Chiz asks COA to
audit ‘Yolanda’ donations
By Office of Senator Chiz
Escudero
November 14, 2013
PASAY CITY – All donations
to the government are deemed public funds and must be properly
accounted for and audited to ease worries of possible misuse,
according to Senator Chiz Escudero, chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee.
Escudero wrote to Commission on Audit Chairman Grace Pulido Tan,
seeking a full report on the donations here and abroad extended to the
government to ensure proper compliance with existing rules and
regulations ahead of the plenary debates on the 2014 spending plan
next week.
“Such audit and the respective agency’s compliance with rules and
regulations will help all of us in quelling any anxiety the public may
have on the possibility of these aid falling into the wrong hands or
not reaching or benefiting the calamity victims,” Escudero said.
At the same time, Escudero asked Budget Secretary Florencio Abad to
provide the finance committee with the guidelines and procedures on
the acceptance and utilization of donations from donor countries and
international organizations for victims of natural disasters.
“We’d like to retrace our steps on how donee agencies comply with the
reportorial requirements on acceptance and utilization of donations.
GAA mandates that they do. Fund drives are also governed by
presidential decrees and administrative orders. These must be adhered
to,” he said.
Escudero added: “Proper accounting and utilization of donations is the
best that a country like ours battered by natural disasters can do to
match the goodwill of individuals, organizations and foreign countries
who come to our aid in trying times.”
The senator noted that the deluge of aid pouring into the country for
victims of super typhoon “Yolanda” that has displaced millions of
people and killed more than 3,000 others in most parts of the Visayas
and similar assistance coming in for victims of other calamities,
should be properly utilized, disbursed and accounted for.
“All donations shall be used only for the purpose specified by the
donor.
Anyone who gambles or takes advantage of money and aid intended to
help save lives is a betrayal and must be considered a heinous crime.
Every single centavo will decide whether a person may survive or die,”
Escudero stressed.