Gov't ups drive against jueteng in north Luzon
>> Monday, January 7, 2013
The administration is going against the
multi-billion “underground industry” in northern Luzon provinces, a source
close to Malacanang said.
The government’s drive against the illegal
numbers game is reportedly heading to Ilocos Sur after dealing with Pangasinan
even as jueteng is still proliferating in Baguio and Benguet towns La Trinidad,
Mankayan, Buguias, Tublay, Itogon, Tuba and Atok.
The source said the government is now
gathering pieces of evidence against a known political figure in northern Luzon
and his involvement in jueteng.
Earlier, Bugallon town Mayor Rodrigo Orduna
accused his erstwhile boss Pangasinan Gov. Amado Espino of his direct
involvement in the operations of jueteng in all six districts in the province.
The charge was denied by the governor,
tagging it as “baseless” and ill-timed as the 2013 mid-term poll nears.
This reportedly led to the relief last week of
Senior Supt. Mariano Luis Verzosa Jr. as Pangasinan police director.
In Camp Florendo, San Fernando Las Union, the
Ilocos Region police headquarters, Supt. JovencioBadua Jr., spokesman, said
Verzosa will be reassigned to Camp Crame as Senior Supt. ManolitoLabador, PRO1
deputy director for operations, took his place as Pangasinan police chief.
But at Camp Crame in Quezon City in a command
conference with newly installed Philippine National Police Chief Alan Purisima,
Chief Supt. Franklin J.B. Bucayu, Ilocos Region police director, said reports
like Verzosa’s lackluster handling of drive against jueteng was not the cause
of his relief.
“It so happened that he (Verzosa) has a son
who is running for an elective post in a town of Pangasinan. It has been our
policy in the PNP to preserve non-partisanship of our police officials and so
it was a necessary move,” Bucayu said.
Orduna, who has lodged a plunder complaint,
said Gov. Espino received an estimate of P900 million in jueteng money and is
allegedly protecting its operations.
The Department of Interior and Local
Government has formed an investigative body to look into the accusation while
the Ombudsman is undertaking a separate probe.
The DILG has also requested the assistance of
the Bureau of Internal Revenue and the Anti-Money Laundering Council and other
government agencies in the investigation on Espino.
In Ilocos Sur, only Tagudin town Mayor Roque Versoza,
Jr. has declared his town as jueteng-free. “This town will remain jueteng
free,” the town executive said while another town mayor talking on conditions
of anonymity said, “mahirap mapahinto ang jueteng.”
Verzosa however is firm, saying “only the
financers of jueteng gain from its operations,” adding, “if one wants to stop
jueteng operations, it only takes political will.”
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