THE Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) called for a wider probe into corruption in flood control projects, stressing that accountability should not stop with contractors but must also include legislators, engineers, auditors, and political patrons.

In a pastoral letter signed by CBCP president Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David and released late Saturday, the bishops said public outrage should be “inclusive.”
“In recent hearings, the rebuke ‘Mahiya naman kayo!’ (Have some shame!) was directed only at contractors. But shame must be inclusive: Legislators, district engineers, government auditors, and political patrons also share in the plunder,” David said. “Equally guilty are private contractors and financiers who collude in this racket.”, This news data comes from:http://oqadk.erlvyiwan.com
The CBCP likewise questioned the credibility of the investigating bodies.
“How credible are these inquiries when the very institutions conducting them are themselves implicated? Who inserted these national projects into the budget as pork, often at the expense of education, health and social programs?” the letter read.
The bishops emphasized that true justice requires restitution of stolen funds to public coffers, not just punishment.
“Stolen wealth must be returned to the public coffers from which it was taken. Many of those implicated will not be impoverished by such reparation, yet the nation remains poor if the funds are not restored,” the letter said.
The CBCP backed calls for an independent committee to investigate anomalies in flood control projects and budget insertions, urging Filipinos — especially the youth — to use their digital platforms for vigilance, truth-telling and demand for reforms.
“This challenge is not only for government, business or contractors. It is for all of us, including the Church. We too have often failed, whether by silence, by tolerating corruption in our own ranks, or by not setting a consistent example of integrity. That is why this call begins with us,” it said.
Bishops demand broad probe into flood project corruption
- 'No way' US troops can invade Venezuela, says Maduro
- 102-year-old becomes oldest person to summit Mount Fuji
- Marcos signs laws declaring holidays across PH
- DMW, pharmaceutical firm sign agreement to boost access to medicines, hospital services for OFWs, families
- Anutin elected as Thailand's new prime minister
- 'I have no resentment,' says Torre after dismissal as PNP chief
- Zelenskyy meets European leaders on Ukraine security guarantees
- Pasig City continues barangay aid for efficiency, ends patronage politics
- US approves .5M in assistance to Nigeria to help address hunger
- LPA trough, 'habagat' to bring rains in parts of Luzon, including Metro Manila