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Congress seeks probe on CoA-flagged Health funds 

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SEVERAL SENATORS have called for a probe on the more than P67-billion coronavirus response funds under the Health department that were flagged by state auditors. 

“We should investigate the Department of Health’s (DoH) handling of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) funds. The deluge of deficiencies that the Commission of Audit (CoA) findings uncovered are alarming and disturbing,” Senate Minority Leader Franklin M. Drilon said on Thursday as he sought an inquiry in aid of legislation.  

“It is imperative that we examine closely the DoH’s use of billions of pesos in COVID-19 response funds given the findings of the CoA and the corruption allegations that hounded the agency’s procurement of various COVID-19 equipment and supplies,” Mr. Drilon said.  

Senator Mary Grace S. Poe-Llamanzares made the same call saying “inefficiencies in the midst of a health crisis make our people bear the brunt.” 

The CoA, in a report made public on Wednesday, found “deficiencies” amounting to over P67 billion due to “non-compliance (with) pertinent laws, rules, and regulations” in its 2020 annual report of the DOH.  

“Given the CoA findings, the DoH seems to be depriving thousands of Filipinos of healthcare services in the face of national emergency, and it’s nothing short of criminal,” said Senator Ana Theresia N. Hontiveros-Baraquel in a press release.  

Senator Panfilo M. Lacson, in a separate statement, said the “DoH’s management of pandemic response funds will definitely be taken up during the deliberations of the DoH’s 2022 budget, once the Senate starts the hearings before approving their budget.”  

At the House of Representative, the Makabayan bloc also plans to file a resolution seeking an investigation on the matter.  

The group, composed of progressive lawmakers, said in a press conference on Thursday that they aim to have the inquiry through the House Committees on Public Accounts and Good Government.   

Bayan Muna Party-list Rep. Carlos Isagani T. Zarate said the misuse of funds by the DoH “borders on criminal negligence” as lives would have been saved if the alloted budget was used properly.     

He also said that the Makabayan bloc will scrutinize the DoH on the matter during deliberations for the 2022 national budget. 

Members of the group also renewed calls for Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III to resign.   

A majority of senators signed last year a resolution that also called for Mr. Duque’s resignation over the government’s pandemic response.  

Mr. Duque said on Wednesday that the flagged deficiencies are “accounted for” and are currently being addressed by the DoH, adding that they are taking the findings of the CoA report “very seriously.” — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan and Russell Louis C. Ku  

Study recommends psycho-social help for drug war victims’ families   

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

FAMILIES of those who were killed in the government’s controversial drug war must be provided with “biological, psychological, social, and spiritual” help as part of the justice process, according to a non-profit, legal-focused group that recently conducted a study on the long-term impact of the anti-narcotics campaign on women.  

“For justice to be complete, we must also take into account the biological, economic, psychological, social, and spiritual harm inflicted upon the indirect victims of these crimes,” said Raphael Carlo D. Brolagda, researcher team lead of the study undertaken by Initiatives for Dialogue and Empowerment through Alternative Legal Services (IDEALS).  

Among the concrete recommendations put forward in the study includes  “expenses for burial, education, and relocation.”  

For psychological and spiritual needs, the study said families must be provided with “emotional support and spiritual guidance for the restoration of their faith shaken by the incident.”  

As for social needs, one of the study’s main findings was that the survivors require a strong support system for the healing process.  

IDEALS’ study revealed that families of those allegedly killed in the drug war experienced a decrease in family income, mothers or children were forced to become breadwinners, and the victims’ families endured discrimination in their community.  

A total of 10 women aged 18 and above whose fathers or husbands were killed in the campaign against illegal drugs were the subjects of the case study, with four deaths classified as vigilante killings and the other six were under police operations.  

The respondents, including children in their family, also experienced discrimination as their community tagged them as families of “drug addicts or pushers.” Some of the children stopped going to school.    

The families also continuously feared for their safety as the attackers might come back, this time to kill them.   

Behavioral changes, such as aggression, anger, and violent tendencies were also observed, including in children. 

The participants of the study said they will continue to seek justice despite all the other problems that arose from the death of their loved ones.  

