--- title: "Philippines ‘flood control queen’ faces arrest over corruption scandal" type: "News" locale: "zh-HK" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/269059257.md" description: "An arrest warrant is being prepared for Cezarah Discaya, known as the \"queen of flood control,\" over corruption charges related to a government project. Her arrest is part of a larger scandal involving infrastructure contracts worth billions. Analysts doubt this will quell public anger or improve President Marcos' declining approval ratings. The charges highlight skepticism towards the Independent Commission for Infrastructure and call for accountability beyond public spectacle." datetime: "2025-12-09T09:00:53.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/269059257.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/269059257.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/269059257.md) --- > 支持的語言: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/269059257.md) | [English](https://longbridge.com/en/news/269059257.md) # Philippines ‘flood control queen’ faces arrest over corruption scandal An arrest warrant is being prepared for Cezarah “Sarah” Discaya, the businesswoman once dubbed the Philippines’ “queen of flood control”, after prosecutors accused her of pocketing millions from a government project that was paid for but never built.\\nDiscaya’s impending arrest – expected within days, according to President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr – would mark one of the most high-profile developments in the multibillion-peso flood control corruption scandal that has roiled Manila’s political establishment.\\nYet analysts say her detention, while symbolically potent, is unlikely to stem the rising tide of public anger with a system many Filipinos believe enabled corruption to flourish unchecked.\\nThe case against Discaya “can definitely be construed as just chasing the small fry”, Gino Trinidad, a political science instructor at the Ateneo de Manila University, told This Week in Asia. “The investigations have implicated other politicians, including those formerly allied with the president.”\\n\\nOn Friday, the Office of the Ombudsman filed corruption charges against Discaya, the president of her company St Timothy Construction and eight officials from the Department of Public Works and Highways over a 100-million-peso (US$1.7 million) unbuilt flood control project in Davao Occidental province.\\nThe charges are the second batch filed in a corruption investigation that has dominated headlines and fuelled weeks of street protests demanding greater accountability. Documents obtained by the Philippine Centre for Investigative Journalism showed that six Discaya family companies had collectively cornered 345 infrastructure contracts worth 25.2 billion pesos (US$430 million).\\n“We are expecting the warrant of arrest against Sarah Discaya to come out this week,” President Marcos said in a social media video on Tuesday. ‘It won’t take long before she is arrested.”\\nShortly after the charges were filed on Friday, Marcos announced that he had directed law enforcement to closely monitor the whereabouts of Discaya and her co-accused.\\n\\nDiscaya and her husband, Pacifico “Curlee” Discaya – called the “king and queen of flood control” by local media – oversaw nine construction companies involved in roadworks, building projects and flood mitigation. Pacifico has been in detention since September, after being accused of giving inconsistent testimony during a Senate inquiry.\\nTwo Discaya companies – Alpha & Omega General Contractor & Development and St Timothy Construction – rank among the government’s top 15 contractors that have collectively secured nearly 100 billion pesos in flood control projects since 2022.\\nSpectacle over substance\\nThe charges come amid deepening public scepticism towards the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI), an ad hoc body Marcos created in September to investigate corruption in public works.\\nOnly 37 per cent of Filipinos believe the ICI can conduct a fair inquiry, according to a survey last month by public opinion firm WR Numero, while nearly one-third openly distrust it.\\nFor the government to regain public trust, Trinidad argued that Marcos must “seriously show” that the ICI and the ombudsman’s office could act independently, as highlighted by the recent resignation of ICI commissioner Rogelio Singson, a former public works secretary.\\n\\n“A good start would be the filing of charges against politicians allegedly involved in the scandals, despite them being allies of the president,” he said.\\nArjan Aguirre, an assistant professor of political science at Ateneo, said the charges against Discaya were only the beginning of “what will likely be a long and painstaking process” of accountability that could falter unless supported by airtight evidence.\\nHe stressed the importance of building a robust, evidence-driven case – something many previous high-profile corruption cases in the Philippines had failed to achieve.\\n“Often, complainants prioritise the public spectacle – public shaming, press conferences, political mileage – over building a strong case that can survive judicial scrutiny,” Aguirre said.\\nOften, complainants prioritise the public spectacle … over building a strong case\\nArjan Aguirre, political scientist\\nAnalysts say that Discaya’s impending arrest is unlikely to reverse Marcos’ declining approval ratings, which have slipped to a new low of 21 per cent.\\nAguirre attributed the erosion of public confidence to a series of missteps, including the administration’s failure to rally support during the impeachment attempt against Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio and its ambivalent stance towards her powerful political bloc that “freely attacks the administration with little pushback”.\\nHe said Marcos’ public denunciations of corruption appeared “more like an attempt to salvage his declining popularity” than a sustained reform drive.\\n“The administration will need far more than sporadic arrests or announcements” to restore trust and rid itself of the perception that it was slow, hesitant and unwilling to go after allies, Aguirre said.\\n“Only when individuals with real political backing, or those close to influential families, are held accountable will the public begin to view the probe as credible.”\\n ## 相關資訊與研究 - [Lupin to Up Stake in Philippines Unit](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281487478.md) - [Philippines energy regulator says market suspension to remain until conditions are suitable for safe resumption of normal market](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/280564229.md) - [Philippine Airlines Chief Says Nation May Need to Ration Fuel](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/280453412.md) - [INWIT Calls 2026 Shareholders’ Meeting to Approve 2025 Accounts and Cancel Treasury Shares](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281176363.md) - [Siemens to Dissolve Digital Industries, Smart Infrastructure Divisions](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281116194.md)