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CHR asks gov’t to divulge real coronavirus score in prisons

By Vann Marlo M. Villegas, Reporter

THE Commission on Human Rights (CHR) has taken the government of President Rodrigo R. Duterte to task for lack of transparency in reporting coronavirus deaths inside the country’s jails and prisons.

“We call out the Bureau of Corrections and the Department of Justice for their lack of transparency and non-cooperation,” the agency said in a statement at the weekend. It added that it would look at the complaints of inmates’ families.

With 215,000 prisoners nationwide, Philippine jails and prisons are overfilled more than five times their official capacity, making it the most overcrowded prison system in the world, according to the World Prison Brief (WPB).

As of 2017, it had 933 jails — seven national prisons and 926 city, district, municipal and provincial jails, which are not enough to contain inmates, three-quarters of whom are at the pre-trial stage, WPB said on its website.

Many jails in the Philippines fail to meet the minimum United Nations standards given inadequate food, poor nutrition and unsanitary conditions.

The commission said prison and detention facilities in the Philippines are among the “direst places.”

The country’s jails had a congestion rate of 534% as of March 2020, it said, citing the Bureau of Jail Management

and Penology.

The country’s prisons, where convicted criminals stay, had a congestion rate of 302% as of December, it added.

The human rights body said it had sent letters to the Justice department seeking the list of inmates who died of the coronavirus and those who had been quarantined. It had not received a response 15 days after, it said.

The statement comes after Jaybee Sebastian, a drug convict at the national penitentiary in Muntinlupa City, supposedly died of the virus.

He was one of those who testified against opposition Senator Leila M. de Lima, who is now in jail for alleged drug trafficking.

The agency said the government should respect its mandate and work with it on various concerns about prisoners and prison workers.

Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra said he had sought the list of dead prisoners from prison officials. He has also ordered the National Bureau of Investigation to probe the deaths of nine high-profile inmates, including Mr. Sebastian.

The Justice chief said they were “trying to uncover strange things happening” at the Bureau of Corrections. “It is not fair to say that the department has not been transparent about the conditions at the BuCor,” he told reporters in a Viber message.

The Human Rights commission said information about the prisoners’ deaths must be divulged so the government can craft measures to contain the pandemic inside jails.

The Justice department last week said 21 prisoners had died of the coronavirus.

COVID-19 infections top 80,000 — DoH

THE Department of Health (DoH) reported 2,110 new coronavirus infections on Sunday, bringing the total to 80,448.

The death toll rose to 1,932 after 39 more patients died, while recoveries increased by 382 to 26,110, it said in a bulletin.

There were now 52,406 active cases, 90% of which were mild, 9% did now show symptoms and less than 1% were either severe or critical, DoH said. More than 1.2 million people have been tested.

DoH on Friday said it takes almost 12 days for COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) cases to double. The death rate was down to 2.6% as of July 22 from 6.7% in April, it said.

Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned the public against buying so-called coronavirus vaccines sold locally or online.

“There is no vaccine which has completed clinical trials to prove its safety and efficacy,” it said in an advisory. “The FDA has not yet approved any vaccine for use against COVID-19.”

The agency said such products pose health risks. “Likewise, selling and dispensing of registered products by unauthorized establishments or individuals is prohibited.”

Also on Sunday, the Philippine Coast Guard reported 77 new coronavirus infections among its staff, bringing the total 503, it said in a statement on Sunday.

The workers had been pulled out from their stations and were given treatment, it said. There were now 248 COVID-19 cases at the agency, it said.

It also said 96 more workers have recovered from the illness, bringing the total of those who have gotten well to 255.

“The Command conducts regular swab tests and ensures that its frontline personnel are equipped with sufficient supplies of vitamins, personal protective equipment sets and other medical supplies in the performance of their duties,” it said.

Meanwhile, the Bureau of Immigration will close its main office in Manila for disinfection on Monday and Tuesday after three employees tested positive for the virus.

Employees at the main office will undergo rapid antibody tests during the two-day suspension of operations, Immigration Commissioner Jaime H. Morente said in a statement. Positive employees must take swab tests for confirmation.

“Given the high number of people who troop to our main building everyday to transact business, we have to take all precautionary measures to prevent the transmission of this virus in our office premises,” he said.

He added that he had approved the recommendation of Deputy Commissioner Aldwin F. Alegre to require officials and employees at the main office to take rapid antibody tests every month. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

DoLE says P2.5-B fund for OFWs has run out

GOVERNMENT AID for overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) amid a coronavirus pandemic has surpassed its limits, prompting the Labor department to seek more funds.

“It has already exceeded the 250,000 OFW beneficiaries of the P2.5-billion emergency fund for COVID-19-affected migrant workers,” the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) said in a statement on Sunday.

The agency had received about half-a-million applications from Filipino migrant workers, half of which were approved, it said.

DoLE said P2.232 billion of the P2.5-billion program fund had been released to beneficiaries as of July 21. Migrant workers get a one-time cash out of P10,000 under the program.

The agency earlier said the funding was only good for 250,000 beneficiaries. It is seeking P2.5 billion more from Congress.

DoLE said more than 100,000 OFWs who got stranded had been sent home to their provinces.