“It is only when the wounds in our society are healed can we say that justice has truly been served,” Mr. Brolagda said. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago  

No damage reported from magnitude 7.1 earthquake off Davao Oriental 

NO DAMAGE was reported as of Thursday morning from the magnitude 7.1 earthquake that struck off Davao Oriental in southeastern Mindanao at 1:46 a.m., according to the provincial government.   

“There are no damages reported so far… Teams from the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (PDRRMO) – Operation Center have conducted an assessment earlier today in tsunami prone areas and critical facilities including the Davao Oriental Provincial Medical Center,” it said in a statement issued at around 10:30 a.m.   

Disaster management teams of the 10 towns and the capital Mati City were continuously assessing and monitoring their areas, in coordination with the provincial office.   

As of 10:45 a.m, 38 aftershocks were recorded by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs), with magnitudes ranging from 2.7 to as strong as 4.9.  

Phivolcs recorded the epicenter of the offshore 7.1 earthquake at 95 kilometers southeast of Governor Generoso town.  

Tremors with intensities 4 to 5 were felt in areas east of Davao Oriental, up to General Santos City.    

“Despite that there are no damages reported, the PDRRMO reminds the general public to stay calm, alert from various hazards, and stay informed,” the provincial government said.  

Lawmaker pushes for mandatory ‘no disconnection’ policy in lockdown areas 

PHILSTAR

SENATOR SHERWIN T. Gatchalian, who leads the Senate’ energy committee, has asked the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) to order distribution companies to hold off disconnections in areas under strict quarantine classifications. 

In an emailed statement on Thursday, he asked the commission to direct distribution utilities (DUs) to “replicate the move taken by Manila Electric Co. (Meralco),” which earlier announced that it will be implementing a ‘no disconnection’ policy until the third week of August to provide relief to consumers who have yet to settle their obligations.  

“We were able to implement the ‘no disconnection policy’ last year…This was a great help to consumers who only have enough to spend for their expenses. I hope that DUs will be considerate to our countrymen for the second time,” Mr. Gatchalian said in Filipino.  

The strictest quarantine category is in place over Metro Manila and several other areas where there has been a surge in coronavirus cases and the utilization rate of medical facilities are at critical level.  

Mr. Gatchalian also reiterated his call to local government units to allow the continued conduct of onsite meter readings to ensure the accuracy of electric power bills. 

“We don’t want a repeat of last year’s ‘bill shock.’ We’ve had enough of this in the past and both the consumers and the DUs should have learned from what happened,” he said.  

BusinessWorld has reached out to the ERC for its comments on the lawmaker’s statements, but it has not yet replied as of press time.  

In an advisory issued on Aug. 6, the Department of Energy appealed to power distributors to suspend disconnection activities in areas under lockdown. 

Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Angelica Y. Yang 

Police chief warns food delivery riders to observe health protocols

PHILSTAR

NATIONAL POLICE chief Guillermo T. Eleazar has reminded food delivery riders to strictly follow minimum health safety standards and quarantine protocols following multiple reports of violations.   

“In recent days, the PNP (Philippine National Police) has received several complaints and allegations about violations by delivery riders of the minimum public health safety protocols in their waiting areas in various areas in Metro Manila,” Mr. Eleazar said in Filipino in a news release on Thursday.   

He said his office received reports that some riders were not properly wearing their face masks and some were smoking in designated waiting areas in between deliveries.   

Mr. Eleazar said police heads have been ordered to coordinate with local government units and business establishments to ensure the implementation of health standards.   

Complaints of such violations may be submitted to the police’s online portal. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago  

Davao journalist to appeal criminal charges against 17 police before High Court 

A DAVAO City-based journalist will appeal to the Supreme Court the criminal charges filed against 17 policemen who mistakenly arrested her in 2019 as the Ombudsman downgraded the case to simple neglect of duty and dismissed the others.   

“Simple neglect of duty, as they call it, now excuses command responsibility and accountability,” journalist Fidelina Margarita A. Valle said in a press briefing on Thursday, expressing her dismay over the Ombudsman’s decision.  

In its Aug. 2020 decision, the Ombudsman dismissed the criminal charges against 15 of the 17 policemen, and charged two with administrative sanctions for simple neglect of duty subject to a three-month suspension without pay.   

In June 2021, it again denied Ms. Valle’s motion for reconsideration, stating that she failed to present newly discovered evidence or proof of the Ombudsman’s grave error in its 2020 decision.   

