TABUK CITY, Kalinga -- The one-month suspension of Kalinga Gov. Jocel Baac started last week after President Aquino ordered Baac suspended for hitting broadcaster Jerome Tabanganay with a microphone last year.
Vice Gov. Sammy
Manawang took over as acting governor during Baac’s suspension, a statement
issued by the office of the provincial administrator said.
A video showed Baac
barging into the dzRK station and attacking Tabanganay.
Baac said he would
abide by the order, even as he maintained he did not intend to harm Tabanganay.
“I will comply but
with a heavy heart because the programs and projects, including the autonomy
campaign, will be sacrificed. It is the people who will be deprived of
our services,” Baac said.
When asked what
prompted him to confront Tabanganay, Baac said, “his unbalanced reporting.”
He lamented the timing
of the issuance of the suspension which coincides with the 25th founding anniversary of the Cordillera
Administrative Region, aside from the delay in the implementation
of services to his constituents.
His suspension arose
from a complaint by the National Press Club after the governor entered the
government-run station Radyo ng Bayan in Tabuk, Kalinga after Tabanganay
reportedly kept on hitting Baac’s administration.
Baac said he entered
the radio booth where Tabanganay was because the latter kept on criticizing his
administration based on unverified allegations that he received through text
messages.
In a phone interview
Baac said that protecting his constituents against any form of abuse is a
primordial duty of a governor.
“Ang pagpiggil ng tahasang
pangabuso at paggamit ni Tabanganay sa press freedom laban sa
mamamayan ay parte ng aking katungkulan,” (stopping abuses and the
improper use of ‘press freedom’ against the citizenry is part of my duty), he
added.
He said that the
decision to suspend him is also partly politics saying, “once you enter
politics, you create both friends and enemies.”
He said he does not
discount the fact that his political detractors also have a hand in the
unverified text messages that were being announced through radio with the
intention to destroy him.
“The important thing
here,” he said, “is I have protected government officials and employees who
were subject of Tabanganay’s criticisms through his radio program
‘Agenda.’”
Baac said he earlier
stopped the proliferation of jueteng in kalinga.
Baac’s move was
reportedly lauded by the religious sector of the province.
After Baac stopped
jueteng, it was gathered that Tabanganay started his daily barrage against
the PNP and the administration.
In one of his
broadcasts, Tabanganay reportedly urgcd the New People’s Army to join in his
crusade against anti-gambling because the PNP was useless in stopping the
illegal numbers game.
Tabanganay’s radio
statements were tackled during the provincial “Kapehan,” a monthly
meeting of all provincial national and local government heads of offices
including the private sector which recommended to Radyo ng Bayan that
government radio announcers should first check and ascertain their facts before
any broadcasts are made.
Asked what to do with
the 30 day suspension, Baac said he will use it to recover lost time with
family, friends and relatives.
Meanwhile, it
was a learned that Tabanganay is facing an administrative case filed with
the civil service commission also for acts of unbecoming a government employee
due to a previous rape case filed while he was a radio broadcaster
in Mt. Province.
Earlier President
Aquino warned in his order that similar action, like what Baac reportedly did
to Tabanganay will be dealt with more severely.
In an order dated June
27 signed in behalf of the President by Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa the
President upheld the recommendation of the Department of Interior and Local
Government which found Baac guilty of conduct unbecoming of a public officer.
The DILG had also
warned Baac that the commission of the same or similar acts in the future “will
be dealt with more severely.”
“The conduct and
behavior of all officials and employees in the public service should be
circumscribed with the heavy burden of responsibility. This is so because
the image of the government is necessarily mirrored in the conduct, official or
otherwise, of the men and women who work thereat,” the President’s order said.
The order also asked
Baac to “adhere to the standards of morality and decency in order to preserve
the government’s good name and standing for which they serve.”
Baac “fell short of
this exacting standard, had shown lack of decorum, propriety and respect in his
dealings with other people,” the order added.
Tabanganay thanked the
President for his decision saying it was a “long-sought ruling.”
He said the order
proves that the government is treading the straight path that the President has
promised.
Tabanganan earlier
said he had lost hope of getting justice for what Baac did to press freedom in
the country.
Meanwhile, Baac filed
counter charges against Tabanganay before the Civil Service Commission. – With
a report from Richard Valdez
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