The Japan Times - Philippines 'ghost' flood projects leave residents stranded

EUR -
AED 4.293576
AFN 74.809943
ALL 96.783059
AMD 439.883898
AOA 1071.888963
ARS 1621.49183
AUD 1.657039
AWG 2.106957
AZN 1.984951
BAM 1.954393
BBD 2.352805
BDT 143.559872
BHD 0.441222
BIF 3471.657663
BMD 1.168908
BND 1.489183
BOB 8.071739
BRL 5.964585
BSD 1.168109
BTN 107.84427
BWP 15.672843
BYN 3.409643
BYR 22910.602761
BZD 2.349398
CAD 1.618593
CDF 2688.489004
CHF 0.922134
CLF 0.02673
CLP 1055.313547
CNY 7.983876
CNH 7.984129
COP 4266.77247
CRC 543.385481
CUC 1.168908
CUP 30.97607
CVE 111.776797
CZK 24.380157
DJF 208.022201
DKK 7.472131
DOP 70.865032
DZD 154.865085
EGP 62.242987
ERN 17.533625
ETB 184.100394
FJD 2.586736
FKP 0.882797
GBP 0.869808
GEL 3.132987
GGP 0.882797
GHS 12.869329
GIP 0.882797
GMD 85.917647
GNF 10260.106084
GTQ 8.936565
GYD 244.39461
HKD 9.154329
HNL 31.128255
HRK 7.529637
HTG 153.142521
HUF 376.180401
IDR 19881.669118
ILS 3.610009
IMP 0.882797
INR 108.025538
IQD 1531.269878
IRR 1538137.214317
ISK 143.799247
JEP 0.882797
JMD 183.887588
JOD 0.828717
JPY 185.094312
KES 151.257873
KGS 102.221156
KHR 4690.265528
KMF 499.123817
KPW 1052.004495
KRW 1729.171856
KWD 0.361274
KYD 0.973445
KZT 558.501117
LAK 25669.226643
LBP 104675.738545
LKR 368.21486
LRD 215.370881
LSL 19.731538
LTL 3.451482
LVL 0.707061
LYD 7.463419
MAD 10.954132
MDL 20.115397
MGA 4869.081717
MKD 61.617252
MMK 2454.714938
MNT 4174.852416
MOP 9.42443
MRU 46.861951
MUR 54.961756
MVR 18.059559
MWK 2029.817618
MXN 20.395228
MYR 4.647584
MZN 74.752209
NAD 19.719119
NGN 1615.162233
NIO 42.922357
NOK 11.167925
NPR 172.553583
NZD 2.003462
OMR 0.44943
PAB 1.168099
PEN 4.004647
PGK 5.045593
PHP 69.588641
PKR 326.125093
PLN 4.248923
PYG 7577.543638
QAR 4.260644
RON 5.09375
RSD 117.329235
RUB 91.827588
RWF 1706.606124
SAR 4.386814
SBD 9.408056
SCR 17.692661
SDG 702.513495
SEK 10.850919
SGD 1.489108
SLE 28.757291
SOS 668.034222
SRD 43.897178
STD 24194.041879
STN 25.131529
SVC 10.22164
SYP 129.22206
SZL 19.731775
THB 37.437822
TJS 11.103182
TMT 4.102868
TND 3.412082
TRY 52.013612
TTD 7.922956
TWD 37.100563
TZS 3021.627642
UAH 50.622831
UGX 4321.684738
USD 1.168908
UYU 47.455828
UZS 14289.904273
VES 553.439742
VND 30780.277919
VUV 139.592125
WST 3.238943
XAF 655.448583
XAG 0.015558
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.159033
XCG 2.105321
XDR 0.817039
XOF 769.141609
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.842648
ZAR 19.16957
ZMK 10521.577977
ZMW 22.340766
ZWL 376.387997
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • AZN