The Ombudsman also denied the motion for reconsideration of the two policemen who claimed that their right to due process was violated.   

Ms. Valle was arrested in 2019 as police mistook her for Elsa Renton, an alleged Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) leader.   

Ms. Valle’s lawyer, Katherine A. Panguban, said they will also raise in the Supreme Court petition the fact that the policemen still insisted and tagged Ms. Valle as a member of the CPPA-NPA in their own motion for reconsideration.   

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines chairman Jonathan de Santos said he “hopes this is the last of such cases” and called on law enforcement agents to be more careful with their actions. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago  

Youth groups petition for voter registration extension 

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

MORE THAN 60 youth groups have signed a petition asking the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to extend the voter registration period, especially in areas that have been placed on strict lockdown.   

“The aim is that all of us, with no one left behind, would be able to vote in 2022,” Julianna Oropeo from Youth with Senator Risa Hontiveros-Baraquel, said in mixed English and Filipino in an online event Thursday.   

Senator Ana Theresia “Risa” N. Hontiveros-Baraquel, chair of the Senate Committee on Women, Children, Family Relations and Gender Equality, was at the forum in support of the youth’s call.   

“When you come of age, voter’s registration becomes one of your first and greatest responsibilities. This is your first opportunity to understand how your voice affects the lives of Filipinos around you, and for generations to come,” said Ms. Hontiveros in mixed English and Filipino.  

The petition was initiated by the First Time Voters Network (FTVN) and Akbayan Youth.    

Comelec has previously announced that the Sept. 30 deadline for registration, which started last year, will not be extended in consideration of other activities under the 2022 election calendar. Filing of candidacies start on Oct. 1.    

The petition proposes several measures such as extending the registration by at least one month, extending registration hours and allow for registration during weekends, provide simplified digital procedures for the revalidation of 6.3 million voters delisted by Comelec, and set clear guidelines that accommodate alternative but legitimate forms of identification for first time voters, especially students and out-of-school youth who may not have easy access to documentary requirements. 

Akbayan Youth Leader RJ Naguit said the entire registration period has not been maximized due to temporary closure of Comelec offices and satellite registration sites during lockdown periods.    

Based on FTVN’s estimate, as many as 13 million voters may be disenfranchised if no extensions are made. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Guillermo Rigondeaux biggest test for ‘Quadro Alas’ Casimero

FILIPINO WBO bantamweight champion John Riel Casimero is seen to be tested hard by Cuban Guillermo Rigondeaux in their title fight in California this weekend. — ALVIN S. GO

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

FILIPINO World Boxing Organization bantamweight champion John Riel “Quadro Alas” Casimero is to defend his title against Cuba’s Guillermo Rigondeaux this weekend in what could well be his biggest test as a fighter to date, said one local boxing analyst.

Ormoc City native Mr. Casimero (30-4, 21 KOs) is to battle Mr. Rigondeaux (20-1, 13 KOs) in a scheduled 12-rounder at the Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California, on Sunday, Aug. 15 (Manila time).

It will be the first fight of 31-year-old Mr. Casimero since successfully defending his title against Duke Micah of Ghana in September last year where he won by technical knockout in the third round.

The Rigondeaux fight is the third title defense of Mr. Casimero after he won the WBO title in November 2019.

For boxing analyst Nissi Icasiano, this latest title defense of Mr. Casimero will be a tough one considering the top-quality challenge the 40-year-old Mr. Rigondeaux will be presenting.

“Stylistically, it’s a nightmare for Casimero on paper. It’s going to be an uphill battle for the Filipino, and there is no need to exaggerate it because he is facing a boxer who has been bred differently,” said Mr. Icasiano in an online interview with BusinessWorld.

While Mr. Casimero has logged more action in the ring than the Cuban and the latter has been exposed as a fighter in recent outings, there is still no denying how fluidly and effectively Mr. Rigondeaux, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, has translated his skill set from the amateur ranks, the analyst said.

“Rigondeaux is the more proven fighter, and his evasiveness and boxing savvy will likely be the difference here,” Mr. Icasiano further shared.

But the analyst is not outright counting out Mr. Casimero as he is still the champion and has some things going for him as well.

The Filipino bet, however, has to come out with all he has to successfully fend off Mr. Rigondeaux.