“More than 106,200 overseas Filipino workers repatriated by the government amid the coronavirus pandemic have been transported to their home provinces,” it said. — Gillian M. Cortez

Regional Updates (07/26/20)

Cebu Pacific appeals for standard airport regulations from local governments

BUDGET CARRIER Cebu Pacific has called for common protocols from local governments hosting airports, citing that varying regulations makes it difficult to rebuild their network of flights, especially domestic services. Without the standardization of these regulations, were actually having a hard time rebuilding the network because as each LGU (local government unit) comes up or gives us their requirements, we will also have to inform our passengers on what the requirements are. Everythings very fluid. That is the challenge for us today,Candice A. Iyog, Cebu Pacific vice-president for marketing and customer service, said in a virtual presser Friday. There are a lot of restrictions so that is what we are managing on a day-to-day basis as we rebuild the network. The challenge for us is we do recognize that there is a need to limit air travel to essential travel only, at the same time we need to strike a better balance. Our hope is we start opening domestic to assist in the recovery of the industry,she added. Ms. Iyog said the Air Carrier Association in the Philippines, wherein the airline is a member, has already sent letters to the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines and LGUs requesting for standardized regulations. Maya M. Padillo

Pangasinan health chief assures province not going back to strict lockdown

PANGASINAN OFFICIALS are not planning to revert the province to a strict lockdown despite recording its highest daily record of positive cases at 23 on July 24. In a statement on Sunday, Provincial Health Officer Anna Ma. Teresa S. de Guzman said Pangasinan, which has one of the biggest populations in the country at about three million, has not reached the critical zonebased on the classification guidelines from the COVID-19 national task force. As of July 25, the province has recorded 203 cases, with 115 recoveries and 10 deaths. The 78 active cases include 72 in different towns and six in the independent city of Dagupan. Last week, officials of the Dagupan-based Region 1 Medical Center, the biggest government-run hospital in the province, called for a return of the province to the strict enhanced community quarantine category. Based on our review of the case data in Pangasinan, we really expected that the numbers would go up because we have been conducting expanded mass testing and strengthened our active case finding activities following a directive from Governor Amado I. Espino III,Ms. De Guzman said in Filipino. Mr. Espino, in the same statement, said the increase in COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) cases may also be partly attributed to returning residents who were stranded elsewhere in the country, mostly in Metro Manila.   

Davao airport under review for OFW one-stop-shop

THE DAVAO International Airport (DIA) is undergoing assessment for a one-stop processing center for returning overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to further disperse international passenger traffic who are required to undergo health and quarantine protocols. The national government is conducting inspection in Davao International Airport if there is a possibility to establish a one-stop-shop,said Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio of Davao City, where the airport is located. Such one-stop-shops have been set up at the airports in Manila, Clark, and Cebu. In a one-stop-shop, an OFW will be tested and will be brought to a hotel, and once the test result is available, the OFW may proceed to the LGU (local government unit) of destination and proceed to home quarantine, and for those positives, they will be brought to a hospital. The national government is looking if this is doable in DIA,the mayor said. The city government started implementing last week the requirement for arriving passengers to have a negative RT-PCR test released in the previous 72 hours for immediate exit from the airport. Those who do not have a valid test result can avail of free testing at the airport, but will have to stay at the designated 50-bed holding center for up to 48 hours. Maya M. Padillo

Bangsamoro lawmakers call for use of P200-M emergency fund for healthcare workers

A RESOLUTION calling on the Bangsamoro Ministry of Health to provide additional incentives to health workers was filed last week, proposing the use of an allocation provided under the regional governments emergency fund. Despite Bangsamoro health workers’ deplorable conditions overworked, underpaid, unsafe, and unsupported they are now in the forefront of fighting the deadly virus across the nation, to the extent that some health workers have succumbed or fallen victims to the coronavirus,reads part of the resolution authored by parliament members Amir Mawallil, Baintan Adil-Ampatuan, and Sittie Shahara Mastura. The salaries of healthcare workers in the country are below the daily minimum cost of living, and fall short compared to the remuneration other countries pay for the same profession, hence, the substantial difference in salaries and benefits of health workers in the country is the main reason that drives Bangsamoro health workers to work abroad, it said. The resolution proposes the use of a P200-million fund allocated for the health sector under the Quick Response Fund of the Office of the Chief Minister. The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) has about 2,000 regular health workers. As of July 24, BARMM has recorded 423 coronavirus cases, with 128 recoveries and eight deaths.

Nationwide round-up

REUTERS

Bill granting incentives to pro bono doctors filed in Senate

A PROPOSED law that will give incentives to doctors extending free services to indigent patients, with or without a health crisis, has been filed in the Senate. Senate Bill No. 1715, the Physician Pro Bono Care Act, seeks to provide tax incentives to doctors in recognition of their work at no cost to patients as well as encourage more voluntary service. “A number of doctors have taken it upon themselves to volunteer and render free health services to our people who cannot afford to seek medical attention. The tax incentive is a way of giving back for their selflessness, commitment and expertise,” Senator Grace S. Poe-Llamanzares, the bill’s author, said in a statement. Citing 2019 data, Ms. Llamanzares said the Philippines has a 1:33,000 doctor-to-patient ratio, which is higher that the global average 1:6,600. She also said six out of ten Filipinos die without being able to see a doctor. “The advent of COVID-19 pandemic even exacerbated the healthcare situation in the country… The pandemic also widened the gap to quality healthcare access among the poor and marginalized,” she said in the explanatory note of the bill. The bill mandates the Department of Health and the Philippine Medical Association to evaluate the pro bono services, taking into account the number of hours rendered and the nature of treatment. The tax credit will be deducted from the doctor’s gross income. — Charmaine A. Tadalan 

Presidential communications office records 23 COVID-19 cases

THE PRESIDENTIAL Communications Operations Office (PCOO) on Sunday confirmed 23 positive cases of the coronavirus among their personnel, but said this will not affect President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s annual address on Monday. Of the total cases, 17 are from the PCOO main office, and the rest are from the People’s Television Network, APO Production Unit, Philippine Information Agency, and Radio Television Malacañang. Two personnel have died from the disease. PCOO Secretary José Ruperto Martín M. Andanar, in a radio interview on Sunday, said none of the COVID-positive personnel from the PCOO has interacted with Mr. Duterte. The New Executive Building in Malacañang, where the PCOO office is located, will be on semi-lockdown during the State of the Nation Address, with just technical staff and members of the media allowed in. Mr. Duterte will deliver his address at the congressional complex. — Gillian M. Cortez 

