THE Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) ordered mining companies to suspend their operations following heavy siltation and water discoloration at the Mapagba and Pinatatagan rivers in Banaybanay.
“I received the report yesterday (Jan. 17) confirming that the river has turned red due to extraction activities. I have instructed our regional office to immediately address the incident and to suspend the operations of the mining company(ies),” Secretary Roy A. Cimatu said in a statement.
The investigation, led by the DENR and its Davao regional office, attributed the extraction activity to Riverbend Consolidated Mining Corp. and Arc Nickel Resources, Inc.
Residents reported the changes observed along the rivers on Jan. 14. Heavy rains are believed to have caused the mines’ silt ponds to overflow, according to the DENR.
On Jan. 17, the miners were served a cease-and-desist order and notice of violation.
Separately, the Mindanao Development Authority’s new chair called for a review of mining operating practices.
“While the minerals industry continues to be cited as among the country’s economic drivers, some industry practices need thorough review and operations require close monitoring,” Secretary Maria Belen S. Acosta said in a statement.
Ms. Acosta said keeping mining operations in check was vital “to prevent pollution and contamination, distortion of the ecological balance and damage to water systems.”
“Economic development and environmental protection should go hand in hand. They should not cancel each other out,” she added.
DENR Regional Director Bagani A. Evasco said further assessment is ongoing to determine possible penalties, operational adjustments, and the extent of environmental damage to the area.
“Our legal team is also evaluating further action with regard to any of the violations,” Mr. Evasco said. “Further evaluation is being conducted as to the extent of environmental impact.”
The local government of Banaybanay said it will be conducting regular monitoring of the area as the mining firm implements measures to address the siltation. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson
THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said certification of ceramic tile inventories produced or imported before new quality standards came into force must undergo a recertification process.
In a statement on Thursday, the DTI noted that Memorandum Circular (MC) 22-01 issued by its Bureau of Philippine Standards took effect on Jan. 11.
The DTI circular provided supplemental guidelines for Department Administrative Order (DAO) 20-09:2020 which required the product certification of ceramic tiles.
According to the DTI, MC 22-01 sets guidelines for the certification of ceramic tiles covered by DAO 20-09:2020, which were manufactured or imported to the Philippines before Oct. 12 and held in inventory by importers, distributors, or retailers.
“DTI issued MC 22-01 to address concerns of both manufacturers and importers on the proper disposition of the remaining inventories of ceramic tiles that are already released and distributed in the Philippine market prior to the implementation of DAO 20-09:2020,” Trade Undersecretary Ruth B. Castelo said.
“With the newly issued supplemental guidelines, we hope that they maximize the opportunity to have their existing inventories of ceramic tiles certified before the market monitoring and enforcement commences next year. With this MC, we also addressed importers’ concerns on product testing for shipments of ceramic tiles intended for single dwelling units or project supply contracts,” she added.
For locally manufactured products, the DTI said manufacturers should apply for Philippine Standard certification for the remaining inventories of ceramic tiles distributed in the market before the effectivity of DAO 20-09-2020.
Importers, on the other hand, need to apply for import commodity clearances on a “per product and per manufacturer basis.”
“In addition, MC 22-01 exempts shipments of ceramic tiles intended for single dwelling units or project supply contracts from product sampling and testing provided that these importations do not exceed 1,800 square meters,” DTI said.
The DTI said market monitoring and enforcement will begin on Jan. 1, 2023 to provide ample time for local manufacturers and importers to comply with the certification requirements.
Holders of non-compliant products by that date will be issued notices of violation and be advised to withdraw these products from the market after a first offense. The next notice of violation will trigger a regular adjudication process. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave
HEALTH workers conduct house-to-house antigen testing on some residents of West Rembo, Makati. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS
By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter
CORONAVIRUS infections in Manila, the capital and nearby cities were on a downtrend, according to researchers from the country’s premier university.
“The reproduction number in the National Capital Region (NCR) decreased to 1.79, while the weekly growth rate became negative for the first time since Dec. 24 last year,” OCTA Research Group fellow Fredegusto P. David said in a report posted on Twitter on Thursday.
