Friday, April 19, 2024

Retards in the Government 361

It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption in the Philippine government.

 


 

https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/11/3-laguna-cops-probed-for-involvement-in-kidnapping

Three policemen assigned to the Calamba City, Laguna Police Office are under investigation for their alleged involvement in the kidnapping of a 54-year-old man in Los Banos, Laguna on March 26.

The Police Regional Office 4-A led by Police Brig. Gen. Paul Kenneth Lucas ordered on Tuesday, April 9, a comprehensive investigation on the incident.

The Los Baños Police Station said Erwin Española Magbanua reported that his youngest brother, Randy Magbanua, from Barangay Lalakay, Los Banos, has been missing since March 26.

Randy was last seen on the national road in Barangay Lalakay.

Police conducted an investigation and backtracking of surveillance footage on the national highway and adjacent areas.

They found out that Randy was abducted by eight individuals on board a black Toyota Wigo and motorcycle. The suspects fled towards Calamba City.

Follow-up investigation resulted in a witness identifying two Persons of Interest (POI) – Burda and Naredo. Six other POIs are under investigation for possible proof of identity.

The Laguna Police Provincial Office found out that three POIs were police officers based on witness and surveillance footage in area.

They were assigned to the Calamba City Police Station and immediately relieved from their posts and placed under the Provincial Headquarters Administrative Holding Center pending investigation. 

Lucas ordered a deeper probe into the roles and actions of the three lawmen.

“We are committed to leaving no stone unturned in the pursuit of truth and justice for the families of the missing persons. Every effort is being made to ascertain the whereabouts and ensure the safety of the missing individual, and those responsible for any wrongdoing will be brought to justice,” Lucas said.

Police are also determining if the three police officers are linked to another missing persons incident in Calamba City.

3 PNP officers are being probed for kidnapping and links to another missing person.

https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/11/coa-flags-lack-of-responsive-actions-in-times-of-calamities

The Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged the officials of Ramos town in Tarlac for "lack of responsiveness to the real needs of residents' when 90 percent of the town's farmlands were inundated and 1,126 families were affected by typhoons "Egay" and "Falcon" in July and August 2023.

In its 2023 audit report, COA scrutinized the municipality's Local Disaster Risk Reduction and Management (LDRRM) fund utilization.

It said its auditors found that the municipality appropriated P5,326,229 as its LDRRM fund for 2023. However, they noticed that the municipality simply adopted the same programs, projects, and activities (PPAs) from its 2021 LDRRM plan.

For the COA, the findings showed a "lack of responsiveness by the management to the real needs of its constituents."

COA's audit report showed that 15 out of the 20 PPAs were implemented, while five PPAs with a total appropriation of P1,025,654.97 were still not implemented as of Dec. 31, 2023.

These unimplemented PPAs included the purchase of swab testing kits, purchase of Covid-19 vaccines, purchase of subsidized vegetable seeds, climate and disaster risk assessment (CDRA) training, and titling of acquired lots.

"The non-implementation of identified PPAs for the cited reasons may be indication that the planned PPAs were again not responsive to the real needs of the constituents," the report also said.

At the same time, COA said that the auditors found that the municipality stored 21 cavans of rice as part of its rice subsidy program. Unfortunately, these were "already infested with insects and were still in the municipality's stock room," it said.

Another concern raised was the incomplete details submitted in the distribution list for various medicines, dengue solution, palay seeds, and relief goods. While the municipality was able to provide auditors copies of distribution lists, these were found to be incomplete, COA said.

It said: "One common observation was that the submitted distribution lists lacked necessary details such as quantity and type of items received. Also, several pages of the list do not bear the signature of the recipients, their respective addresses, and the date of receipt," the report said. "These deficiencies precluded the audit team from timely verifying the transactions."

COA asked officials of Ramon town to complete all the necessary details in the supporting distribution list in order to help them conduct its validation, as well as design guidelines on distributing farm inputs to farmers for approval in order to prevent excessive disbursements and other future complaints.

