“Let
us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair; the rest is in the
hands of God.” George Washington
By
Alex P. Vidal
ILOILO
Governor Arthur “Art” Defensor Sr. described Engr. Gracianito Lucero, chief of
the Provincial Engineer’s Office (PEO) as “an honest man.”
“Honest
ini sia nga tawo. Dugay ko na ini sia kilala. I trust this man, but not some of
his men. Damu gid man dira kawatan kag gina pa imbistigar naton ina (He
is an honest man. I have known him for a long time. I trust this man but not
some of his men who are really thieves. And that’s why I am investigating
them),” Defensor told me in front of Lucero inside the governor’s office on
Friday morning.
The
governor was referring to the “pa-ihi” or fuel pilferage scam
allegedly committed by some corrupt PEO employees.
Defensor
has tasked Provincial Administrator Raul Banas to leave no stone unturned in
the investigation.
“We
are now doing the investigation,” Dr. Banas told me.
Executive
Assistant Ruel Von Superio confirmed that “there is an ongoing investigation.”
Broadcaster
Ibrahim Calanao, meanwhile, has owned up to the “pa-ihi” expose.
“Ako
sina una nag expose, Lex. Ulihi na lang ina ang write-up mo. Dugay ko na ina
gina hambal sa radyo. Ang iban nga truck didto gapa amolya sa patyo sang
Janiuay ho. Didto nila ginapasuyupan gasoline ang tangke. (I was the one who
first made that expose. Your write-up came later. I have been announcing this
anomaly on my radio program. Some of the trucks were brought to a cemetery in
Janiuay where the fuel pilferage was done),” Calanao said.
Lucero,
by the way, told me his wife, who is a doctor, owns the “expensive” vehicle
referred to by a source in my previous column.
-o0o-
My
visit in the governor’s office on Friday morning actually coincided only while
Defensor was waiting for Lucero to arrive.
They
had an important meeting regarding the “pa-ihi” imbroglio.
Defensor
showed strong eagerness to rid the PEO with corrupt elements.
I
went there together with former North Cotabato Gov. Manny Pinol, who asked me
to accompany him and his brother, Mlang, Cotabato Mayor Joselito, in his second
visit to Defensor in one week.
Pinol, who was there two
days earlier, was head of Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte’s advance party in
the courtesy call to Defensor.
I
was not part of Duterte’s activities in Iloilo.
I
came only because of Pinol, my long-time colleague in sports writing (we first
met in 1991 during the House committee on youth and sports hearing on alleged
sports anomalies when Pinol was still writing for Tempo, sister publication of
Manila Bulletin).
Pinol,
who dabbles as boxing manager, and I last met in Las Vegas three years ago when
Manny Pacquiao lost by KO5 against Juan Manuel Marquez.
“This
is your first visit in my office since I became governor (for the second
time),” Defensor told me.
-o0o-
WE
support the call of the Animal Welfare Association (AWA) of Iloilo headed by
Anna Marie Rivera Wharton to halt the use of carbon monoxide poisoning via the
“tambutso” or car exhaust in exterminating stray dogs and cats.
City
Veterinarian Tomas Forteza has confirmed the practice in a radio interview,
according to Wharton in her letter dated February 23, 2015.
Wharton’s
expose surprised Iloilo City Mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog who admitted “he has no
idea of a humane method of killing stray animals that is lawfully acceptable.”
Mabilog
referred the matter to Dr. Forteza and asked him to “research and check on the
methods that may not be considered afoul with the law.”
Republic
Act. No. 8485 (Animal Welfare Act of 1998) mandates that “the killing of
animals shall be done through humane procedure at all times.”
Humane
procedure, under the law, “shall mean the use of the scientific method
available as may be determined and approved by the committee (Committee on
Animal Welfare).”
The
law does not, however, specify these scientific methods, according to a recent
article written by Wenceslao Mateo.
“But
is killing of stray animals by carbon monoxide suffocation lawfully acceptable
and a scientific method?” asked the article.
The
article added: “A news report abroad reveals that carbon monoxide killing of
stray animals, especially those in shelters, is outlawed in the US states of
California, Tennessee, Maryland and Rhode Island.
“Also,
both the American Veterinary Medical Association and the Humane Society of the
United States reject killing by carbon monoxide.
“They
observed that carbon monoxide poisoning causes animals to suffer horribly while
they are slowly suffocated, and often scream and go into convulsions while
struggling for air.”
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