BY DENNIS GADIL
CONNECT the dots, if you please, or if you
will.
Sen. Panfilo Lacson yesterday said his
"surprise" witness, Leo San Miguel, was overheard by members of
the Office of the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms (OSAA) during a break
in Tuesday's Senate hearing on the ZTE deal talking to a person
he addressed as "Ma'am."
On the other side of town, Executive
Secretary Eduardo Ermita said that President Arroyo was "elated"
by San Miguel's testimony that he knew nothing of supposed
kickbacks in connection in the deal.
"Narinig siya ng OSAA, may kausap siyang
'ma'am.' 'Yes ma'am, opo ma'am, ide-deny ko po ma'm,'" Lacson
said.
Lacson said he doesn't believe that San
Miguel was just talking to his wife or staff.
"Ewan ko, baka asawa niya ang kausap niya
pero 'ma'am' ang tawag niya. At madiin ang 'yes ma'm, opo ma'm,
ide-deny ko po ma'm,'" Lacson said.
He said the phone call was coursed through
lawyer Marcelino Agana IV of the Presidential Legislative
Liaison Office (PLLO).
"Nakausap niya si Attorney Agana na siyang
nasa PLLO sa Senado. Maya-maya meron siyang kausap sa telepono
na 'Ma'am'," he said.
"Lalong tumibay nang makausap si 'Ma'am. Isa
lang naman ang 'Ma'am' na ina-address ng ganun," he said.
He said after the call, San Miguel appeared
to have further firmed up, denying anything about the supposed
kickbacks and commissions that the "Greedy Group" of former
elections chair Benjamin Abalos Sr. were supposed to get.
Agana admitted that he talked to San Miguel
Monday night before the ZTE consultant met with Lacson and
before the Senate inquiry Tuesday morning.
But Agana said San Miguel only told him that
he was going to testify on whatever he was going to be asked.
Agana, who said he was San Miguel's lawyer
when the businessman was president of the Philippine Cable
Television Association, denied that he tried to influence San
Miguel's testimony or that President Arroyo or Malacañang had
instructed him to do so.
In his testimony Tuesday, San Miguel said he
had no "direct knowledge" of the alleged $41 million in advances
that he and other alleged members of the "Greedy Group Plus
Plus" were supposed to have received from China's ZTE Corp.,
which had bagged the $329 million contract.
Lacson was caught by surprise by San Miguel's
testimony, saying it was contrary to what was related to him in
their previous meetings.
Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz
labeled San Miguel as incredible for "unfathomably" lying before
the Senate inquiry.
"I really don't know what happened to him. He
is obviously lying because for him to be asked by a senator to
undergo a lie detector test is something. The man sounded
incredible to many senators," said Cruz, a former president of
the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines.
San Miguel's insistence that he does not know
anything about the supposed bribe advances was contrary to the
statements of Rodolfo "Jun" Lozada, Jose "Joey" de Venecia III
and Dante Madriaga, who all said San Miguel was part of the
negotiations of the deal.
Cruz said it is evident that "someone
powerful" made San Miguel testify the way he did.
"It can only mean two things: either he was
threatened or he was convinced not to tell the truth of what he
obviously knew so much of," Cruz said.
GOV'T OFFICIALS TOO
Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita said the
Palace is open to allowing government officials linked to the
ZTE deal to undergo a lie detector test.
Ermita said they also welcome the proposal of
Sen. Mar Roxas Tuesday night for Lozada, De Venecia, Madriaga
and San Miguel to undergo a lie detector test. All except De
Venecia have agreed to the proposal.
Ermita denied that Malacañang or the
President herself may have had contact with San Miguel or even
know him.
He also denied that there are efforts to influence him or any
of the other witnesses. - Dennis Gadil, Gerard Naval and
Jocelyn Montemayor