Also, it said that concerned town officials should closely monitor perishable goods like rice so as to avoid spoilage.

The Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged the officials of Ramos town in Tarlac for "lack of responsiveness to the real needs of residents' when 90 percent of the town's farmlands were inundated and 1,126 families were affected by typhoons "Egay" and "Falcon" in July and August 2023.

The Office of the President (OP) placed Davao del Norte Governor Edwin Jubahib under preventive suspension for 60 days starting April 11.

In an interview Thursday, Abdullah Matalam, the Department of the Interior and Local Government in Davao Region (DILG-11) regional director said Vice Governor De Carlo Uy will serve as acting governor of Davao del Norte for 60 days while Jubahib is still suspended.

"The suspension order came from the Office of the President. We followed the order, and we just did our job. It's nothing personal," he said.

The order was the result of the Nov. 24, 2022, affidavit complaint filed by Board Member Orly Amit against Jubahib for grave abuse of authority and oppression and the latter's Oct. 9, 2023, answer.

Amit filed the complaint against the governor in connection with last year's barangay elections in the area.

"After a preliminary evaluation and consideration of the parties' allegations and evidence, this Office finds strong evidence of guilt against Gov. Jubahib. Likewise, given the gravity of the offense charged, there is a great probability that his continuance in office could influence the witnesses or pose a threat to the safety and integrity of the records and other evidence," the April 8, 2024 order signed by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin said.

The order was under Section 63 (a) of Republic Act No. 7160, otherwise known as the "Local Government Code of 1991", and Section 1, Rule 6 of Administrative Order No. 23, s. 1992.

The Office of the President (OP) placed Davao del Norte Governor Edwin Jubahib under preventive suspension for 60 days starting April 11.

A barangay public safety officer was killed while two others, including a policeman, were wounded when a man went on a stabbing spree in Quezon City on Wednesday.

The victim, Vinalita Salazar, 45, of Barangay Payatas-A, and another barangay officer, Ronaldo Mataya,  51, went to Morning Star street at around 1:30 p.m. in response to a call about an unruly person in the area.

Probers identified the suspect as Wilfredo Belgera, 41, whom Salazar and Mataya confronted for his behavior.Thinking they had pacified Belgera, the watchmen turned to leave when the suspect stabbed them.

Executive M/Sgt. Roel Relox, a resident of the area, responded to the scene but was stabbed by the suspect in the left arm and stomach.

Bystanders ganged up on Belgera and subdued the suspect.

Belgera is facing criminal charges of murder and frustrated murder. He is recuperating in another hospital in Quezon City.

A barangay public safety officer was killed while two others, including a policeman, were wounded when a man went on a stabbing spree in Quezon City on Wednesday.

https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/11/awol-cop-nabbed-for-bobbing-fast-food-restaurant

A policeman who had gone Absent Without Official Leave was nabbed for allegedly robbing a fast food restaurant in Carigara, Leyte, on Wednesday, April 10.

The suspect was identified as Salvador Humbria, 37, formerly assigned to the Leyte Police Provincial Office and a resident of Barangay Ponong, Carigara.

Police said that the suspect suddenly approached the cashier at gunpoint and declared a holdup.

The suspect grabbed cash from the cash register amounting to P2,580 and fled to an unknown direction.

Lawmen caught the suspect in a hot-pursuit operation on Thursday, April 11, in Barangay Ponong.

Suspect face appropriate charges.

A policeman who had gone Absent Without Official Leave was nabbed for allegedly robbing a fast food restaurant in Carigara, Leyte, on Wednesday, April 10.

Two policemen were arrested in Cotabato City on Friday for allegedly extorting money from a motorist in exchange for his impounded vehicle.

M/Sgt. Nassrolah Abdula Gani and Executive M/Sgt. Benigno Mercado Jr. were apprehended by operatives of the police Integrity Monitoring and Enforcement Group (IMEG) in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in Barangay Rosary Heights I at 7:05 p.m.

