Over
P695-M tobacco taxes
LINGAYEN, Pangasinan – A group of tobacco
farmers from North and Central Luzon has filed plunder charges against an
incumbent lawmaker of Pangasinan and her husband for alleged misuse of tobacco
excise tax funds.
Members of the North
and Central Luzon Tobacco Farmers Association Inc. (NCLTFAI) accused Rep.
Carmen Cojuangco of the fifth district and her husband, former congressman Mark
Cojuangco, of violating Republic Act 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt
Practices Act.
In a complaint filed
with the Office of the Ombudsman on March 16, the NCLTFAI, represented by its
president Ruben Lagmay and secretary-general Virginia Salta, said the
respondents defrauded the farmers of the proceeds of the tobacco excise tax.
The complainants
claimed the couple misappropriated more than P695 million, representing the
district’s share in tobacco excise tax from 1997 to 2007.
They presented
documents showing P503.7 million of the P569 million in tobacco excise tax,
released in three tranches from 2010 to 2012, was used for the construction of
farm-to-market roads, palay and corn drying facilities, irrigation canals and
purchase of farming equipment in the towns of Alcala, Sto. Tomas, Sison and
Villasis.
The complainants
alleged most of the projects implemented by the Cojuangco couple violated provisions
of the law, which provides that the tobacco excise tax should be used for the
benefit of tobacco farmers.
Republic Act 8240
states that 80 percent of the amount must go to the congressional district, 10
percent to the provincial government and 10 percent to municipalities and
cities that produce tobacco.
Aside from plunder and
graft, the tobacco farmers asked Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales to have the
respondents and members of their family subjected to a lifestyle check.
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