Sen. Richard Gordon said he was “a bit disappointed” that former President Benigno Aquino III and former Budget Secretary Florencio Abad were not among those indicted for the controversial Dengvaxia immunization program.
“I think [the indictment] is lacking. Malacañang should take a second look,” said Gordon, chair of the Senate blue ribbon committee.
“I hope the secretary of justice is listening and he’ll take a second look because, as far as I’m concerned, they did not look at the procurement aspect,” he said.
Gordon made the remark after prosecutors filed charges of reckless imprudence resulting in homicide against former Health Secretary Janette Garin and 19 other officials for the P3.5-billion program.
Late announcement
A year after the inoculation of thousands of schoolchildren, Sanofi announced in late 2017 that Dengvaxia may have side effects on those who had not contracted dengue and many believed this was the cause of death of eight children.
But Gordon, a lawyer, said he feared the charges might not stand because there had been no conclusive finding that Dengvaxia caused the deaths of the eight children.
The senator argued that prosecutors would have a stronger case had they filed charges of illegal procurement and violation of the antigraft law.
“Definitely, the procurement was wrong and the circumstances behind the procurement were big trouble,” he said, citing findings of his committee.
The probe concluded that the Aquino administration expedited the purchase of the vaccine after President Aquino met with Sanofi officials in Paris in December 2015.
No politics
Presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo did not respond to Gordon’s claims but said he hoped “that true justice and peace will be attained.”
“This is the only way we can deliver proper closure to the victims of the vaccination,” he said.
“Now that the legal process has taken its course, we wish everyone would finally stop politicizing the issue in the court of public opinion,” Panelo added.
But Justice Undersecretary Mark Perete, Department of Justice spokesperson, insisted that the charges reflected “the high degree of accountability and caution” demanded of those who implement public health programs.
Aside from Garin, others charged were Department of Health officials Vicente Belizario Jr., Kenneth Hartigan-Go, Gerardo Bayugo, Lyndon Lee Suy, Irma Asuncion, Julius Lecciones, Maria Joyce Ducusin, Rosalind Vianzon and Mario Baquilod; Maria Lourdes Santiago and Melody Zamudio of the Food and Drug Administration; and Socorro Lupisan and Maria Rosario Capeding of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine.
Also facing the same charges were Sanofi Pasteur Inc. executives Carlito Realuyo, Stanislas Camart, Jean Louis Grunwald, Jean Francois Vacherand, Conchita Santos and Jazel Ann Calvo.—WITH REPORTS FROM JEROME ANING AND CHRISTINE AVENDAÑO