Pacific Island Times July 2018 Vol 3 No. 6 | Page 4
FROM THE PUBLISHER’S DESK
Whistleblowers
“We are only faced with the absurd when we take both our need
for answers and the world’s silence together.
—Albert Camus
F
This is why many choose to seal their lips and look the
other way. As long as no none blows the whistle, the cul-
prits get away with their criminal mischiefs. “Account-
ability and transparency have been an expectation rather
than a rule in government,” Doris Flores-Brooks said
when she announced her resignation as public auditor to
run for Congress.
The suppression ought to stop, according to Sen. Frank
Aguon, who introduced Bill 301-34 to address “the
tidal wave of corruption allegations and questionable
decisions that have been made by leadership within the
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Associate Editor
Bruce Lloyd
[email protected]
Associate Editor (Pacific Note/Palau)
[email protected]
Palau Bureau Chief
Bernadette Carreon
[email protected]
Contributing Writers
Vince Akimoto
Raquel Bagnol
Richard Brooks
Zaldy Dandan
Jayne Flores
Joyce McClure
Denise Mesa Mendiola
Diana Mendoza
Johanna Salinas
Gaafar Uherbelau
Aline Yamashita
Hospital officials deny the allegations, but one can’t
tune out the two GMH administrators’ familiar narra-
tives, which are consistent with the classic ostracism of
those who dare to speak out. This pattern goes all the
way back to the controversial days of the very vocal Dr.
George Macris, whose medical license and privileges
were suspended by the hospital board in 2010.
Such state of affairs is not exclusive to
GMH. There were cabinet officials in the
past who had stepped down from their posts
for reasons one could only speculate. One
government attorney was fired from her job
after being suspected of leaking information
about a questionable tax settlement. The tax
deal was sealed — unchecked. The lawyer is jobless. It
is disturbing when the act of leaking gets more attention
and treated as an offense more than the actual offense.
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
[email protected]
Ongerung Kambes Kesolei
irst, Ted Lewis. The former Guam Memorial
Hospital administrator was forced to resign in
January 2016, amid credit card abuse investigation
and sexual harassment complaint, which he believes had
been fabricated by a core group of administrators who
wanted him out of GMH. This was the consequence of
him not shutting up. Then recently there was Dr. Kozue
Shimabokuro, assistant administrator of medical ser-
vices, who has been stripped off her administrative tasks
and pushed to clinician work after repeatedly raising
questions about the fiscal mismanagement at GMH.
“The graveyard is full of fired GMH physi-
cians that have been terminated