The messenger sings
August 1, 2005 @ 5:15
pm · Posted by Sheila Coronel
Filed under In the News
IN a hurriedly called press conference
this morning, a Malacañang political operative made
what are potentially the most damaging allegations of President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s involvement in electoral
fraud since the “Hello Garci” tapes were made
public in June.
Michaelangelo “Louie” Zuce,
a presidential staff officer assigned from February 2001
to July 2004 to the Office of the Presidential Liaison Officer
for Political Affairs headed by Lakas stalwart Joey Rufino,
also accused the Office of the President of directly bribing
and otherwise getting the cooperation of elections officials
in Mindanao to ensure Mrs. Arroyo’s victory.
The burly Zuce, a nephew by affinity of
the disgraced elections commissioner Virgilio Garcillano,
whose wiretapped conversations set off the gravest crisis
of the Arroyo presidency, also attested to his role in the
fraud, which included conniving with election officials
in Mindanao to make sure Mrs. Arroyo led in the count. (Click
here for Zuce’s sworn statement.)
Zuce, who said he came out publicly because
his life was in danger, apparently also acted as his uncle’s
trusted messenger, runner and companion. He said that his
tasks, dating to 18 to 20 months before the May 2004 elections,
included raising funds for, organizing meetings with, and
distributing payoffs to, Mindanao election officials.
Even more damaging, Zuce said that some
of the payoffs made to Mindanao-based provincial election
supervisors and regional directors of the Commission on
Elections came from Pampanga-based jueteng lord Rodolfo
“Bong” Pineda and his wife Lilia. He also confirmed
that 27 regional directors and provincial election supervisors
from Mindanao had a secret dinner with Mrs. Arroyo at her
La Vista, Quezon City home in January 2004.
During that dinner, which Garcilliano and
then Isabela Gov. Faustino Dy Jr. allegedly also attended,
the election officials were introduced to the President
by Mrs. Pineda, Zuce said. After the introductions, Mrs.
Arroyo supposedly made a short speech asking for the officials’
support in the elections.
The President then left and proceeded to
another engagement. “As we were leaving, Mrs. Pineda
gave RD (regional director) Johnny Icaro white envelopes
for all of us,” Zuce’s affidavit said. “When
we opened them in the vehicles, we found that each envelope
contained P30,000.”
In impromptu remarks made in the launching
of a breastfeeding program this morning, Mrs. Arroyo denied
any involvement in election fraud and accused her opponents
of “waging a black propaganda against me, saying I
am this and I am that, especially those who are angry, those
who are in need of money and whose testimonies are for sale."
Later, in an interview with ABC-5, she
said, “Ang masasabi ko walang nagbibigay ng suhol
sa harap ko (All I can say is no one gives out bribes in
front of me).”
Indeed, Zuce said the President was no
longer there when the payoffs were made. What his affidavit
alleges is her “knowledge and direct participation”
in the rigging of the elections as attested to by:
<!--[if !supportLists]-->Her canny
appointment of Garcilliano, after he had proven that he
had a personal network of key Comelec people in Mindanao
who would do his bidding;
<!--[if !supportLists]--><!--[endif]-->Her personal
knowledge of the attempts to influence the election officials
through meetings and “consultations,” as attested
to in the approval by the Office of the President of these
consultations;
<!--[if !supportLists]-->Her approval of the release
of funds for such consultations with key Mindanao Comelec
personnel;
<!--[if !supportLists]-->Her personal appeal for support,
as a candidate, from officials of a supposedly nonpartisan
election body; and
<!--[if !supportLists]-->Her tacit approval of the
role the Pineda couple allegedly played in getting the cooperation
of the Comelec bureaucrats.
Presidential Political Adviser Gabriel Claudio called the
charges “incredible and fantastic,” saying that
it didn’t make sense that a minor functionary like
Zuce would be included in meetings to which his boss, Rufino,
was not. Rufino, he said, was ill with cancer and could
not answer the allegations directly. (Both Claudio and Undersecretary
for Political Affairs Raymundo Roquero, however, confirm
that Zuce was employed in the Office of the President, first
under Rufino, and from September 2004 to last May, under
Roquero.)
While the account of the dinner at the
presidential home may be the most sensational of Zuce’s
allegations, his sworn statement also reveals a deliberate
and organized effort by the Office of the President to influence
the outcome of 2004.