“The talent is there and Casimero has done enough to deserve the chance to share the ring with Rigondeaux. But the truth is we haven’t seen Casimero against an elite competition. You would argue that Zolane Tete or Amnat Ruenroeng are his best competition. This will easily be the biggest test for Casimero,” Mr. Icasiano said.

Adding, “Casimero has never seen anywhere close to the talent of Rigondeaux or somebody who will mesmerize him with the same boxing brilliance like what he’ll face. He has to dig deep into his arsenal to offset Rigondeaux.”

The analyst said Mr. Casimero should take cue from Mr. Rigondeaux’s last fight against Venezuelan Solis in 2020 where the Cuban got hurt early in the contest and just tried to survive for the majority of the time the rest of the way to win by split decision.

“Casimero should look into that (Solis fight) because he has the punch that packs more power between the both of them. He has to be very active as well by pushing the pace and bringing the fight to Rigo,” Mr. Icasiano said.

Predicting the outcome of the fight is not easy, said Mr. Icasiano, just as he noted that “the first four [rounds] of the fight will be crucial.”

But if he is to call it, he said, “Probably, a decision in favor of Rigondeaux. Maybe eight rounds to four.”

The Casimero-Rigondeaux fight is organized by Premier Boxing Champions.

Filipino Paralympians get additional travel allowance 

THE country’s six para athletes are flying to Japan for the Tokyo Paralympic Games with extra motivation to do well.

Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) Chairman William I. Ramirez announced on Thursday that each of the para athletes, their coaches, and accompanying officials will be receiving P100,000 additional allowance, hiking to P150,000 their total allowance for the Aug. 24 to Sept. 5 Games.

At the same time, Mr. Ramirez asked Chef de Mission Francis B. Diaz to encourage his colleagues at the University of the Philippines to prepare the athletes mentally and psychologically, stressing this aspect was a proven formula for the success in the recent Tokyo Olympics.

Mr. Ramirez also told the para athletes to “enjoy your game.”

Wheelchair racer Jerrold Mangliwan (para athletics) was designated to carry the country’s colors in the opening ceremony while Ernie Gawilan (swimming) will have the same responsibility in the closing ceremony.

Also on the team are discus thrower Jeanette Aceveda, swimmer Gary Bejino, taekwondo jin Allain Ganapin and powerlifter Achelle Guion.

Mr. Ramirez said that the PSC board of commissioners did not hesitate to approve the additional allowances for the para athletes.

“The PSC also added travel allowances to our athletes in the Olympics because of the high cost of living in Japan,” he said.

The para athletes thanked the PSC chairman and the commissioners, saying they are “happily overwhelmed with the love and care the sports agency has been giving them.”

They also vowed to bring their best game, enjoy the experience and continue to aim for a podium finish.

Chery Tiggo extends PVL finals series

The Chery Tiggo Crossovers took Game Two of their best-of-three PVL Open Conference finals series with the Creamline Cool Smashers in four sets on Thursday to force a rubber match. — PVL MEDIA BUREAU

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

The Premier Volleyball League Open Conference finals will go the full route after the Chery Tiggo Crossovers took Game Two of their best-of-three series with the Creamline Cool Smashers in four sets on Thursday.

Banking on a balanced attack, the Crossovers packed the heat to get the better of the Cool Smashers, 25-18, 17-25, 25-16, 25-21, at the PCV Socio-Civic & Cultural Center in Bacarra, Ilocos Norte, and level the series at a game apiece.

Jaja Santiago led the charge for Chery Tiggo and got ample support from the other stalwarts of the team as well as from the auxiliaries.

The Crossovers used a spirited charge late in the fourth set to close out the Cool Smashers and send the series to a deciding game on Friday.

Down, 15-16, by the second technical break, Ms. Santiago rallied her team in outscoring Creamline, 10-5, the rest of the way to book the win.

Ms. Santiago tallied 25 points — 20 coming from attacks, three blocks and two aces.

Chery Tiggo also got valuable contributions from starters Dindin Santiago-Manabat (18 points), Shaiya Adorador (nine) and Maika Ortiz (six) as well as reserve Joy Dacoron (eight).

Alyssa Valdez paced the Cool Smashers with 18 points, followed by Jema Galanza (17) and Tots Carlos (15).

Game Three of the finals is set at 3 p.m. and can be seen over One Sports and One Sports+.

