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Senator
Juan Ponce Enrile delivers a statement at a courthouse in
Manila, on May 29,
2012
|
The
90-year-old former defence secretary, senate president, and martial-law
enforcer of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos is accused of taking nearly $4
million in kickbacks from illegally diverted state funds.
"The
first order of arrest is issued against Senator Juan Ponce Enrile," court
clerk Dennis Pulma told reporters, reading from a resolution of a special
anti-graft tribunal that has also ordered four other suspects detained,
including an aide to the politician.
Enrile's
spokeswoman Lizette Nepomuceno told AFP he was consulting his lawyers.
Enrile is
the third member of the 24-seat Filipino senate to be ordered arrested by the
court in a case that has staggered the nation, in which dozens of lawmakers,
their staff and other officials are accused of embezzling millions of dollars
alloted for development projects.
Senators
Jose Estrada -- son of a former president -- and Ramon Revilla, also an action
film star, were arrested last month.
The trio
were among dozens indicted earlier this year.
Enrile was
accused of pocketing 172 million pesos ($3.95 million) in public funds that
were allegedly diverted to ghost projects.
He has been
charged with one count of "plunder", punishable by life imprisonment.
The case
erupted last year when businesswoman Janet Napoles was accused of colluding
with lawmakers to embezzle an estimated 10 billion pesos from legislators'
"pork barrel" funds, or money for their pet projects.
Napoles
initially denied any wrongdoing, then in a failed effort to turn state witness
gave prosecutors a list implicating more than 100 lawmakers. She has also been
charged with plunder.
Two of
those on the list are now members of President Benigno Aquino's cabinet, but
they deny the charges and say Napoles is spreading false information to deflect
blame.
Aquino came
to power in a landslide election victory in 2010, pledging to sweep away
massive corruption that he blames for the Philippines' stubbornly high levels
of poverty.
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