Zuce’s narration begins in October
2002, when he introduced his uncle, then Comelec Region
10 director, to Rufino, who subsequently endorsed Garcillano’s
appointment to the President. Apparently to ensure his nomination
as commissioner, Garcillano proposed a “nationwide
consultation” with Comelec officials, which was a
thinly disguised attempt to get these officials’ support
for the president.
Garcillano, according to Zuce, was “used
by PGMA during the elections in exchange for his ambition
to become a Comelec commissioner.”
Garcillano began by asking for a budget
of P2.4 million, but only P1 million was initially approved
by the President and this was used for three “consultations”
with Mindanao elections officials, some of them coinciding
with the Comelec sports fests that Garcilliano was famous
for organizing.
During the consultations held in Mindanao,
these election officials “expressed their willingness
to support PGMA’s candidacy depending on what Director
Garcillano wanted them to do,” Zuce’s affidavit
said. “The Mindanao election officials present also
said that Atty. Garcillano should be appointed Commissioner
so that he would be behind them and be able to answer for
them in their efforts of supporting PGMA.”
In all three consultations, Garcillano
distributed P20,000 each for regional directors and provincial
election supervisors, P15,000 for city election officers,
P10,000 for municipal election officers and P5,000 for selected
staff of Comelec Mindanao, said Zuce. Garcillano, Zuce added,
made the point to say that the cash was “being given
by PGMA in appreciation of their expression of support of
her candidacy.”
A second round of payoffs was made to Mindanao
regional directors and provincial elections supervisors
at a meeting organized by Rufino’s office at the Grand
Boulevard Hotel on Roxas Boulevard in Manila in late 2003.
During that meeting, Zuce said that he personally distributed
to the Comelec officials P17,000 each in white envelopes.
A third meeting with Mindanao Comelec officials,
again at the Grand Boulevard, was held in January 2004,
where three of Rufino’s staff distributed P25,000
each to the attendees.
A month later, Garcillano was named Comelec
commissioner, with strong endorsements from Rufino and a
manifesto signed by Comelec officials in Mindanao. Zuce
said that Garcillano told him that Mrs. Pineda “was
asked by higher-ups to help in the confirmation of Comm.
Garcillano before the Commission on Appointments.”
Once ensconced in the Comelec, Garcillano
began planning a “big special operation” in
Mindanao under his supervision, said Zuce.
To get the ball rolling, the Comelec commissioner
planned a junket in Manila for 27 Mindanao regional directors
and provincial election supervisors. Zuce said that his
uncle asked him to get Rufino to fund trip. Garcilliano
also allegedly brought Zuce to the Pinedas’ Greenhills,
San Juan home to plan such an operation, which would include
the assignment of people and the vehicles that would be
needed.
Also at that meeting, Bong Pineda, according
to Zuce, gave him P150,000 to cover the costs of the Manila
junket, including a three-day stay at the Rothman Hotel
in Malate. It was also then that the dinner with Mrs. Arroyo
was announced.
For the election operations proper Zuce
said he was asked to:
<!--[if !supportLists]--> Prepare
the budget for the Mindanao operations, on the instructions
of Garcillano and Rufino
<!--[endif]-->Coordinate the delivery of vehicles
needed for the Mindanao operations (four Pajeros and two
jeeps courtesy of Pagcor chief Ephraim Genuino)
<!--[if !supportLists]--> Monitor and coordinate with
Comelec officials and employees to ensure Mrs. Arroyo’s
victory. “In places where PGMA would be losing, I
was to talk to them to find ways to reduce her loss or to
add votes in her bailiwicks,” said Zuce’s affidavit.
His area of operations included the Misamis provinces, Lanao
provinces, Marawi City, Cotabato City, Maguindanao, Sultan
Kudarat, North Cotabato, South Cotabato and Sarangani. He
was also coordinating, through mobile phone, with operatives
in the Zamboanga provinces, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Basilan and
Zamboanga City.
Among the more sensational contents of Zuce’s affidavit
is the revelation that Garcillano was given P12 million
for the Mindanao operations, an amount the commissioner
said was not sufficient. Zuce said he was brought by his
uncle to a condominium at Macapagal Blvd. in Pasay and shown
a closet filled with P1,000-bills wrapped in plastic.