PHAP donates P120M for coronavirus emergency response

MEMBERS the Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Association of the Philippines (PHAP) donated about P120 million in monetary and healthcare equipment to aid the response to coronavirus infections, the group said in a statement. PHAP said the donations benefitted more than 1.5 million families, and over 155 private and government hospitals nationwide. “Even as the global biopharmaceutical industry is leading the way in developing COVID- 19 vaccines, treatments and diagnostics, we are taking concrete actions to support the Philippine government’s COVID-19 response,” PHAP Executive Director Teodoro B. Padilla said in the statement. Its members also donated P8.5 million in cash and in-kind to its social responsibility arm, PHAPCares Foundation. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Let’s talk about drugs

Okay, the President has to issue EO 104 because of RA 9502.
But can Health Secretary Duque focus right away on implementing Section 4 of the EO?

We have apparently been so absorbed by COVID-19 and community quarantines over the past four months that the price controls on medicines and drugs that loomed in the last days of January slipped by unnoticed.

When I learned about the plan in late January, I wrote about market friendly ways of reducing medicine prices in my BW Introspective opinion of Jan. 27. At that time, President Rodrigo Duterte was still weighing Health Secretary Francisco Duque’s recommendation to impose price caps on pharmaceutical products.

President Duterte did approve Secretary Duque’s draft, now known as EO 104, on Feb. 17. Its impact was sidelined not by COVID-19, but by a 90-day grace period that allowed existing suppliers to dispose of their inventory at prevailing prices. That window closed last week.

What’s in the order? It imposed price caps on 133 medicines and drugs: 22 anti-hypertensives, 28 anti-diabetic drugs; 18 neoplastic and anti-cancer medicines; 16 immunosuppressant formulations; 11 analgesics; eightanti-asthmatic and chronic obstructive pulmonary (COPD) disease preparations; seven anticoagulants; three antianginal medicines; three agents affecting bone metabolism; three antiemetics; two psoriasis, seborrhea, and ichthyosis preparations; three antidepressants; and nine other medicines and drugs.

These pharmaceutical products meet any of the four following criteria set by the Department of Health (DoH): 1.) they address the health priorities of the general public especially those that account for the leading causes of morbidity and mortality; 2.) they have high price differentials/arbitrage compared to international prices; 3.) they have limited competition in terms of lack of generic counterparts or lack of market access to these products; and, 4.) they are innovator products which are most expensive yet most prescribed.

EO 104 imposes caps on both wholesale and retail prices.

All of us would like to see lower medicine prices in our country. In our healthcare system that is predominantly private sector-oriented, out of pocket costs particularly on medicines are about 50% of total. It is very likely that the majority of us could not afford the medicines our doctors prescribe.

Price controls would, however, bring more problems than benefits to patients. Like price controls imposed on other consumer items, which politicians are prone to price cap such as housing and food items, in the long run E.O. 104 would dry up the supply of medicines and drugs, reduce our country’s access to innovative pharmaceutical products, and would ultimately undermine the overall quality and integrity of the local pharmaceutical market.

If the purpose of the EO is to reduce out-of-pocket costs of medicines and make it more accessible to all of us, this short-term benefit would not be sustained. In the longer term, suppliers would be disincentivized by price controls, reducing the quantity supplied of these price-capped pharmaceutical products.

When supply gets scarce, black markets of medicines start to co-exist with formal markets. Patients start to search for suppliers of the medicines they need. The added search costs effectively raise access costs of patients to medicines and drugs.

Even the rich among us, who could import medicines abroad in desperation would likewise have added access costs. No formal private businesses, Filipino or multi-national, would import drugs and medicines because of price controls. If they cannot pass on to the market the real costs of these products, they would not be supplying these items.

Accordingly, importation would continue but inefficiently and at a higher cost. In the long run, the lower prices that EO 104 orders would not be sustained. It may not be farfetched to expect hearing in the not so distant future these same words, which we had heard from say a seller of rice, meats or fish in wet markets at prices set by the trade and industry or agricultural departments, “go and buy these medicines from the DoH at government prices.”

Secondly, price caps would undermine: the quality of the medicines and drugs sold locally. When the local market of price-capped pharmaceutical products gets to co-exist with black markets of badly needed drugs and medicines, the Food and Drug Administration would be unable to guarantee pharmaceutical quality.

This could be similar to the early years of the generics law, when patients were not enthusiastic over buying generic drugs and medicines because of their uncertain quality. When this problem occurs thanks to the EO 104, medicines cost would even shoot up because patients would have to pay additional cost in black markets to ensure quality.

Thirdly, all of the innovative medicines are manufactured abroad. Innovators price their medicines and drugs higher because they are recouping their investments in developing these innovative medicines and drugs. International and our national intellectual property laws do allow them to have a monopoly of selling the innovative drugs for about 21 years, for them to recover their R&D costs.

One of the DoH’s four criteria in selecting the drugs and medicines to be included in the EO is that the product is innovative, most prescribed, and priced highly. If price controls would not let these innovators recover their costs in our local market, our country may no longer be their priority market for the release of these innovative medicines and drugs. Just consider the implication of that when we need vaccines for COVID-19 in a year or two, and none are coming here because of price controls.

