Plan to sell Camp Aguinaldo welcomed,
hit
By Delon Porcalla and James Mananghaya
The Philippine Star 09/26/2006
House Majority Leader Prospero Nograles
welcomed yesterday the proposal to sell portions of Camp
Aguinaldo in Quezon City.
"That’s a very good idea. It
will ease traffic with new access roads. It will raise funds
for modernization, it will develop the commercial area and
will move military camps outside of the highly congested
areas therein," Nograles said of the Armed Forces’
general headquarters.
The lawmaker, however, stressed that the
process should be transparent.
"We must define and make the process
clean, transparent and subject to COA (Commission on Audit),
Congress and public scrutiny. All processes must be done
by legal means and we must monitor closely the sale, especially
the proceeds where it will be used and spent," Nograles
said.
But as expected, Parañaque Rep.
Roilo Golez, a member of the opposition, slammed the idea.
"Why should the AFP (Armed Forces
of the Philippines) sell its jewels in order to modernize?
The other agencies are not asked to do that," Golez
said.
"The AFP modernization budget should
come from the General Appropriations Act, especially now
with the additional VAT (value-added tax) revenue of over
P100 billion," he added.
Golez, a former national security adviser
of President Arroyo, said the general headquarters of the
Department of National Defense (DND) "should not be
transferred far from Malacañang for better communication
and coordination."
"In the US, the Pentagon is only a
few minutes away from the White House," Golez cited.
Defense Secretary Avelino Cruz bared last
week plans to sell or lease on a long-term basis some military
camps, including Camp Aguinaldo, in a bid to raise much
needed funds for the modernization program of the AFP.
Cruz, however, noted that they have yet
to receive proposals from private concessions for the sale
or long-term lease of military camps.
"It would push through only if there
is a good proposal," the defense chief said during
the Manila Overseas Press Club forum at the Intercontinental
Hotel in Makati City Thursday night.
Cruz said he has asked Congress to authorize
him to sell or lease the military’s real estate properties
as required under the National Defense Act.
He said that if plans to sell or lease
Camp Aguinaldo push through, the AFP’s major services
namely, the Army, Air Force and Navy as well as the DND
would have a common headquarters. This could be in Lipa
City in Batangas, Lucena City in Quezon or Clark Field in
Pampanga.
AFP chief Gen. Hermogenes Esperon said
an estimated P50 million could be raised by selling or leasing
portions of the 178-hectare Camp Aguinaldo.
Esperon said that aside from Camp Aguinaldo,
any camp could also be sold or leased such as Fort Magsaysay
in Palayan City, Nueva Ecija — home of the Army’s
7th Infantry Division, the elite Special Operations Command
and the Training and Doctrines Command.
Fort Magsaysay is said to be a "candidate"
for conversion into an agricultural field.
Golez, meanwhile, raised concerns over
Camp Aguinaldo, which lies along the EDSA highway, being
transformed into a commercial hub.
"Converting Camp Aguinaldo into a
commercial center would worsen the EDSA traffic. Right now,
there are only a few offices and vehicles situated there.
Making it commercial would dramatically increase its population
and vehicle density," he said in a statement.
"With its trees, Camp Aguinaldo is
one of the lungs of Metro Manila to help ease the serious
air pollution along EDSA. Most of those trees would be chopped
down to give way to ‘progress,’" he added.
"And finally, do we really need another
potentially graft-ridden mega land deal similar to what
happened in the Amari land deal?" Golez asked, referring
to the multimillion-peso scandal involving Thai firm Amari,
which reclaimed lands along the Manila Bay area.
The Philippine Defense Reform (PDR) program
aims to allot P10 billion annually for the modernization
of the AFP for the purchase of new and modern equipment
for the military’s anti-terror and counter insurgency
campaigns.
Among the real estate properties of the
military that have been sold to private buyers through the
Bases Conversion and Development Authority are Fort Bonifacio
in Taguig City, Camp John Hay in Baguio City, Subic naval
base in Zambales and Clark Field in Pampanga, from which
the government was able to earn billions of pesos.
Cruz said that by directly putting the
earnings in a trust fund at the Development Bank the Philippines
and the Landbank of the Philippines, the earnings from the
sale or lease of military real estate would surely go to
the modernization program.