    3.9500

    204.76

    +1.93%

  • NGG

    1.8850

    89.405

    +2.11%

  • GSK

    1.3800

    57.22

    +2.41%

  • RYCEF

    1.2500

    17

    +7.35%

  • RELX

    0.7800

    34.14

    +2.28%

  • BTI

    0.7100

    59.51

    +1.19%

  • RIO

    3.9400

    98.6

    +4%

  • CMSD

    0.2650

    22.555

    +1.17%

  • CMSC

    0.2000

    22.34

    +0.9%

  • BCC

    3.9600

    78.67

    +5.03%

  • JRI

    0.1280

    12.818

    +1%

  • BCE

    0.2690

    24.099

    +1.12%

  • VOD

    0.4050

    15.715

    +2.58%

  • BP

    -1.7850

    45.455

    -3.93%

Philippines 'ghost' flood projects leave residents stranded
Philippines 'ghost' flood projects leave residents stranded / Photo: Jam STA ROSA - AFP

Philippines 'ghost' flood projects leave residents stranded

The dike meant to protect the Philippine town cost taxpayers nearly $2 million, but when a minister visited this month he found little more than dirt hastily dumped along the river's banks.

Text size:

Residents of Plaridel, north of the capital Manila, could have told him what happened -- contractors had only just begun a project that government officials marked "completed" more than a year earlier.

The dike is one of more than 100 flood-control projects at the centre of one of the country's biggest corruption scandals in decades.

It has already sparked leadership changes in both houses of Congress, but the real impact is among communities left without protection, many of them strung along rivers in the Bulacan region.

"We carry our children to school when the water is high," Leo Francisco, a construction worker and father of two, told AFP in the village of Bulusan.

"Inside our house, the water is up to our thighs," the 35-year-old said.

"On the road... sometimes knee-high, sometimes ankle-high. These are ordinary days -- not typhoons."

A flood control project intended to remedy the issue, like so many identified in recent weeks, has never been finished.

"The dike is incomplete, so the water washes in. Even in the built-up sections, the water still gets through from underneath because the pilings are shallow," Francisco said.

In nearby Plaridel, AFP saw a pair of masons bathing themselves near a half-built dike with exposed metal rods.

The taxpayer money paid for the dike "was clearly stolen", Public Works Minister Vince Dizon said after visiting the site.

He called it an obvious "ghost project" and said he had fired the district's chief engineer and two others.

- 'The dike is worthless' -

Anger has been growing over so-called ghost infrastructure since President Ferdinand Marcos put the issue centre-stage in a state of the union address after weeks of deadly flooding.

Greenpeace estimates some $17.6 billion in funds may have been bilked from climate-related projects since 2023, much of it meant for communities that are slowly sinking due to groundwater over-extraction and rising sea levels.

Marcos himself has visited sites caught up in the scandal and slammed the poor quality of the dike in the village of Frances.

"You can crush the cement mix used with your bare hands. They short-changed the cement," he said, pledging to hold those responsible to account.

Residents said they were pleased to see Marcos but were "waiting for him to deliver".

"The dike is worthless. It's full of holes," said Nelia de los Reyes Bernal, a health worker.

Schoolchildren now wear rubber boots to class after a spike in cases of the bacterial disease leptospirosis and athlete's foot, she said.

"Construction began last year but it has not been completed, supposedly because funds ran out," the 51-year-old added.

"There's no storm and yet the water is rising... We can no longer use the downstairs rooms of our houses. We've moved our kitchens to the second floors."

- 'Both guilty' -

In Plaridel, 81-year-old Elizabeth Abanilla said she had not followed hearings on the scandal because she doesn't own a television, but felt contractors were not the only ones to blame.

"It's the fault of those who gave them money," she said.

"They should not have handed it over before the job is completed. Both of them are guilty."

The Philippines has a long history of scandals involving public funds, and high-ranking politicians have typically escaped serious jail time even if convicted of graft.

Thousands are expected to turn out for a protest in the capital on Sunday demanding justice -- including prison for those found guilty of involvement in the bogus infrastructure projects.

But for construction worker Francisco, who says the floods are killing his livelihood, that kind of outcome is barely worth dreaming about.

"For me, what's important is that they return the money," he said.

"It's up to God what is to be done with them."

H.Hayashi--JT