Fourthly, EO 104 may have disastrous effects on the supply chain of drugs and medicines. In the supply chain are giant retailers (or perhaps just one with more than half of the local retail market) of pharmaceutical products. Suppliers know that, and take care they would not incur the ire of these large retailers. With retail prices capped, it is expected that big retailers would just pass on to suppliers the burden of price controls by telling suppliers to price their products at wholesale prices set by the large retailers.

The incidence of the burden of price controls are likely to fall on suppliers, aggravating the disincentive effect of price controls on the supply of medicines and drugs, hastening the drying up of the local pharmaceutical market.

But let’s look at the smaller retailers in the provinces. They do not have the same market power as the large retailers and their locations require higher distribution costs. Suppliers in this case may be able to pass on the burden of price controls to smaller retailers. The incidence of price controls would then be shared by suppliers and the smaller retailers in the regions. But the former could weather the problem better than the latter, who would get squeezed between the price cap on retail prices of medicines and drugs, and the pass on costs of price controls to them by suppliers.

This could destroy the supply chain in the regions, reducing access to medicines and drugs of our people in those areas.

Is this then the reason why wholesale prices are likewise capped? To protect the smaller retailers in the region? Likely. But if suppliers are not getting a good net return from a regional market, they may just skip those markets. This may hasten the demise of small retailers.

According to some suppliers and a distributor, some small retailers did close shop in 2009, when price controls on medicines were first imposed.

Fifth, delivery delays of medicines would also occur. There are two major supply chain distributors linking the suppliers to the hospitals and other health care institutions, and pharmaceutical retailers. Both are experienced in the distribution of medicines and drugs. Because of them, the private sector led-supply chain is relatively efficient.

Their revenues are proportionate to the wholesale prices of suppliers. With lower wholesale prices, distributors’ revenues fall and with distribution costs remaining the same, their net incomes get squeezed. I talked to the CEO of one of these distributors. In the price cap in 2009, his company lost about P10 billion. The price cap then was less than 10% of the scale of EO 104.

With expected larger losses, these distribution companies would have to re-think their business model. One possibility is they may carve off their businesses to focus on outlets where they can make money — another reason why access to medicines may shrink because of price controls.

There is, however, one redeeming section of the EO, Section 4. It says “The DoH, in consultation with relevant government agencies, including the DTI (Department of Trade and Industry) and the Philippine Competition Commission, is hereby directed to study and propose measures, including, but not limited to pooled procurement, price negotiation, and other mechanisms, which will influence the supply, demand and expenditure on drugs and medicines, in accordance with RA No. 9502, and other relevant laws and regulations.”

Secretary Duque, let’s attend to this now, before these long-term negative effects (effects one through three) and the contemporaneous destructive effects on the supply chain of medicines and drugs in the country (effects four and five) of EO 104 become irreversible.

 

Ramon L. Clarete is a professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics.

COVID-19 as our ‘number one problem’

Said President Rodrigo Duterte:  “Perhaps our number one problem today is COVID.”

The President is tentative in his pronouncement by adding the adverb “perhaps” in his statement. His tentativeness is unusual; his unforgettable statements are marked with an air of boldness and an appearance of certainty. Some examples:

“Slaughter them.”

“Give me salt and vinegar, and I’ll eat his liver.”

“I don’t care if I burn in hell for as long as the people I serve live in paradise.”

So let me revise the President’s statement, by removing the modifier “perhaps.”

Our number one problem is COVID. Period. This statement frames the state of the nation.  Said another way, to borrow the language of the Left, the principal contradiction of Philippine society (and of the world, for that matter) is between the people and COVID-19.

The implication of this is that regardless of our ideological, political, religious, ethnic, and other affiliations, we all have to unite to fight and beat COVID-19.

Vice-President Leni Robredo has a firm grasp of this problem. Said in the early stage of COVID-19 transmission in the Philippines, Vice-President Leni’s video message was unequivocal:  Panahon ito ng pagtutulungan, hindi bangayan…. Binibigkis tayo ng isang layunin; kailangan nating magkaisa. [The time calls for cooperation, not hostility…. We are bound by one purpose; we have to unite.]

Some of the President’s men are blind to the call for unity. Recall the act of then Anti-Corruption Commissioner Manuelito Luna who asked the National Bureau of Investigation to probe the Vice-President’s initiatives in responding to the pandemic. It is to the credit of the President that he ordered the firing of Mr. Luna as Commissioner of the Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission for the unwanted statement. He appreciated the Vice-President’s cooperation to fight COVID-19.

This could have been the cue for unity and collective action. But the President, it seems, thrives in creating conflicts. To quote fellow columnist Diwa Guinigundo, the President is “picking untimely fights.”

The killing of suspects in the illicit drug trade continues. The all-out war against the Communist Party and radical activists is merciless, even resulting in the death of non-combatants. The administration has likewise divided and polarized society by threatening the media and denying ABS-CBN a broadcasting franchise; by allowing an anti-terror law to pass in a context where trust in the police and the military is low; and by launching a campaign for Charter change and term extension.

The art (or science) of war informs us to focus on the principal enemy. Thus during World War II, the forces of the “free world” and communism set aside incompatible differences and united to defeat the common main enemy that was fascism. In China, the warring Communist Party and the Kuomintang forged a united front to fight the Japanese aggression and occupation. In the Philippines, during the period of Martial Law, the communists and the anti-communist bourgeois democrats had tactical alliances to effectively fight the Marcos dictatorship.

COVID-19 undeniably is “the number one problem” today. It behooves us, especially the political administration, to avoid division in order to target the main enemy that is COVID-19.

The need for cooperation has all the more become urgent in the wake of the sharp spike in the COVID-19 transmission. Do note that it is in the most polarized countries like the US, Brazil, and India where a rampaging COVID-19 is overwhelming society.

