LAOAG CITY --
Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos Thursday asked the House of Representatives
to release the six provincial officials who were cited in contempt over their
alleged evasive answers during the congressional inquiry into the reported
misuse of tobacco funds.
House leaders have prepared a detention room
for Marcos in case she again refuses to attend the congressional inquiry.
“I appeal for humanitarian reasons to the
House leadership to set free the Ilocos six. They have suffered more than
enough. Please allow them to go home. You have families too and you know the
pain of being separated from them,” Marcos said in a statement issued through
her lawyer, former solicitor general Estelito Mendoza.
Marcos said the detention of the provincial
employees for over a month now has brought “immeasurable emotional and
psychological anguish to them and their families.”
“They have already testified to the best of
their knowledge. Forcing them through prolonged detention to give false
testimony just to satisfy the committee is tantamount to compelling them to
commit perjury. Please, set them free,” she said.
Marcos said the motor vehicles were not
overpriced and the transactions were cleared by the Commission on Audit.
“Are the vehicles missing? They are all
accounted for and are being used by the beneficiaries,” she said.
Marcos said the provincial government is
prepared to bring the issue to court if the House committee will continue to
reject their explanations.
“Political vendetta cannot justify putting
the legislature and the judiciary on a collision course at the expense of the
rights of hapless citizens,” she said.
Ilocos Norte Rep. Rodolfo Fariñas, a
political rival of the Marcoses, initiated the inquiry.
Meanwhile, ABS party-list Rep. Eugene de Vera
said they could send uncooperative resource persons to the New Bilibid Prisons
(NBP).
De Vera cited a Supreme Court ruling issued
on July 1950 that allowed the detention of evasive resource persons at the NBP
for six months as well as other court decisions that upheld the contempt powers
of Congress.
“We have been following the law
from the beginning,“ he said.
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