Olongapo SubicBay BatangGapo Newscenter

Friday, March 14, 2008

PASG head faces arrest

Refusal to attend House hearings on the group’s mandates and activities earns ire of lawmakers

A member of the House of Representatives on Wednesday gave a final warning to Presidential Anti-Smuggling Group (PASG) Chief Antonio Villar Jr. that he will be arrested if he fails to attend the chamber’s hearings next month.

In a press conference, Zambales Rep. Ma. Milagros Magsaysay said that if Villar continues to snub House hearings on the antismug­gling group, they will cite him for contempt and push for his arrest.

“We have no other recourse [so] we’ll have him arrested,” Magsaysay said.

But Magsaysay said that they are now receiving feelers that some friends of Villar are convincing him to attend the next hearings of the House so he will not be arrested.

She said Villar should not throw his guns against the members of the House through the media. Rather, Villar should air his grievances or views before Congress.

“No matter how hard the question is, he should be made to answer them as head of PASG,” she added.

The Zambales lawmaker stressed that there are different committees now handling the investigation of the antismuggling group, namely the Oversight Committee, the Ways and Means Committee, the Committee on Good Government and the Committee on the Freeport Zones.

The hearings are to determine, among others, if the PASG and the Bureau of Customs have duplicating functions.

It was Cebu Rep. Antonio Cuenco who filed the motion to have Villar subpoenaed while Paranaque Rep. Roilo Golez raised the question as to how the antismuggling body spent its P50-million fund.

Villar earned the ire of some lawmakers, particularly Magsaysay, who accused him of having businesses inside freeport zones.

PASG insists it earned P6.8 billion

Villar continues to boast of the achievement of the task force he heads, insisting that they were able to generate P6.8 billion in revenues from antismuggling operations last year.

The antismuggling group head said he has the documents to prove the PASG generated P6.8 billion in revenues. Villar even questioned the claim of the Customs bureau that his task force only generated P13 million.

“I don’t know where did they get their figures . . . P13-million is only equivalent to one smuggled luxury vehicle,” Villar told reporters during the Usapang Daungan sa Danarra Hote news forum on Wednesday.

Based on the accomplishment reports submitted by the PASG to Malacañang, the task force was able to generate P743 million in taxes and duties paid from June to December 2007. The amount’s bulk was from the payment made by PTT Philippine Corp. and Tri-Solid.

PASG also collected P9.5 million from seized shipments in the Port of Manila and the Manila International Container Port, and another P4.2 million from warehouses.

According to Villar, if the petroleum companies earlier implicated for smuggling will be charged the maximum penalty, at least P5 billion in revenues can be generated. Apparently, that amount is included in the P6.8-billion revenues, which Villar claims his task force already generated. By Jomar Canlas and Jefferson Antiporda, Manila Times

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