Here, it is worth quoting the abstract of a preprint (forthcoming in the Canadian Journal of Political Science) titled  “A Rare Moment of Cross-Partisan Consensus: Elite and Public Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic in Canada,” authored by Eric Merkley, Aengus Bridgman, et al.:  “Effectively containing the pandemic requires a societal consensus. However, a long line of research in political science has told us that polarization tends to occur on highly salient topics because partisans ‘follow the leader.’ Elite consensus is thus essential to fight the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. We examine the degree of partisan consensus that exists in Canada at the level of political elites and the mass public…. Elite and public response to the COVID-19 pandemic can be characterized as a cross-partisan consensus.”

Sadly this kind of consensus is still absent in the Philippines. But it is not yet too late to have that elite and public consensus, a necessary condition to defeat our number one problem.

 

Filomeno S. Sta. Ana III coordinates the Action for Economic Reforms.

www.aer.ph

The leaning Tower of Babel

The Cyber Libel Law, or formally, the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, has caused more confusion than the clarification it should have given the libel laws of the Philippines through their evolution and refinement since the Revised Penal Code was enacted in the 1930s. The chaos is most pathetic in this restrictive time of the coronavirus pandemic, when limited human communication and interaction has forced people’s concentration on the internet — now the most convenient, and at times the only, means of talking to the outside world from imposed isolation.

The allegory of the Biblical Tower of Babel comes forth in this confusing time. The chilling lesson of human pride building its hierarchic ziggurat of layered reputations for one to reach Heaven first, by whatever means including stepping on others’ shoulders, can be seen as parallel to the quarrels of libel and slander in our modern times. “Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the sky, and so make a name for ourselves; otherwise we shall be scattered all over the earth,” the descendants of Noah said (Genesis 11:4). They had gone down from the Ark as it was beached on the mountain after the Great Flood receded, and went from the East (figuratively the Garden of Eden) towards the West (Babylonia), symbolic of degeneration from the cleansed state (after the Flood) to mundane temptations from the exercise of free will and individual differentiation and competition. It was about pride and reputation.

In the beginning “The whole world had the same language and the same words,” it is said in Genesis 11:1. But in the 18 years (estimated by some Bible historians) building the Tower of Babel with its many rooms (like a high rise condominium), quarrels started among the descendants of Noah, much like the story of George Orwell’s Animal Farm, where organization and administration schematics were being drawn for that aimed-for perfection in governance, but thwarted by individual selfishness.

God saw that they were bickering and maligning each other, and in His omniscience saw that their hearts were stricken with the sin of Pride — they wanted to be God — may the best man win. “So the Lord scattered them from there over all the earth, and they stopped building the city. That is why it was called Babel, because there the Lord confused the speech of all the world. (Genesis 11:8-9).

The curse of the Tower of Babel is what drives defamation laws of the world, to protect persons and their reputations from libelous or slanderous declarations of others. Juxtaposed are the freedoms of speech and of the press — basic human rights in democratic societies, drawing from the philosophical free will and intellect that direct life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness — from the break-out of the forced colonization of the Great Flood, when the Tower of Babel toppled and spilled the multi-lingual peoples of the new world. Different views ensued, resolved by ubiquitous politics.

There is always something that suffers in the translation, many have said only too often. And yet miscommunication can be an honest mistake, but a lie cannot ever be pardoned or easier forgotten for its affront to its recipient, be it an individual or to the public. The laws of defamation ask for motivation for the identifiable offense (publication, or at least 3rd person witness), and that is hard to establish by the affronted, and illogical for the libeler or slanderer to admit to. For this reason, many countries (like the US) have reduced libel to civil cases (guilt by a preponderance of evidence) from the earlier category of criminal cases or sins against the state/people establishing guilt by proof beyond reasonable doubt. In the Philippines, Libel is still a criminal case, although that may be good or bad depending on which side you are on — it is difficult to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the alleged defamation was motivated to defame, with no basis, or an outright lie. For the alleged libeler, “Truth is my defense,” but truth has to be proven with sources and evidence beyond reasonable doubt.

In newspapers and other media, the intrinsic element of publication constituting libel is most potentially incriminating. The journalistic What, When. Where, Why and How must be answered by the article, supported by evidence (it is actually occurring, or witnessed personally). So easily, “Truth is my defense,” the reporter can say. But of course “slant” can be suspected of the journalist — who can choose what elements of the story to emphasize, and details to omit or not tie up with an unspoken but implied conclusion. Biases, even subconscious preferences, especially on the higher level of values and personal principles cannot be avoided, though straight journalism must by professional ethics be objective and show both sides of an issue, if there is one, built into the story. Investigative journalism must have the integrity of truth.

For opinion writers/live media hosts, opinion which is slanderous, outright libelous or in any way defamatory is his/her own lookout, as the network or station always declares such opinion as separate and distinct to the writer/speaker and not shared by the company or its other employees and contractors. Freedom of speech and of the press is raised high with closed fists, and often closed minds in this area. Proceed at your own risk with libel and the law.

At the webinar “Libel and the Law” last week, motivations, two sides to an issue, proof beyond reasonable doubt, and difficulties with libel laws were discussed alongside technicalities of the law like the overriding prescriptive period within which to file libel cases. The audience was the restricted and isolated masses in coronavirus modified community quarantine, assumed to be already over-saturated with related news on the issues of the Cybercrime Prevention Law, the ABS-CBN franchise revocation, the warrantless arrests of the Anti-Terrorist Act, amidst updates on the rising numbers of COVID-19 contamination, deaths, and recoveries. The webinar focused on the technical incongruences of the decision of Judge Rainelda Estacio-Montesa, who convicted Rappler CEO Maria Ressa and former Rappler researcher Reynaldo Santos, Jr. for cyber libel committed in 2014 on Wilfredo Keng, a businessman and the private complainant, who was reportedly under surveillance for human trafficking and drug smuggling in 2012.