IMEG director Brig. Gen. Warren de Leon said police conducted an entrapment in response to a complaint of an engineer.

The victim said the policemen and his four cohorts asked for P50,000 in exchange for the release of his vehicle, a green Honda Civic, which was impounded for an unspecified violation.

The suspects were held after they accepted P20,000 in marked money from the victim. Two cell phones, a 9mm handgun and a Galil rifle were also seized from the two.

Two cops have been arrested for extortion.

https://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/mayor-cortes-4-other-mandaue-officials-face-raps-for-allegedly-turning-private-lot-into-relocation-site

CRIMINAL charges have been brought against five Mandaue City officials in connection with the 9.5 hectares of land that reportedly belong to a private individual but were distributed to the informal settlers.

Maria Priscilla Melendres filed the charges against Mayor Jonas Cortes and city councilors Maline Zafra, Oscar Del Castillo, Jen Del Mar, and Cynthia Remedio at the Office of Ombudsman Samuel Reyes Martires in Quezon City on March 16, 2024, for violating Section 3 of Republic Act 3019, also known as the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.

In the case of "oppression, gross misconduct in office, and grave abuse of authority" Melendres also filed a separate complaint at the Office of the President. 

The plaintiff requested President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. to put those officials involved under preventive suspension, while the case is being heard so that they could not influence the witnesses and threaten those who handle the investigation.

"The respondents could influence the witnesses or pose a threat to the safety and integrity of the records and other evidence," read part of Melendres' complaint.

But according to lawyer Julius Caesar Entice, the city's Assistant City Assessor, the city has the right to own the land because it is classified as timberland, which means that a private individual cannot own it. 

In spite of that, Melendres, a resident of Barangay Lahug in Cebu City, insisted that they own the lot located in Barangay Paknaan, which has been used as a relocation site for informal settlers.

Melendres said the land was owned by his grandmother and was sold to her.

According to Melendres, more than 100 houses have already been built in the area. 

She revealed that the tax declaration which she filed was also registered under her name and was recognized by the city government. 

She added that the City Assessor’s Office also recognized her as the real owner based on the Real Property Tax Statement that she filed.

Melendres stated that she had further paid P100,291.50 for the lot's increased assessment price. 

Additionally, Melendres filed a complaint against Cortes, which is still pending at the Municipal Trial Court in Cities 2 in Mandaue. 

Melendres believes that the respondents ignored the legal process and proceeded in awarding the lots to the informal settlers even though the ejection case was still pending.

Melendres also accused the city of destroying the fence that she installed in the area.

The Mayor of Mandaue City and four other officials are being sued for using private land as a relocation area.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2024/04/13/2347231/teacher-slain-zamboanga-del-sur-ambush

A high school teacher was killed in an ambush in Mahayag, Zamboanga del Sur on Thursday.

Jerome Etorma of Dumingag National High School was driving home on his motorcycle when he was waylaid in Barangay Boniao, according to reports reaching the office of Zamboanga del Sur police director Col. Restituto Pangusban.

Etorma suffered multiple gunshot wounds and died at the scene.

Probers have yet to determine the motive for the killing.

Relatives and co-workers of Etorma said the victim had no known enemies.

A high school teacher has been assassinated. 

https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/16/eastern-samar-contract-workers-not-only-paid-below-minimum-wage-payment-of-salaries-delayed-in-2023-coa

Contract of Service (COS) and Job Order (JO) personnel hired by Eastern Samar province were were not only paid below the daily minimum wage, but worse, their salaries were always delayed in 2023, the Commission on Audit (COA) said. 

In its annual audit report, COA said that when the audit team checked the disbursement vouchers (DVs), payrolls, and supporting documents attached to the payments of wages of COS and JO personnel, they discovered delays in the payments of wages.

"The payments of wages of COS/JO personnel were late, depriving them of the timely release of their compensation to support their daily needs and expenses. The elapsed time of processing payrolls and DVs for the payment of COS/JO personnel wages for the period January to November 2023, ranged from six to 279 days, thus causing delayed payment by one day to 263 days," COA said in its report. 