Economic growth, a question of anchor

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Quarterly Performance (Q2 2021)

All the broadsheets bannered that the Philippines’ second quarter real GDP growth of 11.8% ended the recession here, representing the fastest pace in 32 years. That was a big relief to us because if this momentum is sustained, we should see the revival of business activities, opening of more jobs, and reduction of hunger and poverty in the land.

This was not exactly the whole story.

BusinessWorld’s infographic was most useful to the public’s economic understanding because while the year-on-year growth of 11.8% was truly impressive for its speed, we see a different story when we assess the seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter growth. On this basis, the economy shrank by 1.3%. The website of the Philippine Statistics Authority’ (PSA) shows tables and tables of quarterly output in current and real terms that this important analytical fact is lost.

Most telling in this chart is that economic growth seems to be losing steam. We should look at the 11.8% year-on-year growth only in a historical context against the second quarter last year. That period spans one year; that is history. Monetary Board Member Felipe Medalla would be the first to argue that doing so is not very useful. Base effects would be most pronounced. Instead, comparing the second quarter 2021 with the first quarter 2021 actually shows a drop from a positive 0.7% to a negative 1.3%. Such quarterly drops have been quite obvious since the fourth quarter of last year. This data series is cleansed of seasonal factors and hence a fair basis for discerning trends.

Based on the composition of economic growth, we see an uneven pattern. That 11.8% annual growth was vigorously driven by both industry and services but agriculture actually contracted by 0.1%. Demand-wise, investments rose by a whopping 75.5% while private consumption climbed by 7.2%. But public spending declined by 4.9%. Imports more than dampened exports. The key to achieving inclusive, sustainable, and self-sustaining growth is for all sectors and demand components to be contributing in concert. Consumers obviously continue to chill; they remain fearful of malls and eating places. Perhaps only the brave souls dared to remain mobile because many of them needed to work and eat.

While base effects were initially dismissed, they were used to explain the decline in public spending associated with “the roll-out of the largest ever emergency subsidies in the second quarter of 2020.” Fundamentally, this means the government was correct in spending big last year, but decided to retreat this year while the pandemic has not even relented.

The second quarter growth story without considering future risks is already ominous. First half real GDP growth averaged 3.7%. The PSA’s National Statistician Dennis Mapa did for us the math of what to expect for the whole year. To achieve the lower end of the official target of 6%, Mapa explained the economy has to deliver at least 8.2% for the second half of 2021. If we target the high end of 7%, we need to expand by at least 10.2%.

Whether this is doable is very much premised on how we could work ourselves out of this pandemic.

Needless to say, a singular focus on pandemic management is essential. Medical forecasts of the potency and the speed of the Delta variant are telling us we may not have seen the worst yet. Daily incidence could rise by multiples of what we are seeing today in the tens of thousands.

What is happening in various capitals and many parts in the US confirms to us one important lesson and this is the viciousness of the virus. It does not banter with fever or flu, it dispenses lockdowns and deaths.

Community transmission is surging exponentially in the US due partly to lack of mask mandates and pervasive hesitancy to get the jab. The unvaccinated adults are super spreading the Delta variant now even to the children. There has been an unseasonal spike in respiratory illnesses among children. Children from three-week-olds to 17-year-olds have been infected. This is now the case in Louisiana where hospital bed space has further shrunk and the demand for doctors and nurses has multiplied. In Florida, infections have been reported by Johns Hopkins University to have increased 51% over the previous week with 134,506 new COVID-19 cases from July 30 to Aug. 5 alone. Of this, 4,615 children were hospitalized, further overwhelming the state’s health facilities.

If this is happening in the US where children generally enjoy a higher level of nutrition and quality of life, and medical facilities are more robust, this could also happen in the Philippines.

Here, we are still in conversation whether children should be vaccinated because of supply issues. This much we got from the recent pronouncement of the National Immunization Technical Advisory Group (NITAG). Contrary to the press statement of the economic managers that “we are expecting the arrival of over 148 million doses of the vaccine,” this Group insists that “our vaccines are not yet enough” and that children “are so resilient and have stronger immunity.” Therefore, no vaccines yet for the minors among us.

First, the Group should look again into the profile of those infected with COVID-19. They should realize that those who are getting sick represent all age groups, even those younger than 19 years old.

