Manila
(29 March) --- Vice President
Noli de Castro has denied reports that
he received an islet as a gift from Celso
de los Angeles, the owner of the collapsed
Legacy Group of Companies.
"Kung
sila'y may ebidensya na sa akin yun ibibigay
ko sa kanila. Sa inyo na at magkulong
kayo diyan sa isla na yan," De Castro
said in an interview with GMA News' Mark
Salazar that was aired on "24 Oras."
(If
they can show evidence, I would give that
supposed islet to them. They can have
it and isolate themselves there.)
De
Castro said detractors could be spreading
that talk to destroy him, especially now
that he is topping in presidential race
surveys.
According
to the report, a text message has been
circulating claiming that De Castro owns
the Calamgaman Island in Leyte province.
At
the same time, a self-proclaimed private
island specialist, Cheyenne Morrison,
also wrote in his blog that the island
was owned by the Vice President.
"One
of the prettiest little coral islands
I have ever seen, located in Leyte Gulf
in the Philippines... You can walk around
the whole island in less than 30 minutes.
The island is inhabited only by guards,
and it is owned by Noli De Castro, the
Vice President of the Philippines,"
said Morrison in his blog entry, which
has been deleted.
An
angry De Castro challenged Morrison to
present evidence that could substantiate
his claims.
"Who
is this man? If he has the evidence he
better come out. If he has nothing, he
is a coward. I challenge you," De
Castro said.
To
further prove that the report was a demolition
job, De Castro wrote the Presidential
Anti-Graft Commission (PAGC) to investigate
the matter.
But
in an email to GMA News, Morrison apologized
to De Castro, even as he explained that
he does not have any malicious intent
when he wrote the article.
"...there
were numerous sources on the Net stating
that he owned the island. This is the
source I based my report upon" Morrison
explained. "There was no malicious
intent whatsoever. If the Vice President
found it malicious, I am sorry. I was
merely writing about island," he
added.
Earlier,
at the height of the investigation on
Legacy mess, De Castro was implicated
as having special ties with De los Angeles.
He was also accused of receiving money
from the latter for his candidacy in the
2007 elections. De Castro has denied the
accusations.