CBCP apologizes for PCSO fund controversy
The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) on Monday apologized to the public after some of its members were embroiled in the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) fund controversy. In a pastoral statement read by its outgoing president Bishop Nereo Odchimar on Monday, the CBCP said the Church “has been deeply wounded by the controversies in the PCSO." "As shepherds struggling to love you like Jesus the Good Shepherd, we are sorry for the pain and sadness that these events have brought upon you," the group said after its 103rd plenary assembly held at the Pope Pius XII Catholic Center in Manila. The group also expressed “deep sorrow for the pain the recent events brought to the people." “We are saddened many of you, especially the youth and the poor—our basic ecclesial communities, have been confused because of the apparent inconsistency of our actions with our pastoral preaching," it added. Ready to face consequences The CBCP likewise reassured the public that the bishops who accepted luxury vehicles from the PCSO funds “are ready to accept the responsibility of their actions and to face the consequences." “If it would be proven unlawful, anomalous and unconstitutional, we assure you that their action was done without malice. Out of their sincere desire to help their people, they failed to consider the pitfalls to which these grants were possibly done," the statement read. The bishops’ group also vowed to reexamine the ways its members collaborate with government agencies to make sure “pastoral sensibilities are respected and the highest ethical standards are observed." Odchimar refused to answer questions from the media after reading the statement, saying that the bishops involved in the controversy will explain their sides on the issue once they attend the Senate probe on Wednesday. PCSO mess PCSO chairperson Margie Juico identified three Catholic Church officials who supposedly received luxury vehicles, including a Montero Sport worth P1.7 million, from PCSO funds in a Senate blue ribbon committee probe on Wednesday. One of these prelates, Butuan Bishop Juan De Dios Pueblos, even requested the vehicle from then-President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo for his 66th birthday. The bishop has admitted to receiving the car, but insisted that it was used to serve poor people in his area. Incoming CBCP spokesperson Monsignor Pedro Quitorio meanwhile said the prelates involved in the controversy only became “sacrificial lambs," since the issue on luxury vehicles only constitute a “small" part of the reported misuse of funds in the agency. - VVP/HS, GMA News