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Philippine Senator Estrada Surrenders Over Graft Case

MANILA, June 1 (Reuters) – A Philippine ⁠senator ⁠who is the ⁠son of a former president surrendered ​to police on Monday after a court ordered ‌his arrest over a ‌charge that he received illicit payouts as ⁠part ⁠of an infrastructure scandal that sparked public protests ​last year.

The anti-graft court ordered the arrest of Senator Jose “Jinggoy” Estrada for plunder, a non-bailable offence under ​Philippine laws. The Office of the Ombudsman last ⁠week ⁠charged Estrada with violating ⁠anti-corruption ​laws for earning “kickbacks” amounting to 573 million pesos ($9.3 million).

“I ​will not ⁠seek Senate custody,” Estrada told reporters at the Senate, referring to the potential for him to seek refuge in the upper house ⁠instead of surrendering to police.

“I am ready to defend myself ⁠before the court and I will not hide behind the institution to evade the process,” he added.

Estrada has denied wrongdoing and said the charges were politically driven. He posted bail last week for a separate offence.

The corruption scandal, which has centred on ⁠dangerously flawed flood-control facilities across the Philippines, has shaken the graft-weary nation and slowed economic growth in recent quarters.

($1 = 61.7010 Philippine ​pesos)

(Reporting by Mikhail Flores and Nestor Corrales; ​Editing by John Mair)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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