“The (Cyber Crime) Law should be stabilizing, but it is now the cause of dissention,” said lawyer Geronimo Sy, main speaker at the webinar. He pointed out that the CyberCrime Prevention Act started in 2008 with discussions on spam and other internet fraud, and lay quite dormant in Congress until 2012 when legislators decided hurriedly “to include at the last minute cyber libel, because (some) legislators were being pilloried in the media” at that time. Related law is the Bayanihan Act of 2020, which deals with “Fake News,” mostly on social media, also hastily put together by our legislators, Mr. Sy said. He stressed that “libel laws should once and for all be re-hashed and consolidated.” His parting words were, “Fair criticism should be OK and the higher an official goes, the official should be able to take it. Legislators are not able to account for bad laws.”

Retired Supreme Court Senior Justice Antonio T. Carpio, a panelist at the “Libel and the Law” webinar, emphasized two points: First, the 12-year prescription period is the “overriding issue in the Rappler case.” Cyber libel is not a new case but the same as a traditional libel case with merely a new medium/method (the computer, internet). The one-year prescriptive period for filing holds for cyber libel as it has for all libel cases since the Revised Penal Code of 1932 to now. The disputed Rappler article was published May 2012, which means complainant Wilfredo Keng had the right to sue only until May 2013. After Rappler corrected a typo in the story in February 2014, Keng then had the chance to sue until February 2015 (Rappler, June 16, 2020).

Justice Carpio’s second point, the elusiveness of social media and the internet: what of online newspapers and postings, when authors are sometimes anonymous or use aliases? The editors/publishers should verify news or claims and declarations — ultimately, the editors/publishers are liable. And finally, on the burden of proof in a libel case: in the libel of a private person, the burden of proof is on the libeler; in the libel of a public person, the burden of proof is on the public person.

Marites Vitug, veteran journalist and co-founder of Newsbreak magazine, and panelist at the same webinar, took up from Justice Carpio’s last statement on the public accountability of government officials. She had libel cases filed against her by at least five public persons in the terms of three presidents: Corazon Aquino, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and Benigno Simeon Aquino III. Some are under arbitration, some still ongoing.

The allegory of the Tower of Babel persists in today’s quarrels for standing and reputation. The Tower leans, and again threatens to keel. Why do laws have to be so politicized?

 

Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

The full economic impact of the virus

The full economic impact of the Wuhan pandemic is still unravelling. As we go from month to month, we are discovering that the ramifications are worse than we thought.

The Asset Management Group of BDO recently presented its prognosis before the members of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines. It was not a pretty picture — in fact, it was rather bleak.

Although the statistics for the second quarter have not yet been published by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA), the country’s biggest bank has determined that the economy contracted by as much as 15.4% during that period. And since the quarantine has spilled-over through the third quarter in NCR, Calabarzon and the Central Visayas (which comprises two-thirds of gross domestic product), the third quarter is seen to post another contraction of 6.7%. Negative growth will ease to 1% in the fourth quarter, but this is on the assumption that quarantine is relaxed. All these will result in a whole year contraction of 5.9% for 2020.

The four successive quarters of negative growth have officially put the country in a state of recession. The last time we experienced such deep economic reversals was in 1984 and 1985 when the economy withered in size by 7.3% for two consecutive years. While it took the country 25 years to recover from the economic havoc of the 1980s, economists believe that we can regain our strong pre-COVID fundamentals in less than five years. This is on the proviso that a vaccine is discovered next year and that the government rolls-out its P1.7-trillion stimulus package as planned. Household consumption, government consumption, and public and private construction will fuel the recovery.

As of today, however, BDO sees a long and slow U-shaped recovery. It predicts growth in 2021 will be only 3.3% and 4.5% in 2022 (the latter is the estimate of the Ateneo Business school). The slow recovery is due to delays in government spending, sustained unemployment, and an anticipated second-wave lockdown.

The painful reality is that despite having appropriated P1.7 trillion to stimulate the economy and provide immediate relief to sectors in distress, the government has failed to cascade the lion’s share of the funds for their intended purpose. This is due to the lack of absorptive capacities of government institutions, inefficiency in operations, and, to a lesser extent, corruption. For instance, the majority of small and medium sized enterprises (SME) have yet to obtain access to credit and emergency loans. The majority of the 400,000 returning OFWs have yet to receive their cash assistance. Funds appropriated for training and livelihood of SMEs is hardly felt. Even infrastructure spending, the sector counted on by the government to stimulate the economy, is lagging behind. Again, I emphasize, government spending is key to a quick recovery.

The pandemic has so far driven 7.911 million Filipinos into unemployment. Add to this 400,000 OFWs who have returned and another 300,000 who are expected to be repatriated. By the end of the third quarter, unemployment will likely hit 9 million.

Meanwhile, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said that more than 2,000 firms have already declared bankruptcy and have closed permanently (this number is massively understated). With so many companies going belly up due to the lack of government subsidies, who, then, will absorb the 9 million unemployed when conditions improve? This is the conundrum we face.

Exacerbating matters further is that surviving companies have implemented cash saving measures to arm themselves against the uncertainties of the pandemic. Capital expenditures (business expansion) have been slashed if not put on hold. There are no new jobs. On the contrary, we can expect more retrenchments.

This is why experts believe our recovery will be long and slow.

We are a consumer-driven economy with 72% of economic output attributed to private consumption. Consumption plunged by 15.1% in the second quarter and is seen to stay in negative territory in the 3rd and 4th quarters at a rate of 8.2% and 3.2%, respectively.

Manufacturing output dropped by 44% (PMI from 140 to 78) from February to March. It improved minutely in May. Manufacturing companies are operating at an average of 30% capacity today.

