Not guilty plea filed for Philippines' Arroyo
Judge acts on ex-president's behalf after she refuses to enter plea on charges of misusing $8.8m in state lottery funds.
A Philippine court has entered a not-guilty plea for Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo, the former president, on charges she misused $8.8m in state
lottery funds in the third corruption case against her.
Arroyo, seated
in a wheelchair and wearing a neck brace at the court in Manila on
Monday, refused to enter a plea and prompted the judge to record a
not guilty on her behalf.
Nine other people, mostly former officials of the state lottery agency, are also charged in the case.
They allegedly conspired with Arroyo during her last years in office to divert public funds for her personal gain.
Arroyo is suffering from a neck ailment, and police brought her to
the anti-graft court from a military hospital. She was admitted days
before the court served the arrest warrant against her on plunder
charges early this month and ordered her confined under guard.
If found guilty, they could face a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
Arroyo's lawyers say the witnesses against her had no personal
knowledge of the transactions of the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes
Office.
Arroyo said that she was wrongly prosecuted for crimes she did not
commit, denying any involvement in the alleged misuse of funds of the
PCSO during her presidency. They have appealed to the supreme court to
have the case dismissed.
Arroyo finished her tumultuous nine-year term in 2010.
Since
then, she has been separately charged with vote fraud and in another
corruption case but posted bail. She had already spent eight months
under hospital arrest before she was discharged in June.
Arroyo has accused her successor, Benigno Aquino III, of pursuing a political vendetta.
Al Jazeera's Jamela Alindogan, reporting from outside the courts in
Manilla said: "Arroyo is seen as the most unpopular president in
current history, her successor Benigno Aquino III has vowed she faces
justice."
Aquino was overwhelmingly elected on a promise to rid the Philippines
of corruption and has vowed to prosecute Arroyo and her inner circle,
blaming them for stealing money for personal gain and for a culture of
impunity in which corrupt practices flourished.
The government
has already denied Arroyo's request to seek medical treatment abroad,
saying she may not return to face the charges.