Baguio village heads put stop to ‘jueteng’ front
BAGUIO CITY—Village leaders in the city got their acts together and put a stop to a community bingo project that they said was being used to conceal illegal gambling operations.
Officials of the Association of Barangay Councils (ABC) here passed a resolution on Nov. 4 to end the “Bingo sa Barangay” program that started in 2008 as a fund-raising campaign by village chiefs for community projects.
Councilor Joel Alangsab, ABC head, said the resolution had divided ABC.
The Nov. 4 resolution nullifies a previous one issued on April 7 authorizing the bingo project.
ABC stopped the program in 2010 on instructions of Mayor Mauricio Domogan, who was implicated that year by a Catholic bishop as among government officials coddling illegal gambling operators. Domogan had denied the charge during a Senate hearing.
Last year, a village leader was sued for operating bingo in Malcolm Square in defiance of Domogan’s directive. A local court, however, dismissed the case, saying a 2006 court ruling had legitimized the game.
Article continues after this advertisementAlangsab said he was not part of the April 7 assembly that led to a resolution allowing bingo. He said members of the ABC board met previously to recall that resolution “but it was not put in writing.”
Article continues after this advertisementABC leaders said the Nov. 4 resolution meant that the April 7 resolution allowing bingo “can no longer be used by any office, entity or individual to advance the Bingo sa Barangay activity.”
The government also recently ordered a crackdown on jai alai games and closed betting outlets nationwide. Police sources, however, said illegal jai alai operations continue. Vincent Cabreza, Inquirer Northern Luzon