Philippine Supreme Court decision on PCGG
Senator Edgardo J. Angara today expressed his support with the Supreme Court's decision to put Presidential Commission on Good Governance (PCGG) Chair Camilo Sabio before the tribunal, saying that the immunity PCGG has been invoking is expressly repealed at the time of the creation of the 1987 Constitution.
"I've always thought that the Supreme Court will never allow an anachronistic agency such as the PCGG to immune itself from all legislative proceedings and investigations," Angara said.
"It's for the same reason that the legality of Executive Order No. 1 had expired at the time we came up with the 1987 Constitution," he continued.
Angara said that the PCGG's immunity defense is obsolete, and belongs to an era when old governments had agencies and institutions that were beyond the reach of the law and were not accountable to the people.
Angara also said that former president Corazon Aquino issued Executive Order No. 1 way back during the revolutionary government.
"When the 1987 Constitution was passed, the provision in E.O.1 which legally grants PCGG immunity from legislative proceedings was impliedly--if not expressly--repealed because we brought back accountability of public officials. No one is beyond reach of the law, including the president herself," Angara explained.
"Their (PCGG's) position that they are above the law and that they are legally granted immunity from any legislative proceeding resembles eighteenth century politics. That is really unacceptable and the PCGG wrongly interpreted it. At present, PCGG does not have any legal basis at all," Angara said.