He said the last time Metro Manila had fewer than 10,000 cases in one day was on Jan. 5, when the surge was still accelerating.
“The pattern is very similar to South Africa’s experience of a rapid surge followed by a dramatic decrease in infections,” he added.
“While this is encouraging news, it must be emphasized that NCR remains at critical risk as the average daily attack rate and positivity rate are still above critical levels,” Mr. David said.
The Philippines reported 31,173 coronavirus infections on Thursday, bringing the total to 3.32 million.
The death toll rose to 53,153 after 110 more patients died, while recoveries increased by 26,298 to 3 million, the Department of Health (DoH) said in a bulletin.
It said 43.3% of 73,989 samples on Jan. 18 tested positive for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), way above the 5% threshold set by the World Health Organization (WHO).
There were 275,364 active cases, 8,424 of which did not show symptoms, 262,168 were mild, 2,979 were moderate, 1,488 severe and 305 were critical.
DoH said 95% of the latest cases occurred from Jan. 7 to 20. The top regions with new cases in the past two weeks were Metro Manila with 8,883, Calabarzon with 6,471 and Central Luzon with 2,783 infections.
It added that 61% of deaths occurred in January, 3% in December and 7% in November.
The agency said 132 duplicates had been removed from the tally, 87 of which were reclassified as recoveries and one was tagged as a death, while 59 recoveries were relisted as deaths. Five laboratories failed to submit data on Jan. 18.
The Health department said 50% of intensive care unit beds in the country had been used, while the rate for Metro Manila was 51%.
The government aims to vaccinate 77 million people by the end of this quarter after a fresh surge in infections spurred by the heavily mutated Omicron variant.
The Philippines has fully vaccinated 56.44 million people as of Jan. 19, while 59.44 million have received their first dose, data from the Health department showed. About 5.61 million booster shots have been injected as of Wednesday.
Health Undersecretary Myrna C. Cabotaje said the country had yet to finalize the guidelines for the vaccination of children aged 5 to 11 years old, which is expected to begin next month.
The Health Technology Assessment Council will issue recommendations as authorities continue to consult experts, she told a televised news briefing.
“We will look at the operational guidelines,” she said. “We might designate specific sites for children five to 11 years old.”
Ms. Cabotaje said the Philippine Pediatric Society and Pediatric Infectious Disease Society of the Philippines have endorsed the vaccination of kids aged 5 to 11.
She said the government might also allow children aged 4 and below to get vaccinated.
“Maybe by the second quarter, around April or May, if there will be a vaccine for 0 to 4-year-old children, and if there are studies and recommendations already,” she said.
THE CAMP of presidential aspirant Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. on Thursday endorsed 10 senatorial candidates for the May elections.
In a statement, Marcos spokesman Victor D. Rodriguez said the Senate slate includes Antique Rep. Lorna Regina “Loren” B. Legarda, former Defense Secretary Gilberto Eduardo Gerardo C. Teodoro Jr., reelection Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian, former Quezon City Mayor Herbert Constantine M. Bautista, former presidential spokesman Herminio L. Roque, Jr. and former Public Works Secretary Mark A. Villar.
Also endorsed was Jose Pimentel “Jinggoy” P. Ejercito Estrada, who is facing plunder and graft charges involving his pork barrel funds. The former senator was released on bail in 2017 after spending three years in jail.
Mr. Marcos and running mate Sara Duterte-Carpio also backed lawyer Lorenzo G. Gadon, who has been suspended by the Supreme Court for swearing at a journalist, and Party-list Rep. Rodante D. Marcoleta, one of the lawmakers who voted against the franchise renewal of ABS-CBN Corp. in 2020.
The tandem also endorsed reelection Senator Juan Miguel F. Zubiri, who is also part of the senatorial slate of opposition standard bearer Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo.
The list “represents a mixture of seasoned and proven political personalities who have excelled in their respective endeavors,” Mr. Rodriguez said.