Fixed capital dropped by 55.2% in the second quarter due to the stoppage of work. A cause for worry is that Build, Build, Build is not yet in full swing in the 3rd quarter. This is why BDO anticipates a further shrinkage in fixed capital by 14.7% and 6.4% in the 3rd and 4th quarters, respectively.

Hardest hits are retail, wholesale, recreation (arts and sports), and tourism activities, which dropped by 84% in the early days of the quarantine. Even the DTI admits that establishments that are operating today only realize an average of 10% of their pre-COVID sales. Without government support or subsidies, thousands of retailers, wholesalers, restaurateurs, hotels and entertainment enterprises will either close their doors permanently or downsize massively.

Government borrowings to combat the pandemic have reached P386 billion ($7.73 billion) as of this writing. The aggressive borrowing will cause our fiscal deficit to deteriorate from 8.4% to 10%, worst case.

As far as the stock market is concerned, the collective value of stocks dropped by 19.8% during the early days of the quarantine. Listed companies were trading at an average of 9.3 times their price-earnings. Values have since recovered. BDO sees the PSE Index ending at 6,600 this year.

On the positive side, Inflation is seen to be benign at 2.3% this year due to low oil prices and low interest rates. BDO sees the peso emerging as the strongest currency in the region. It has already appreciated by 2.4% in the first seven months of the year due to the low demand for dollars. The peso’s value against the US dollar should be in the region of P49.70 by year end. Gross International Reserves are healthy at $93 billion, sufficient for 8.5 months of imports. This is because the Banco Sentral has stepped up its borrowings to beef up its war chest versus the pandemic.

Government holds the key to our recovery. It will be long and slow if nothing changes. It can be quick if it does four things: 1.) save our entrepreneurs from bankruptcies; 2.) cascade the stimulus package as planned; 3.) go full blast with Build, Build, Build; and, 4.) restore consumer confidence by isolating the quarantine to barangay level, not whole cities. Let’s hope the government ticks all the boxes.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

Korea’s elite contact tracers show the world how to beat COVID-19

IN May, when a coronavirus outbreak hit nightclubs in the South Korean capital of Seoul, health officials quickly unleashed their version of the Navy Seals — elite teams of epidemiologists, database specialists and laboratory technicians.

An old-school, shoe-leather investigation showed the virus had jumped from a night-club visitor, to a student, to a taxi driver and then alarmingly to a warehouse employee who worked with 4,000 others.

Thousands of the employee’s co-workers, their family members and contacts were approached and 9,000 people were eventually tested. Two weeks later, the warehouse flareup was mostly extinguished and infections curtailed at 152.

The work of such so-called Immediate Response Teams offers a look at how South Korea — once the second-worst hit by the coronavirus — has succeeded in largely quelling its spread without the lockdowns that have derailed lives worldwide. At a time when cities from Los Angeles to Melbourne to Tokyo are grappling with resurgences, South Korea’s playbook offers one of the most successful blueprints yet for containing a disease that’s killed more than 600,000 worldwide.

The tally of new cases in the Asian country — which pioneered the testing blitz strategy — has never fallen to zero, but the number of daily new cases have largely ranged from 30 to 60 for two months after peaking at more than 800 in February. Compare that with Los Angeles county, which added 2,014 cases on Thursday alone.

South Korea’s strategy is also a contrast with the harsh shutdowns instituted in parts of China or the tourism blockade implemented by New Zealand in an attempt to completely stamp out the virus. The Asian nation meticulously targets dangerous hotspots and then simply allows most people to lead lives and run businesses unimpeded.

“We step in when there’s a chance of large-scale transmission and our main work is to find the connecting links between cases and prevent a flareup,” said Kwon Donghyok, deputy scientific director at the country’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who oversees the investigative squads. “Finding potential contacts and investigating the cause of infection are the backbone of what we do.”

The country now has one of the lowest rates for infections with unknown origin, at about 8%, compared to more than 50% for other countries with recent virus resurgences. Flareups have shrunk from a weekly average of about a dozen to less than six this week.

SUCCESSFUL STRATEGY
South Korea has a successful strategy because it learned from the bitter experience of the past, something Western countries didn’t have the benefit of. The bulk of its more than 14,000 cases and nearly 300 deaths are related to the flareup at a religious sect in February and March. Since then, processes developed after the country’s 2015 outbreak of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome have helped it prevent a second wave of the new coronavirus.

South Korea’s CDC has about 100 epidemiology investigators, up from just two during the MERS outbreak. During a large potential outbreak, several are pulled for the Immediate Response Team, which usually has about six to eight members.

On any given day, officials investigate potential flareups at diverse locations from church group gatherings to clubs for badminton or exotic cars. Infections at low-risk facilities are first handled by municipal health officials, while an Immediate Response Team is called in for high-risk locations.

Other nations have also taken steps to trace contacts and widen testing, with countries like Taiwan and Germany successfully screening to curb the virus. But some have had more difficulty recently. Infections in Melbourne spiked to a record this month because its efforts weren’t suitably designed for its migrant population. India has had some success in following contacts and curtailing an outbreak in the Mumbai slum of Dharavi, but replicating that across the breadth of a country with 1.3 billion people has proven to be hard.

“The key strength of South Korea’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic is its ability to do a thorough epidemiology investigation on every patient,” said Jung Ki-suck, a former CDC director and now professor at Hallym University Medical Center, referring to the detailed public health tracing conducted by officials. “The epidemiology investigation has never been so important because we can reduce the size of outbreaks and even block new cases from occurring.”

