A “benevolent dictator” is what the Philippines needs to finally end corruption in the government, Senate President Vicente Sotto III said yesterday.
The Senate chief aired this belief after Deputy Ombudsman Cyril Ramos said the other day that the country loses about P700 billion from the annual national budget due to corruption. Ramos in an anti-crime prevention summit said the amount equates to millions of poor Filipinos being deprived of access to housing and medical assistance as well as food.
Asked for his recommendation on how to limit, if not put an end to the prevailing problem, Sotto admitted that there might not be a quick fix for it. “I cannot think of an outright solution except to have a benevolent dictator. Remove everyone with a whiff of corruption,” Sotto said.
In the meantime, he said, measures for “moral regeneration of the entire bureaucracy” can at least address it.
Sen. Joel Villanueva said the passage of the Freedom of Information law could be a key to help stop corruption of government funds. “A significant reform that we can do would be to pass Freedom of Information law. This will improve public accountability,” Villanueva said.
The proposed People’s Freedom of Information Act failed to hurdle the Senate in the 17th Congress. Senate records showed it only went as far as the Committee on Public Information’s endorsement for plenary discussion in October 2016. It has not advanced since then. (Vanne Terrazola)