Meanwhile, Ms. Robredo said her kind of politics is “so different from what Mr. Marcos is offering.” “My kind of politics is transformative,” she told the ABS-CBN News Channel. “I don’t want patronage politics.”
“There’s so much at stake, but what’s at stake is not just my winning or losing this election but what is the direction that we would want our government to take in the next six years,” she added.
Mr. Gadon, who is making his third bid for the Senate, is a Marcos supporter. The Supreme Court suspended him this month over his foul-mouthed remarks against a local journalist in a video that went viral.
Mr. Gadon has questioned his suspension, which he said was issued without due process.
Mr. Marcoleta is a deputy speaker at the House of Representatives. He is known for cutting the budget of the Commission on Human Rights to P1,000 in 2017.
The Marcos-Carpio team said Mr. Zubiri would boost their position in Mindanao, which is a bailiwick of the Zubiri clan. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza
GOVERNMENT prosecutors have endorsed the indictment of nine policemen for the killing of Calbayog City’s mayor and his aides in March.
In a statement, the Department of Justice (DoJ) said the cops face four counts of murder for the ambush of Calbayog City Mayor Ronaldo P. Aquino, two of his aides and a civilian who got caught in the shooting.
They also face one count of frustrated murder after one of the victims survived the attack. The cases will be filed at a Calbayog City regional trial court.
A panel of prosecutors issued the resolution on Dec. 15 that was released on Wednesday.
“The defenses of denial, alibi and self-defense interposed by the respondent police personnel cannot be given weight in light of the positive assertions of the witnesses,” the Justice department said in the statement.
It also cited pieces of evidence submitted by the National Bureau of Investigation.
Mr. Aquino became mayor of Calbayog in Samar province after Mayor Reynaldo S. Uy was assassinated in 2011. He was the vice mayor at that time. He served as mayor from 2011 until his death last year. —John Victor D. Ordoñez
THE SENATE minority bloc has called for an assessment of the government’s response to typhoon Odette, internationally known as Rai, to determine policy and funding needs in the continued recovery efforts.
Senate Resolution 976, filed Monday, directs the Senate finance committee to “conduct a thorough evaluation of government response including gaps and structural inefficiencies, and identify the needs for rehabilitation, recovery, and reconstruction, including the corresponding budgetary and policy requirements.”
It was signed by Minority Leader Franklin M. Drilon and Senators Ana Theresia “Risa” N. Hontiveros-Baraquel, Leila M. de Lima, and Francis “Kiko” N. Pangilinan.
“Many families remain without a decent roof over their heads, groping in the dark, with scarce food and clean water. We must not forget that heavy task lies ahead to help Odette victims rise,” said Mr. Pangilinan in a statement on Thursday.
Odette, tagged by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs as the second deadliest disaster to hit the globe in 2021,
struck central and southern parts of the Philippines last month.
It affected over 2.34 million families and left damage to infrastructure and agriculture worth P17.2 billion and almost P16 billion, respectively.
Under the resolution, the assessment of government response and relief efforts should be done with the goal of protecting the people and improving the existing National Disaster Risk Reduction Framework.
“These (typhoons) have catastrophic economic, environmental, and social impacts. Typhoon Odette and previous natural disasters have revealed the vulnerabilities and problems in the present framework, in government policies, as well as public spending for disaster response. Government must address these to be prepared for future shocks and disasters,” the authors wrote in the resolution.
JAPAN AID Meanwhile, the Japanese government has exchanged notes verbale with representatives of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) for an aid program for Odette survivors, its embassy in Manila announced Thursday.
IOM will receive $4.2 million to fund shelter repair kits and emergency medical equipment, among other aid initiatives.
“This project partnership of the IOM with the Catholic Relief Services and CARE Philippines will indirectly benefit an estimated total of 64,681 individuals,” the Japanese Embassy said in a statement.
The project is part of the $13 million or about P663-million Emergency Grant Aid that Japan committed on Jan. 14 to provide to the Philippines. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan
THE TRANSPORTATION department’s maritime sector said more measures are being implemented to address the congestion at the Matnog-Allen route, a major passage connecting Luzon in the north to the Visayas in central Philippines.