It said the province's accounting office explained that the delay was due to late submission of the required supporting documents by the personnel in charge of preparing payrolls, such as Contract of Service and Daily Time Records. However, this was unacceptable to the audit team, it also said.

"The foregoing delay in the payment of wages would ultimately cause undue burden/inconvenience to the CSO/JO personnel, affecting their focus and performance at work," it pointed out.

As if the delays were not bad enough, COA said its audit team even found that wages paid were below the minimum daily rate. For the period of January to April 2023, around 1,923 COS/JO personnel were paid below the minimum daily wage rate of P375.

All the personnel, ranging from those working for the Provincial Health Office to the provincial-paid teachers from various schools, received only P300 as their daily wage, it stressed.

It noted:  "The additional compensation could have helped them support their daily needs and expenses. Further, an increase in their wages will also promote an increase in these personnel's morale."

It recommended that the local chief executive direct all officials concerned to streamline the payroll-related process by addressing any problems in the procedure to reduce delays.

It also asked them to comply with the mandated daily minimum wage at rates prescribed by the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Boards in Contracts of Service in the future.

Contract of Service (COS) and Job Order (JO) personnel hired by Eastern Samar province were were not only paid below the daily minimum wage, but worse, their salaries were always delayed in 2023, the Commission on Audit (COA) said. 

Approximately 30 city government personnel assigned to the Bacolod Traffic Authority Office (BTAO) have been dismissed from their positions due to alleged corrupt activities while performing their duties.

Patrick Lacson, head of BTAO, said that since he assumed the post in November of the previous year, 30 job order casual employees have been removed.

Additionally, some regular employees were allegedly involved in illegal activities. However, they will be reassigned to the Public Order and Safety Office (POSO) due to their status as regular government employees.

“There was a violation, so they were transferred to POSO and have also been assessed by POSO head Primitivo Tabujara,” said Lacson.

He further said BTAO observes the “one-strike” policy against illegal activities involving its personnel to discourage corruption.

The head of BTAO issued an unnumbered memorandum dated April 16, addressed to all BTAO personnel: “All personnel caught engaging in illegal activities will be summarily terminated and face legal charges from the City Legal Office (CLO).”

But Lacson also noted that there was a consensus that termination should not be the only consequence for those caught in illegal activities.

Additional repercussions should be implemented, including filing charges, he added.

30 job order BATO personnel and several regular BATO personnel have been axed for corruption. 

https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/17/ombudsman-orders-dismissal-of-bfar-national-director-escoto

The Office of the Ombudsman has ordered the dismissal of National Director Demosthenes R. Escoto of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) for grave misconduct over the purchases of transmitters and transceivers in 2018.

The penalty of dismissal also carries with it the cancellation of eligibility, forfeiture of retirement benefits, and perpetual disqualification to hold public office.

The administrative charge against former Department of Agriculture (DA) assistant secretary Hansel O. Didulo has been dismissed for insufficiency of evidence. BFAR is under the DA.

The purchases of transmitters and transceivers, which were subject of Escoto's administrative charges, were intended for the BFAR's Integrated Marine Environment Monitoring System Project Phase II (PHILO Project), which was supposed to enhance the government's capability to safeguard and monitor the country's marine resources and to combat illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing activities.


The French government granted a loan to the Philippine government amounting to €28,520,000 on Dec. 18, 2015 payable in 30 years with an interest rate of 0.115 percent per annum in order to finance the PHILO Project. The condition of the loan was that the source of the products to be purchased for the PHILO Project must originate from French suppliers.

Two companies participated in the bidding for the transmitters and transceivers: CLS Collecte Localisation Satellites (CLS) and SRT-France, a subsidiary company of SRT-United Kingdom (SRT-UK) incorporated in France. After checking the bids, the former was disqualified and the latter was declared the winner of the contract.

However, when the French Embassy in the Philippines checked, it declared that SRT-France was unqualified under the terms of its loan since SRT-France has no manufacturing or engineering facilities in France. It also has no record of activities in France, and its parent company is incorporated and domiciled in the UK.