That exhaustive and meticulous investigation strategy paid off when investigators were able to trace the warehouse outbreak after following a flareup at nightclubs in the trendy Itaewon neighborhood, said Kwon, who investigated the MERS outbreak and was in Rio de Janeiro to investigate potential outbreak of the Zika virus during the 2016 Olympics.

The CDC discovered that a nightclub visitor who was a private tutor spread the virus to one of his students. The student, who was unaware of the infection, used a coin-operated karaoke room, transmitting the virus to a taxi-driver singing in an adjoining room.

The taxi-driver also worked as a part-time photographer and took photos of a birthday party at a buffet restaurant in the area where the distribution center is located.

Through surveillance footage and mobile phone records, investigators contacted everyone who had been at the restaurant around the time of the birthday party. Among those who were infected at the restaurant was a woman who had worked for a day at the warehouse.

To be sure, some of the tactics used in South Korea, which has a population of about 51 million, might be difficult to replicate in vastly populated emerging countries. And the Asian country has benefitted from surveillance technology that might not be acceptable to citizens of many Western nations.

Tracing potential contacts in South Korea involved reviewing hundreds of hours of surveillance camera footage and going through mobile phone and credit card transactions. So-called CCTVs are ubiquitous in South Korea as virtually all streets and workplaces have them.

“Other countries simply don’t have the capacity to do these thorough investigations on patients,” said Jung, the former CDC director. “We had a smaller absolute number of cases than other nations, but more importantly, the social norm, where people are okay with their privacy being infringed for the wider public interest, allowed comprehensive investigations, which is just unimaginable in western countries.”

South Korea has said it’s expecting some spike in cases among construction workers returning from virus hit Iraq and more cases from a Russian ship at one of its ports. While those are mostly imported cases brought in from the outside, South Korea’s virus squad knows how tenuous its gains are, and the importance of vigilance. Many countries, including Asia’s financial capital, Hong Kong, have successfully beaten back the virus for months, only to see it make a sudden comeback.

“Any mass infections we have witnessed have happened in the blink of an eye,” Kwon said. “If we miss a tiny piece of a link or let a small detail slip by, we’ll for sure be experiencing a resurgence in cases.” — Bloomberg

North Korea’s Kim declares lockdown in border town

SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un declared an emergency and a lockdown in a border town after a person suspected of being infected with the novel coronavirus returned from South Korea after illegally crossing the border, state media said on Sunday.

If confirmed, it would be the first case officially acknowledged by North Korean authorities.

Kim convened an emergency politburo meeting in response to what he called a “critical situation in which the vicious virus could be said to have entered the country,” the North’s KCNA state news reported.

A person who defected to South Korea three years ago returned across the fortified border that divides the two Koreas to the town of Kaesong this month with symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, KCNA reported.

“An emergency event happened in Kaesong City where a runaway who went to the south three years ago, a person who is suspected to have been infected with the vicious virus returned on July 19 after illegally crossing the demarcation line,” KCNA said.

KCNA did not say if the person had been tested, but said an “uncertain result was made from several medical check-ups of the secretion of that person’s upper respiratory organ and blood,” prompting officials to quarantine the person and investigate anyone he may have been in contact with.

One analyst said the announcement was important, not only because North Korea was for the first time reporting a suspected coronavirus case but also because it suggested it was appealing for help. 

“It’s an ice-breaking moment for North Korea to admit a case,” said Choo Jae-woo, a professor at Kyung Hee University.

“It could be reaching out to the world for help. Perhaps for humanitarian assistance.”

North Korea is under huge economic pressure because of international sanctions over its nuclear program.

Cho Han-bum, a senior fellow at the Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul, said it was significant that North Korea was reporting its first suspected coronavirus case was imported.

“North Korea is in such a dire situation, where they can’t even finish building the Pyongyang General Hospital on time. Pointing the blame at an ‘imported case’ from South Korea, the North can use this as a way to openly accept aid from the South,” Cho said.

KCNA did not elaborate on how the “runaway” had crossed one of the world’s most heavily guarded borders but said the incident was being investigated and the military unit responsible would face “severe punishment.”

South Korean officials were checking to see if a defector had indeed crossed back into the North this month, the South’s Yonhap news agency reported.

North Korea has received thousands of coronavirus testing kits from Russia and other countries and imposed strict border closures.

Thousands of people in North Korea were also quarantined as it took precautions to prevent a coronavirus outbreak but restrictions had recently been eased. — Reuters

Italy’s Lombardy region denies allegations of fraud over COVID medical gear

MILAN — The governor of Lombardy, the Italian region hardest hit by the coronavirus, denied wrongdoing on Saturday after he was placed under investigation for suspected fraud over a supply of medical equipment from a company owned by his brother-in-law.

Magistrates are investigating Attilio Fontana, 68, a member of the right-wing League party, over a 250,000 euro payment to the company, in which Mr. Fontana’s wife has a 10% stake, Fontana’s lawyer Jacopo Pensa confirmed on Saturday.

Pensa told reporters Mr. Fontana denied wrongdoing.

The Lombardy region had ordered 75,000 surgical gowns and 7,000 sanitising kits from the company in a contract worth about 500,000 in April. The company later decided to donate a first batch of 50,000 gowns instead of taking money for them.

Fontana then ordered a bank transfer of 250,000 euros from his own private account in Switzerland to his brother-in-law. The payment was blocked by one of the banks, which notified financial police.

Messrs. Pensa said Fontana wanted to compensate his brother-in-law for the loss of profit he suffered by converting the purchase into a donation.

League leader Matteo Salvini, a former interior minister, defended Fontana, saying the magistrates were politically motivated. Opposition parties called on Mr. Fontana to resign.

About half of Italy’s 35,000 deaths due to the coronavirus have been in Lombardy, Italy’s northern industrial and financial heartland. — Reuters