In a Jan. 19 joint statement, the Philippine Ports Authority (PPA), Maritime Industry Authority (Marina), and the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) said that with vessels servicing the route resuming full commercial operations on Jan. 18, “additional measures are expected to dramatically lessen the inconvenience” now being experienced by stake holders and port users.”
A transport agency reported on Monday that nearly 800 vehicles and about 5,000 people were stranded along the highway leading to the Matnog Port in Sorsogon due to damaged ramps for roll-on, roll-off and fastcraft vessels.
“The PPA shall work to immediately complete all the necessary repairs on office facilities damaged by typhoon Odette at the Port of Matnog, in order to encourage additional frequency of vessel calls from existing, and other vessel operators looking to service the route,” the maritime agencies said.
They also said that Marina will strictly enforce an on-time turnaround of trips for vessels plying the route for better scheduling and predictability.
For its part, the PCG is expected to take over the management of queueing of vehicles leading towards the Port of Matnog.
Meanwhile, Samar Rep. Edgar Mary S. Sarmiento, House transportation committee chair, said he wrote a letter to President Rodrigo R. Duterte to seek assistance in finding a solution to the recurring problem.
He said that Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade assured him that the government would address the issue of congestion and had put in place measures to stop port corruption.
“The House Committee on Transportation received several complaints regarding the recurring issue of congestion and corruption in the Port of Matnog in Sorsogon,” Mr. Sarmiento said. — Arjay L. Balinbin
MEMBERS of the Makabayan bloc in the House of Representatives filed a resolution to investigate the takeover of Benguet Electric Cooperative (BENECO) through an allegedly “anomalous appointment” of its general manager by the National Electrification Administration (NEA).
House Representatives Carlos Isagani T. Zarate, Ferdinand R. Gaite, and Eufemia C. Cullamat filed House Resolution 2457 on Wednesday directing the committees on energy and cooperatives development to jointly probe the issue.
BENECO’s board of directors elected Melchor S. Licoben as general manager after the April 2020 retirement of the late Gerardo P. Versoza.
However, NEA, which supervises electric cooperatives, also appointed Ana Maria Paz Rafael as BENECO’s general manager for scoring highest in the interview.
Ms. Rafael took over on Oct. 18, escorted by around 50 heavily-armed members of the police, which led to a two-day closure of the BENECO office.
NEA has asserted that its appointment of Ms. Rafael was based on Memorandum 2017-035, which contains revised policies on the selection of electric cooperative general managers.
On the other hand, BENECO legal counsel Delmar O. Cariño said in November that NEA’s intervention violated its own rules of general manager recruitment under NEA Memoranda 2017-035 and 2018-004.
“The act of NEA ignored the power of the BENECO board of directors to choose the GM,” Mr. Cariño said. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan
THE HEAD of the national penitentiary’s maximum security facility and the commander of guards have been dismissed from their posts, the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) announced Thursday.
In a statement, the agency said BuCor Director General Gerald Q. Banta has ordered the relief of Arnold J. Guzman as acting superintendent of the New
Bilibid Prison’s maximum security compound and Commander of the Guards Israel Basi.
The two have been temporarily placed under the Directorate for Administration of BuCor while the investigation of the Monday morning escape incident is ongoing.
BuCor appointed Roy Villasi as new superintendent and Reynaldo Tuguinay as guard commander.
Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra said in a Viber message that a full report on the incident has yet to be released.
Four inmates escaped from the national penitentiary Monday morning.
Two of the escapees were killed in firefights with police and BuCor officers.
Still at large are Chris Candas Ablas and Drakilou Yosores Falcon, both convicted of robbery with homicide. — John Victor D. Ordoñez
SECRETARY Bernie F. Cruz of the Department of Agrarian Reform is the latest Cabinet official to test positive for coronavirus amid a fresh surge that is largely within the capital region and surrounding areas.
“I am very thankful that I remain asymptomatic. I am in quarantine now and following the established health protocols to protect everyone,” Mr. Cruz said in a media release Thursday.
