Philippine anti-graft chief and Duterte critic retires

Philippine anti-graft chief and Duterte critic retires
Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales angered President Rodrigo Duterte when she criticized his pronouncements on killings last year. (AFP)
Updated 26 July 2018
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Philippine anti-graft chief and Duterte critic retires

Philippine anti-graft chief and Duterte critic retires
  • Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, 77, finishes her seven-year term
  • Morales was honored with the Ramon Magsaysay Award — often described as Asia’s Nobel Prize — in 2016

MANLA: The Philippines’ top anti-corruption prosecutor, one of the few remaining critics of President Rodrigo Duterte in government, retired on Thursday, appealing for “strong institutions” over strong leaders.
Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, 77, finishes her seven-year term during which she earned Duterte’s ire for criticizing his brutal drug war and for her office’s investigation into his alleged secret bank accounts.
Duterte, who accused Morales of “selective justice” and conspiring with opposition figures to oust him, last year threatened to have the retired Supreme Court justice impeached while launching tirades against her.
But a defiant Morales dismissed Duterte’s allegations as “fake news,” saying that his threats never intimidated her from doing her job.
“I know I am right in my own work so why should I be scared,” Morales said days before her retirement.
“As long as we have strong institutions, we don’t need strong people to run the government,” she added, emphasizing the importance of independent bodies like her office.
Duterte, 73, has launched an unprecedented crackdown on drugs that has left thousands dead, sparking criticism from rights groups who say he may be orchestrating a crime against humanity.
The Filipino leader has lashed out at critics, including Senator Leila de Lima — jailed over drug charges she says were fabricated — and former Supreme Court Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno who was ousted in May.
Opposition leaders have said these moves — along with attempts to discredit the country’s main rights agency — are part of Duterte’s scorched-earth tactics to silence critics and weaken democratic institutions.
Morales, who was appointed by Duterte’s predecessor, Benigno Aquino, in 2011 to head the anti-graft watchdog, angered the president when she criticized his pronouncements on killings last year.
Their spat intensified last January when Morales defied Duterte’s order to suspend her deputy for allegedly leaking his bank records, saying the president’s directive violated the constitution.
Her agency was then investigating allegations that Duterte failed to disclose 211 million pesos ($3.9 million) in secret bank accounts when he was a presidential candidate.
The ombudsman said in February it had terminated the probe after the central bank’s Anti-Money Laundering Council refused to cooperate.
“Ombudsman Morales is a significant voice, a strong woman and a person with integrity,” Gladstone Cuarteros, assistant professor of political science at the De La Salle University in Manila, said.
“With her retirement, another critical voice is softened but not silenced.”
Morales was honored with the Ramon Magsaysay Award — often described as Asia’s Nobel Prize — in 2016 for her diligence in prosecuting high-ranking corrupt officials.
The leading candidate to replace her is a Supreme Court justice appointed by Duterte and who has voted to uphold his major policies.