Second, on the supply issue, our economic managers should look into the Commission on Audit’s report admonishing the Department of Health’s (DoH) inefficient utilization of funds amounting to P67.32 billion intended for pandemic response last year. For instance, P11.89 billion for the procurement of medical equipment and supplies and hiring of additional health workers has remained unobligated or undisbursed. Some P42.41 billion for COVID-19 related programs and procurements was instead transferred to various implementing agencies without the required Memorandum of Agreement and other supporting documents.

If these funds were properly spent to cover our fight against the pandemic, more adults would have been vaccinated fast and the Delta community transmission could have been broken. And NITAG could also do the math: if we have minors numbering 15 million and each two-dose vaccination would cost us around $80 or P4,000, we would need around P60 billion, much less than the disputed P67.32 billions of DoH funds.

Third, it is unnecessary to experience what Bangladesh is going through today. Its healthcare system is hopelessly breaking down under the third, deadliest wave of COVID-19 infections. Hospital facilities are bursting at their seams. Less than 5% of the population has been fully vaccinated. But Bangladesh decided to ease lockdown measures the other day to reopen the economy and permit people to report for work. Various establishments were allowed to open. The country has little choice but to save whatever is left of its economy. Nearly 25 million people have been consigned to unemployment and poverty.

Yes, it is sensible for the Philippines to pursue parallel efforts to neutralize the virus and grow the economy — while we can. What we would like to see is for both the 2021 and 2022 budgets to be properly disbursed based on right priorities: health, economy, social services. The preoccupation against drugs and insurgency should be thrown to the back burner unless we want our choices to narrow down to the Bangladesh dilemma.

Finally, it will be a disservice to the Filipino people if we continue to raise their expectations about growth. The Development Budget Coordination Committee’s (DBCC) decision to keep to the original growth target of 6-7% for 2021 is a Braveheart effect. Therefore, our economic managers’ most recent statement that “the DBCC will review the recent economic data and the risks associated with the Delta variant to fine-tune our growth targets and adjust our recovery strategies” should be an opportunity to anchor our expectations and strategies on more realistic ground.

Anchoring our expectations to that rather ambitious growth target actually deprives us of having a foretaste of the potential cost of bungling this pandemic and economic challenges. A good anchor should motivate our health authorities to work harder to tame this virus and our economic managers to ensure the elephant in the room gets whipped.

 

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.

Disorder and confusion

VICE-PRESIDENT Maria Leonor “Leni” Gerona Robredo checks on an elderly person who is getting her COVID-19 vaccine injection. — WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/VPLENIROBREDOPH

Only the words “disordered” and “confused” can do justice to any attempt to describe the state of Philippine governance, politics, and society in these last 10 months of the Duterte regime, and more than a year after COVID-19 began tormenting these troubled isles.

As distressing as the state of affairs in this country of lost hopes has become, the current chaos could lead to an even greater evil.

The “strong government” many thought the country was finally getting in 2016 that could have helped check the Philippine State’s descent into failure, turned out to be a cruel illusion. That government’s seeming strength — its use of force and intimidation against the citizenry to compel obedience — has further weakened the Philippine State. Empowered by President Rodrigo Duterte, in many places across the archipelago the police and the military have become powers in and for themselves, with their personnel immune from State accountability.

In a number of instances, policemen have killed unarmed citizens without compunction and penalty, and so have some units of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the Air Force of which has also freely bombed supposedly rebel-influenced communities. The impunity or exemption from punishment of security forces is a sure sign of State weakness and imminent failure.

Strongman rule has failed the citizenry in every area of governance, most specially in the life and death imperatives of containing the COVID-19 pandemic and reviving the economy. There is no visible national plan to address the contagion. When it waned early this year, the regime prematurely took down in the National Capital Region (NCR) its usual lockdown response, only to once again impose it, and then to again take it down in the months that followed.

As the number of cases including the Delta variant surged, it reimposed Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ) protocols in NCR this August, to the detriment of the poor and of the vaccination program that is already hampered by the shortage of vaccines.

The regime’s hostile response to any suggestion from any sector for the improvement of its reactive anti-COVID program — if it can be called that at all — helps explain its gross inadequacies.

In 2020, an alliance of medical frontliners called for a lockdown in NCR to enable experts to re-evaluate that program. Although he did place the capital under modified ECQ, Mr. Duterte launched a tirade against the alliance, accusing it of involvement in a so-called plot to remove him from power.