In a memorandum released by the department, Mr. Cruz said his test came back positive on Monday before attending a scheduled land distribution ceremony in Victoria, Oriental Mindoro.
He said persons he was in contact with prior to and on the day of his RT-PCR test are “all well and all [tested] negative of the virus.”
He said he will continue working remotely. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson
INDIVIDUALS at Ilaya, Divisoria show their vaccination cards following a surprise inspection by Manila’s Task Force Malasakit on Jan. 12. The inspection was made following the approval of a new city ordinance prohibiting unvaccinated individuals from going outside of their homes. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS
With the new wave of the Omicron COVID-19 variant and the subsequent upgrades in alert levels and their impact on mobility and business activities, many think tanks and research groups are going back to the drawing board to recast their growth forecasts for the Philippines this year and the next.
On the global scale, it was the International Monetary Fund (IMF) which initiated a possible reduction in their output forecasts as early as Dec. 3 last year. The Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva was disturbed because Omicron may spread very rapidly, dent confidence, increase uncertainty, and prolong the timeline for overcoming the pandemic.
Three weeks later, The Wall Street Journal reported a number of economists cutting their growth forecasts for the US in 2022, citing cancellations of thousands of flights over the Christmas holiday, sporting events, and Broadway shows. Demand was expected to be crimped mostly by spending on services. While the US restrained itself from imposing strict lockdowns, there were reports that people were voluntarily practicing social distancing, obviously hesitant to eat out and stay in various types of accommodations. Growth and employment are bound to suffer. Goldman Sachs had already reduced its US growth forecast from 4.2% to 3.8% for the year.
Rethinking the growth prospects is not limited to the US. International financial institutions, central banks, and other research institutions in Europe and elsewhere have expressed concern about the rolling disruptions in supply chains in the spring. The less fatal Omicron is capable of triggering a widespread wave of sick-outs and involuntary quarantines. If we think this new variant is less debilitating, we may have to reconsider.
In contrast, at the time the Fund was sounding the alarm in the early part of December, some local economists remained bullish even as they premised their prognosis on the outcome of the new variant. In fact, the Government itself was unusually optimistic that, with only 15 days left of 2021, it decided to even upgrade its growth forecast for 2021 from 4-5% to 5-5% and keep the lofty goals of 7-9% and 6-7% for 2022 and 2023, respectively.
Apart from Omicron’s growth-negative effects on mobility and business activities, economic growth could retreat due to two additional causes. Monetary policy might have to be tightened, and fiscal policy might be constrained by large debt exposure of the Philippine government.
Last week we wrote about another ball in the air of radical uncertainty: the US Federal Reserve decision on the stance of US monetary policy. It has already hinted a possible three one-quarter adjustments for 2022. Should capital flows react against emerging markets including the Philippines, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) might be forced to jack up its policy rate to stem the tide which could drain some foreign exchange and lead to peso depreciation. The BSP must have assumed more optimistic currency trends for 2022 and 2023 because the peso was strong for the most part of 2020 and 2021. While good for exports, peso depreciation could also push inflation higher.
There are other potential events that could force the BSP’s hand to tighten. The other day in another broadsheet, there were two news reports on the same page showing the BSP’s assurance that inflation will exceed the 2-4% target only if oil prices surpass $95 per barrel. The other report, by AFP from Hong Kong, quoted Brent crude oil hitting a more than seven-year high due to expected growth recovery. Brent North Sea crude rose to $87.78 per barrel while West Texas International hit $85.43 per barrel. These are uncomfortably close to the BSP’s assumption at which inflation could exceed the targets.
Yet the BSP’s forecasts are first approximation. As it explained, the “scenario analysis considers only the direct effects and does not incorporate any potential second round effects on transport fares, food prices, and wage increases, among others.”
Some supply shocks may also be forthcoming, including higher shipping costs of imports and what many sectors believe to be a fish shortage because of foreign pouching in the West Philippine Sea. Unless oil prices calm down and transport logistics are brought back to normal, import costs will be elevated and inflation can only rise as a result. Unless imports of so-called pelagic fish such as galunggong and mackerel are delivered within the first quarter of 2022, the shortage may persist and again, inflation can be entrenched.
