Letter of Instruction No. 14 (Marcos)

Letter of Instruction No. 14 (1972)
by Ferdinand Marcos
4303217Letter of Instruction No. 141972Ferdinand Marcos

MALACAÑANG
RESIDENCE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES
MANILA

September 29, 1972

LETTER OF INSTRUCTION No. 14

To: All Heads of Departments, Other Agencies and Offices of the Government

In order to facilitate the reorganization of the Government and to speed up the current intensified effort to weed out undesirable government officials and employes, you are hereby directed to require all officials and employes in your department, office or agency who are facing charges or are notoriously undesirable on the ground of dishonesty, incompetence or other kinds of misconduct defined in the Civil Service law or rules to tender their resignations immediately or else face charges and immediate suspension, the suspension to last until the promulgation by proper authority of the decision on the charges.

These officials and employes shall tender their resignations within one week after the publication of this Order in your department (which should be done immediately), and immediately after such period proper charges shall be filed against those who refuse to tender their resignations, and these officials and employes shall be suspended immediately.

The heads of the departments, offices and other agencies of the government shall determine if the officials and employes, who voluntarily resign in obedience to this Order, shall enjoy any of the benefits granted them by law or granted by law to retiring government officials and employes.

The heads of the departments, offices or other agencies of the Government shall report to me within 15 days from the date of issue of this Order the names of the officials end employees who have tendered their resignations or have been charged and suspended in accordance with this Order.

Strict compliance with this Letter of Instructions is desired.

Done in the City of Manila this 29th day of September, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and seventy-two.

(Sgd.) Ferdinand E. Marcos
President
Republic of the Philippines

This work is in the public domain because it is a work of the Philippine government (see Republic Act No. 8293 Sec. 176).

All official Philippine texts of a legislative, administrative, or judicial nature, or any official translation thereof, are ineligible for copyright.

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