In the current ECQ in the NCR and other provinces, three problems reminiscent of those of 2020 are distressingly evident:

1.) the inadequacy, as a number of city and town mayors have pointed out, of the ayuda (economic aid) for those affected, particularly those workers who have lost their sources of livelihood;

2.) the counterproductive impact of the lockdown on those who are anxiously hoping to get vaccinated; and,

3.) the impending crisis in hospital capacity to care for the infected.

The first is due to the regime failure to include in the 2021 budget any provision for such aid. The second, in which large numbers of people overwhelmed vaccination centers on Aug. 5 and probably helped spread the virus, can be explained by some government sources’ threats that they will withhold aid from the unvaccinated, and Mr. Duterte’s rants that he will have those who refuse to be vaccinated arrested.

As for the third, that catastrophe to public health could have been at least mitigated had the regime, more than a year after, learned enough from the 2020 experience to help construct more hospitals or just additional COVID-19 wings in existing ones by using the billions of pesos at its disposal.

The consequences of this ineptitude are the continuing surge in infections, massive unemployment, and economic decline. But even as the regime and its minions were confusing and alarming much of the populace, the peculiar breed of politicians with which this country has been cursed was not giving politics Philippine-style any rest, and in the process further adding to the chaos.

PDP-Laban’s announcement that it will field Mr. Duterte’s confidant, Christopher “Bong” Go, for president and Mr. Duterte himself for vice-president seems to have written-off a father-and-daughter Sara Duterte-Rodrigo Duterte team in the 2022 elections.

But so unpredictably chaotic has Philippine politics become that it could very well be just a reprise of the Duterte 2016 ruse, this time to prevent his daughter’s being subjected to any scrutiny of her qualifications for the post. She could still be a last-minute substitute for Go, as Mr. Duterte was a substitute for someone else five years ago, two years after he had kept denying any interest in the Presidency.

The roster of possible candidates for the country’s highest elective post is long enough for the 2022 elections to have the same results as those of 2016. In addition to Go and Mr. Duterte’s daughter, the list includes Senator cum boxer Emmanuel “Manny” Pacquiao, Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko” Moreno Domagoso, and former police chief, now Senator Panfilo Lacson.

Lacson and his running mate, Senate President Vicente Sotto III, claim to be “reformers,” while Moreno and former Duterte ally Pacquiao have distanced themselves from the Duterte camp. Pacquiao criticized the regime policy on the West Philippine Sea and the surge of corruption in the bureaucracy. Moreno has indirectly taken issue with regime claims regarding its vaccination and aid programs. In response, and in another telling indication of regime priorities, the Department of Interior and Local Governments issued but later withdrew a show cause order against Moreno when he was not yet mayor of Manila. Mr. Duterte then threatened to deny “a metro Manila mayor” ayuda assistance.

Meanwhile, neither the 1Sambayan coalition nor the so-called opposition has announced who its candidate for president will be. Both could ideally field Vice-President Maria Leonor “Leni” Robredo, who, however, seems reluctant to run for that post, given the results of the surveys and her lack of enough resources to run a winnable campaign. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos, Jr. has also been mentioned as another possible candidate for the post his father held for nearly two decades (1965-1986).

If there is anything these worthies are succeeding in doing, it is to further contribute to voter bewilderment and inability to make any sense of what is going on, and to decide who to best vote for except on the usual name-recall basis.

Lacson and Sotto’s pretensions at reform are similar to Mr. Duterte’s in 2016, and are repudiated by their five-year record of basically supporting the Duterte regime. So is Pacquiao’s sudden awakening to the reality of the regime’s acquiescence to Chinese aggression in the West Philippine Sea and the corruption that has been metastasizing in it.

There is the undoubtedly capable Vice-President Robredo, who, however, has not been doing well in the surveys, and whose resources, compared to those of the Dutertes and company, are severely limited. Should she choose not to run, the only choice in 2022 will be, as in past elections, the lesser evil from among the motley crew of far from ideal, falsely reformist, and blatantly clueless candidates.

Even that already bleak possibility, however, might not even happen. In the confusion generated by the chaos that is in many ways the handiwork of the trolls and media mercenaries in the pay of the current regime, the country could end up with the greater evil of another, and quite likely even worse, dictatorship reprised.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com