We do not buy the idea that responding to capital outflows and emerging inflation may have to be done at the expense of abandoning support to the real economy. Monetary policy has done its part in supporting the real economy and if the BSP would like to maintain the sustainability of growth, it would have to help the cause of price and financial stability which is the BSP’s primary mandates. There is sufficient monetary space to do it.
The other potential impediment to the growth momentum is a fiscal policy that is constrained by the Government’s already large exposure to both the domestic and external capital markets. As of end-September 2021, outstanding debt of the National Government stood at nearly P12 trillion or more than 63% of gross domestic product. Fiscal deficit to GDP ratio is already overstretched at more than 8% of GDP. It is good the country’s debt spreads continue to be relatively tight but with a 2022 fiscal scenario of more borrowings, more and more credit ratings should be expected to start asking questions.
Raising new taxes to finance additional pandemic response and infrastructure, while necessary, may have to yield to better timing. Instances of corruption, especially during the pandemic, should also be dealt with because they cause distrust of public institutions and ineffective handling of the health crisis.
With smaller elbow room for additional borrowing, and limited ability to raise new taxes to fund health and economic recovery, we may really have to review where we stand.
Foreign investment is hardly an option. The Board of Investments (BoI) recently announced its approval of around P655 billion in pledges in 2021 which was nearly 35% lower than the 2020 level. Only these lower pledges are expected to be realized this year and in subsequent years. This level is also below BoI’s target.
With monetary policy having to pay attention to price and financial stability objectives this year, it would likely continue to provide assistance to the National Government but at less sizeable amount. After all, whatever is extended to the National Government will have to be mopped up by the BSP itself at some cost. Yet BSP lending to the Government is interest-free.
Under Duterte’s watch, the people of the Philippines should be concerned about that headline of one broadsheet the other day: “Government turns to artworks, ‘hot’ cars for extra revenues.”
Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former deputy governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was alternate executive director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.
BARANGAY WATCHMEN in Pasay City man an outpost at Brgy. 61 after 23 individuals in the area were reported as positive COVID-19 cases. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS
The record-breaking surge in the number of daily COVID-19 cases and its devastating impact on business operations and workers’ livelihoods are among the more visible consequences of the government’s pre-holiday rush to seeming normalcy as the year 2021 was ending.
The rush began in late October as the number of daily cases declined. It was apparently meant to convince the populace that the government had contained the pandemic that had confined many to virtual house arrest, and that everyone could then head for the exits.
The Duterte regime could have welcomed the decline with cautious optimism and with a reminder to the citizenry that the pandemic is still a threat, and everyone should continue to observe established health protocols. Instead, it relaxed domestic and foreign travel restrictions, allowed cinemas to operate, and opened resorts and tourist destinations to the public. Almost daily did its spokespersons issue glowing statements about the country’s celebrating “a better 2021 Christmas” which much of the populace interpreted as indications that things were nearly back to normal.
The reservations of the medical community were, as usual, ignored. Public transport vehicles — jeepneys and buses as well the MRT and LRT lines in the National Capital Region (NCR) — were ferrying passengers at almost full capacity in late October and in November, while shoppers thronged the malls and markets, in many instances without social distancing. Christmas and New Year’s eves contributed to the surge in cases as celebrators partied and made merry, assured as they had been that the Philippines was at low risk of further infections.
But scientists in Africa had discovered the Omicron variant of COVID-19 in travelers from Europe in early November. Following the lead of other jurisdictions, the Philippine government banned visitors and travelers from countries where Omicron cases had been reported, but exempted Filipino nationals. A few cases of Omicron in returning overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) were eventually found in the Philippines, with the numbers spiking as the year was ending. By the second week of the new year, the Omicron variant had become the dominant COVID strain in the country.
From its late 2021 policy of relaxing practically all restrictions, in reaction to the new year surge the Duterte regime has gone to the other extreme of imposing more restrictions on public mobility. But the policies are replete with exemptions and contradictions, and particularly disadvantageous to the poorer sectors of the population.
