Pubdate: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 Source: Hong Kong Standard (China) Copyright: 2000 Hong Kong Standard Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.hkstandard.com/ Bookmark: additional articles on Colombia are available at http://www.mapinc.org/latin.htm GRAFT SCANDAL OPENS WAY FOR REFORM QUEST BOGOTA: Colombian President Andres Pastrana announced late on Thursday that he intended to hold a referendum on reforming the nation's legislature, which has been hit with allegations of corruption in recent weeks. Mr Pastrana said his administration would present a draft law in Congress next week, the prerequisite for holding a referendum that could take place this year. The scandal concerned the embezzlement of US$2.7 million (HK$21 million) from an emergency fund. Funds were siphoned off in late December, when legislators were on holiday, through 60 false service contracts. Among among other items was a US$50,000-purchase of toilet paper. Over the last week, the president of the House of Representatives, Armando Pomarico, and its two vice-presidents, Octavio Carmona and Luis Guerra, all resigned in connection with the scandal. The referendum would be used to decide whether corrupt officials should be blocked from returning to elected office or any public service, Mr Pastrana said. It would also gauge Colombian opinion on forming a ``smaller and more specialised'' congress and on whether legislators' votes should be public ``so that they have to respond to voters for their actions''. In Washington, the House of Representatives approved a US$13 billion measure including funds for Colombia as well as for the United States Defence Department, Colombia and recovery from Hurricane Floyd after refusing to threaten European allies with a pullout of US peacekeepers from Kosovo. The bill included US$1.7 billion to help Colombia's hard-pressed government battle drug traffickers and the rebels who were said to be protecting them. Back in Colombia, a car-bomb exploded early on Thursday in the town of Cachipay, some 40 kilometres from Bogota, killing two people and wounding several others. The number of wounded was still being assessed, police said. While no one took responsibility for the bomb, officials pointed out that elements of the left-wing Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia operated in the region. - Agencies - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder