BY DENNIS GADIL
THE Senate yesterday finally ordered the
arrest of former PNP comptroller Eliseo dela Paz for snubbing
the summons issued by the Senate foreign relations committee
which is conducting a probe into the so-called euro generals.
Senate President Manuel Villar, after signing
the arrest order, said the number of required 10 signatories had
been met. There were eight signatories on Monday and 12
yesterday.
The Office of the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms
went to Camp Crame to serve the arrest order.
The arrest order was received by Director
Leopoldo Bataoil, chief of the Directorate for Police-Community
Relations.
Dela Paz’ lawyer, Noel Malaya, said he last
talked with his client Monday, and the latter promised to
surface this week. He said Dela Paz is either in Bataan or La
Union.
The Senate is investigating Dela Paz’ brief
detention at the Moscow airport after he was found carrying
105,000 euros which he did not declare.
He said the money was meant as contingency
fund for the PNP delegation that attended the October 7-11
Interpol conference in St. Petersburg.
Dela Paz, one of the eight members of the PNP
delegation, reached the retirement age during the trip. He has
taken out almost all of the things in his quarters.
He did not show up at the opening of the
Senate inquiry on October 23, prompting Sen. Miriam Defensor
Santiago, committee chair, to order his arrest.
He is questioning before the Supreme Court
the committee’s jurisdiction to investigate the Moscow incident.
The senators who signed the arrest order were
Villar, Santiago, Francis Pangilinan, Aquilino Pimentel, Manuel
Roxas, Edgardo Angara, Richard Gordon, Gregorio Honasan, Ramon
Revilla Jr., Rodolfo Biazon, Ana Consuelo Madrigal and Loren
Legarda.
Villar said he hoped Dela Paz would not try
to evade arrest and appear in the next hearing.
Santiago said Monday she will schedule the
hearing next week, possibly with the Senate blue ribbon
committee of Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano as secondary panel.
"To avoid all these technicalities, it would
be better if the two committees hold a joint hearing, so that
Dela Paz can no longer make a pretense of challenging
jurisdiction on the arrest warrant," she said.
The Santiago committee has already come out
with a report, recommending Dela Paz’ prosecution.
An ad hoc committee formed by the National
Police Commission (Napolcom) to investigate the Moscow incident
said Dela Paz should be criminally prosecuted if he fails to
explain the "irregular withdrawal" of P6.9 million (converted to
105,000 euros) from PNP intelligence funds.
The Napolcom panel also recommended a freeze on Dela Paz’
retirement benefits and a lifestyle check on the members of the
delegation. – With Raymond Africa and Ashzel Hachero