The “no vaccination, no ride” policy would make sense only if most of the populace were fully vaccinated. But only some 54% of the targeted 70 million have been. The policy has led to a rush to vaccination centers by the unvaccinated, but the first shot will not protect one and one’s fellow passengers in a bus or jeepney from infection.
Because it won’t — most of the vaccines require two shots, and need some time to take effect — the impact of the policy on public safety is thus limited only to those who have been fully vaccinated, and whose shots have had the time to develop the antibodies that would protect them.
The same policy assumes that the unvaccinated are against vaccinations. Some indeed are; but most are not. A number of other reasons make getting vaccinated problematic even if one wants to for such sectors as workers who are paid on a daily basis. For them, losing a day’s wages — there are long lines in most of the vaccination centers, where one has to wait for hours — can mean their family’s missing a meal. In belated awareness of that fact, the government now says workers are exempted from the “no vaccination, no ride” policy. Since most of those who take public transport are workers, the policy makes even less sense.
At the same time that it is supposedly being enforced, the checkpoints that have once again sprouted on major thoroughfares are stopping motorcycles, buses, and jeepneys in implementation of its sister policy of keeping the unvaccinated at home and arresting those who defy that rule. But they were not checking privately-owned and -driven vehicles, whose occupants, whether vaccinated or not, could come and go as they please.
The policy swing to what amounts to a lockdown by another name is contradicted by the Inter-Agency Task Force’s (IATF) approval, despite the protest of health and medical professionals, of shorter isolation and quarantine periods for asymptomatic and fully vaccinated persons.
Part of the reason for the policy seems to be the shortfall in nurses and other hospital personnel, many of whom have tested positive for COVID-19 as the surge in cases threatens to overwhelm the health system. The shortage is a problem of long-standing primarily because of the pittance in wages and benefits such personnel receive, to augment which they are still fighting for, two years into the pandemic.
In further contradiction of the swing to a veritable lockdown, the Department of Health (DoH) has proposed a stop to the testing and tracing of the close contacts of those found to be COVID positive as long as they are asymptomatic. Healthcare workers, senior citizens, and persons with other health problems would instead be prioritized for testing.
The argument is that because “many, many” Filipinos have been vaccinated, the chances of recovery of the COVID-positives’ contacts are supposedly higher and their hospitalization less likely. But the policy is in effect a gamble that most or all of those so exposed to the disease are fully vaccinated. Omicron is also a new coronavirus variant about which not enough information is currently available. Whether this policy makes sense will be determined only by future data on the extent to which it helped reduce the number of cases. The DoH proposal incidentally contradicts Mr. Duterte’s order to improve the healthcare system’s testing capacity.
In the midst of the confusion, distress, and anguish the government response to the COVID-19 surge has generated came an attempt to hype up the Omicron threat as a blessing rather than a curse.
A priest/molecular biologist with a number of involvements in government agencies and activities described the variant as “a blessing” because those infected with it would supposedly develop antibodies that would protect them from other coronavirus variants.
Octa Research fellow Nicanor Austriaco’s optimism was widely reported, but was repudiated by analysts, epidemiologists, and medical doctors for glossing over the crisis in the medical workforce and the resulting strain on the hospital system. It did seem to be based more on politics — was he throwing the rabble a bone so they’ll continue to support the administration? —rather than on science. But in their desire for some good news to hold on to, any number of Filipinos could have taken Fr. Austriaco’s claims for Bible truth.
Accurate, relevant, and verifiable information rather than lockdowns by some other name and other restrictions is in fact what is most needed for the country to survive its present predicament. Without it, no exit is possible from the hole the citizenry is in, and from further restrictions, immobility, discrimination, and mass confusion.
Well thought-out, pro-active policies based on informed and rigorous analysis could have helped the country navigate the treacherous waters of the pandemic from its very onset in 2020. The need for them was especially evident during the last quarter of 2021, as well as at the present time. But they are precisely what were and are still missing in the far from strategic and purely reactive government response to the pandemic.