Philippines arrests first suspects in multi-billion-dollar flood control graft

Protesters march with placards during an anti-corruption rally in Quezon City, Philippines on November 16, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 November 2025
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Philippines arrests first suspects in multi-billion-dollar flood control graft

  • Police have detained 7 people, and several more are being sought
  • Suspects include a former lawmaker and government public works engineers

MANILA: Philippine authorities have detained seven people in connection with a multi-billion-dollar graft case involving flood control projects, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said on Monday, as police seek another nine others named in arrest warrants.

The Philippines — one of the world’s most typhoon-vulnerable countries — has been gripped by the corruption scandal for the past few months, as investigations have uncovered massive irregularities in flood prevention and mitigation projects.

During a senate hearing in September, Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said that economic losses may have averaged $2.1 billion a year from 2023 to 2025, mainly due to ghost projects.

As several powerful political figures have been found to be implicated, Marcos has established an independent commission led by a former supreme court justice and vowed to hold all wrongdoers accountable, regardless of their status.

After a two-month probe, the first group of more than a dozen suspects, including former lawmaker Zaldy Co and several government public works engineers, was indicted by a special anti-corruption court. Marcos had earlier promised that they would be in jail by Christmas.

“Of the 16 individuals named in three warrants, authorities have arrested seven, two are expected to surrender, and seven remain at large, including Zaldy Co,” he said in a video message on Monday.

“To all the remaining accused, my advice to you is: Surrender. Don’t wait to be chased down.”

Public Works and Highways Secretary Vince Dizon told reporters in Manila to expect many more arrests, as the first group of suspects was linked only to $4.8 million flood control projects in Oriental Mindoro province.

“We are now at the point where those responsible will be held accountable. This is just the start,” he said.

“Many more cases are coming. Many more will be charged. Many more will be arrested.”

Of the 545 billion pesos ($9.54 billion) allocated since 2022, thousands of initiatives were found to be substandard, lacking proper documentation, or nonexistent.


Single ‘digital nation-state’ is not a far-fetched notion, Melania Trump tells UN Security Council

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Single ‘digital nation-state’ is not a far-fetched notion, Melania Trump tells UN Security Council

  • US first lady argues that AI and global connectivity could reshape education, help reduce conflict and empower children worldwide
  • Societies rooted in knowledge foster innovation, tolerance and moral reasoning, while those shaped by ignorance risk disorder and conflict, she says

NEW YORK CITY: The idea of a single digital nation-state is “not so far-fetched,” US First Lady Melania Trump told the UN Security Council on Monday.
She argued that artificial intelligence and global connectivity could reshape education, help reduce conflict and empower children worldwide.
The US holds the rotating presidency of the council for March, and as she presided over its first meeting of the month Trump said technology was erasing borders and creating what she described as a shared intellectual future.
“Perhaps this idea isn’t so far-fetched,” she said, pointing to the rise of digital currencies, blockchain-based payment systems, and AI-driven databases she argued were already transforming media and financial markets.
Trump thanked the US’s fellow council members — the UK, France, Russia, China, Greece, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Denmark, Panama, Liberia, Somalia, Colombia, Pakistan, Bahrain and Latvia — for their role in efforts to maintain international security.
The responsibility for preventing conflict “must be applied evenly and should never be carried out lightly,” she said. Her remarks focused in particular on the role of education as the foundation of peace and stability.
“A nation that makes learning sacred protects its books, its language, its science and its mathematics. It protects its future,” Trump said, arguing that societies rooted in knowledge foster innovation, tolerance and moral reasoning, while those shaped by ignorance risk disorder and conflict.
Education is widely recognized as a fundamental human right, she added, yet many children and young adults around the world remain barred from the chance to attend high school or university. The losses arising from this squandered potential, from potential medical breakthroughs to possible advances in food security and technology, are borne not only by the individual countries involved but by humanity as a whole, she said.
Trump called for the expansion of global access to technology to help bridge the digital divide, noting that about 6 billion people, 70 percent of the world’s population, now use mobile devices and the internet.
“If our nations band together, we can close the technological divide,” she said, describing a world in which a farmer on a remote Greek island, a student in Somalia and a resident of New York City can all tap into centuries of accumulated human knowledge.
AI was democratizing access to information once confined to university libraries, she added, and redefining participation in the global “economy of ideas.”
She continued: “Conflict arises from ignorance. Knowledge creates understanding, replacing fear with peace and unity.”
Trump called on council members to safeguard learning and promote access to higher education, urging them to “build a future generation of leaders who embrace peace through education.”
She added: “The path to peace depends on us taking responsibility to empower our children through education and technology.”