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Opinion

EDITORIAL - Lost wealth

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The nation has just commemorated the 19th death anniversary of Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr., and will soon mark the 20th year since martial law was imposed by his tormentor, despot Ferdinand Marcos. The peaceful revolt that capped the mass protests triggered by Aquino’s death, which led to the ouster of Marcos, was staged more than 16 years ago. Yet the nation is no closer to identifying the mastermind of Aquino’s murder. No one has been punished for the abuses perpetrated during those years of dictatorship. And the nation is no closer to recovering the bulk of the wealth believed stolen by the Marcoses during their 20 years in power.

The ill-gotten wealth is believed to run into billions of dollars. But first the government has to find out where the wealth has been stashed. Then it has to prove its ownership claim. In both aspects progress has been disappointingly slow. About $670 million deposited in Swiss banks has been transferred to the Philippine National Bank from Switzerland. But the assets remain in escrow pending a final ruling on its rightful ownership.

The Presidential Commission on Good Government also identified bank accounts in Switzerland belonging to three Marcos associates: former energy minister Geronimo Velasco, his nephew Alfredo de Borja and secretary Carmencita Clavecilla. The three accounts contain a total of $16,997,048 — more than P886 million at current exchange rates. But even with the assets identified, the government can’t seem to safeguard its claim.

Reports said Velasco, De Borja and Clavecilla emptied the accounts shortly after the Zurich district attorney lifted the freeze order on the assets last March. The prescription period for the forfeiture proceedings had reportedly lapsed.

PCGG officials blamed the lifting of the freeze order on the dismissal by the Ombudsman of criminal cases filed against the three account holders. The PCGG has given assurance that the Swiss move will not affect the $670 million held in escrow. That’s cold comfort to the nation. If the government can’t hang on even to assets that have already been identified, how much of the Marcos wealth is now irretrievably out of the nation’s reach?

ALFREDO

AQUINO

BENIGNO AQUINO JR.

BORJA

CARMENCITA CLAVECILLA

DE BORJA AND CLAVECILLA

FERDINAND MARCOS

GERONIMO VELASCO

GOOD GOVERNMENT

PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK

PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION

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