BY DENNIS GADIL
THE Cayetano siblings have joined hands in
investigating alleged bribery by Hanjin Heavy Industries and
Construction Co Ltd. of South Korea to determine President
Arroyo’s culpability.
"Parang this is the second time from the ZTE
(bribery scandal) na may nagsumbong kay Presidente at imbes na
pa-imbestigahan niya yung kompanya, e mas lalong napabilis ang
implementation," Blue Ribbon chair Alan Peter Cayetano said in
an interview.
Former Planning Secretary Romulo Neri had
informed the President about the P200 million offer of then
Comelec chair Benjamin Abalos in exchange for approving the
$329-million NBN-ZTE broadband project.
But Neri, during a Senate probe, clammed up
when asked about the response of President Arroyo and invoked
executive privilege.
Cayetano said the probe, to be spearheaded by
the committee on environment chaired by his sister Pia, will
also look into the environmental laws violated by Hanjin in
putting up their projects in Subic.
He said there was obviously a rush in
implementing the Hanjin projects despite the lack of
environmental permits and clearances.
Cayetano said the PNP Task Force Tagovill
which investigated the alleged bribe attempt and the Korean
Chamber of Commerce have confirmed attendance.
He, however, said that Tagoloan Mayor Paulino
Emano and Villanueva Mayor Juliette Uy, who allegedly cried
bribery by Hanjin, have declined the Senate invitations.
Emano last May 1 was caught on television
saying he told the President about the P400 million bribe offer
to him and Uy but Arroyo "ignored" him.
The two mayors last week backtracked and
signed an affidavit that said no bribery-extortion took place.
Hanjin president Jeong Sup Chim has confirmed
his attendance in today’s hearing.
Environment Secretary Jose Atienza, Subic Bay
Metropolitan Authority administrator Armand Arreza, PNP chief
Avelino Razon, and Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno have yet to
confirm their attendance.
Sen. Pia Cayetano has said she was outraged
"that Hanjin offered such favor to the local official to allow
them to continue construction even without first securing a
municipal building permit and environmental compliance
certificate (ECC), among others."
"These are basic requirements under the law,
regardless of whether you’re a local or foreign investor," she
said
Hanjin has gotten the ire of
environmentalists for constructing two condominiums at the
protected Subic forest reserve without an ECC. The construction
began last January.
Hanjin applied for an ECC only last March.
The SBMA granted the ECC last July. By then, Hanjin had already
built eight floors of the first, a 22-story condominium, and
four floors of the second, a 12-story structure.
Hanjin is planning to operate a $2 billion shipyard that
would extend from Tagoloan to Villanueva in Misamis Oriental.
Its training center alone would occupy eight hectares, while the
planned shipyard would be on a 70-hectare property in Tagoloan
and on a 400-hectare property in Villanueva.