Malacañang: NBI 'filing charges' vs LGU officials not complying with guidelines
>> Tuesday, April 7, 2020
By Lian Buan
The National Bureau of
Investigation (NBI) is "investigating and filing charges" against
local executives who do follow the national guidelines on how to implement the
Enhanced Community Quarantine or the effective lockdown of Luzon to contain the
spread of the coronavirus.
"The
NBI is investigating and filing charges against local government officials who
willfully disregard, contravene, or violate national guidelines on community
quarantine set by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging
Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID)," Malacañang said in its report to Congress as part of the oversight
feature of the Bayanihan Act that gave President Rodrigo Duterte's special
powers.
Section
4(g) of the law gave Duterte the special power to "ensure that all Local
Government Units (LGUs) are acting within the letter and spirit of all the
rules, regulations and directives issued by the National Government."
Asked
for more details, Justice Undersecretary Markk Perete deferred to the NBI. The
NBI is under the Department of Justice.
"Will
check on that," NBI Deputy Director Ferdinand Lavin told Rappler when
asked.
Rappler
asked for the nature of the cases, and the ranks of the LGU officials investigated
or charged, and whether there were prior complaints before the investigations
were launched.
The
DOJ earlier said that without a complaint, it cannot ask the NBI to
investigate Senator Koko Pimentel for breach of quarantine protocol.
Coronavirus-positive Pimentel went to the Makati Medical Center although he was
under strict self-quarantine. The hospital has slammed this move as reckless
and irresponsible.
Duterte
likes to say in his speeches that local officials who would not follow national
government guidelines will be charged of dereliction of duty.
Duterte
ordered LGUs to "stand down" in a speech made immediately
after Malacañang rejected Pasig City Mayor Vico Sotto’s appeal to allow tricycles to operate in his city to
ferry frontliners.
Lavin
said the NBI is actively pursuing cases and investigations of profiteering and
overpricing, especially when it comes to medical supplies.
"NBI is
continuously investigating and we have filed numerous cases against profiteers,
hoarders of essential goods and prime commodities," said Lavin.
(READ: DOJ allows release of seized medical supplies to hospitals)
"We
also continue to investigate those involved in the proliferation of fake news
concerning COVID and the related issues," Lavin added.
Malacañang
is required under the Bayanihan Act to submit a progress report to Congress
every Monday until the special powers are in effect. The law is effective for three
months, unless extended by Congress. – Rappler.com
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