalos, cable TV executive Leo
San Miguel, retired police general Quirino de la Torre, and
businessman Ruben Reyes if they do not show up on Tuesday.
Madriaga has testified that Abalos, San
Miguel, De la Torre and Reyes comprise the "greedy group" who
are after commissions from the ZTE deal.
Villar said he is not giving up hope that
Neri would appear on Tuesday.
"If he will show up and answer all questions
truthfully, then that will prove that EO 464 has been discarded.
The proof of the scrapping of that issuance is in his answering
of our questions," he said.
‘TALK IS CHEAP’
Malacañang belittled the impending appearance
of another witness on the ZTE deal.
Cabinet secretary Ricardo Saludo said the
testimony of another "talking head" out to malign government
would show that the Senate investigations into the broadband
controversy are just "accusations with no proof."
Saludo said "talk is cheap" and that those
who are in search of truth should look to the courts for due
process, not the Senate.
Senators Panfilo Lacson and Aquilino Pimentel Jr. on Thursday
said a new witness with personal knowledge of the alleged
bribery that attended the ZTE deal will surface on Tuesday.
– With Regina Bengco