The BFAR then sought to increase the project cost from P1.675 billion to P2,097 billion and to close the French loan. It also sought to change the funding source from foreign assistance to local funding, which was later approved by the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) - Investment Coordination Committee (ICC).

The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) then alloted P2,097,819,000 for the PHILO project as requested, and the final procurement for the transceivers took place on Oct. 30, 2018. Around 5,000 transceivers were purchased for commercial catcher vessels above 30 gross tons and Satellite Services subscription during the entire duration of the project.

Since the contract was no longer limited to French suppliers, the participants to the bidding were Fleet Automation Services Pte. Ltd. JV Comfac Corporation and SRT-UK. Since Fleet Automation was found "wanting" in qualification, SRT-UK was awarded the contract.

However, the Commission on Audit (COA) issued a Notice of Suspension on Jan. 24, 2020 claiming that a portion of the money paid to SRT-UK worth P722.639 million was not supported with complete documents, and that there was failure to pay the appropriate withholding tax.

Escoto and Didulo were then slapped with administrative charges for accepting the bid of SRT-UK and causing the loss of the French loan. They were also accused of failing to account for the P722.639 million and for adopting a project that is not "sustainable."

For the Ombudsman, SRT-France was indeed not qualified to participate in the bidding. It added that an "anomalous scheme" was adopted by the respondent (Escoto) to cause the award of the contract to SRT-UK, even though it was disadvantageous to the government.

The Ombudsman said that their suspicions were raised at the outset that SRT-UK was really the bidder for the transceivers, and SRT-France was only used to satisfy the French-related conditions of the loan.

"Despite knowledge of the French-related conditions, the newly created French company, and with no proof of activities in France, [SRT-France] made use of the documents pertaining to its parent company (SRT-UK) to justify its eligibility to bid. These documents were found to be acceptable by Escoto," the Ombudsman said.

It found that SRT-France was created just a month before the bidding. With the sudden termination of the award to SRT-France for some "baseless reason," as well as the immediate cancellation of the French loan, the Ombudsman said that Escoto paved the way for SRT-UK to participate in the new bidding with expanded scope and increased coverage. 

The Ombudsman added that Escoto gave unwarranted benefit to SRT-France by allowing the company to participate in the bid despite its ineligibility, and his actions constitutes a "willful violation of the law and established rule."

"His actions as Chairman of the bids and awards committee culminated in the award of a very favorable contract to SRT-UK. In this contract, the government was made to assume a contractual obligation way beyond what was asked for. As mentioned, instead of purchasing merely 3,736 units of VMS Transceivers, he agreed to compel the government to procure 5,000 units of these items. This is a contractual obligation that is grossly disadvantageous to the government and unreasonably beneficial to SRT-UK," it ruled. 

The Office of the Ombudsman has ordered the dismissal of National Director Demosthenes R. Escoto of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) for grave misconduct over the purchases of transmitters and transceivers in 2018.

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Coronavirus Lockdown: Mental Health, US' Contribution, and More!

More news about how the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines is being handled by the public and the government.

President Marcos recently visited the USA and touting the Philippines' pandemic recovery before the Philippine-US Business Forum in Washington DC thanked the US for contributing to the Philippines' economy.   

https://pco.gov.ph/news_releases/pbbm-touts-phs-post-pandemic-recovery-highlights-us-contribution-to-admins-economic-agenda/

President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Friday touted the Philippines’ strong post-pandemic economic recovery, being one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia.

“On the economy, I would like to share with you that for 2023, the Philippines achieved a 5.6 percent annual growth in GDP which outpaced other high-growth economies such as China Viet Nam, and Malaysia,” President Marcos said in his keynote address before the Philippine-US Business Forum in Washington DC.

“Despite the recovery time needed to accelerate businesses coming from the–coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, we were able to either exceed or match the economic projections of multilateral organizations, such as the IMF, the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office, and the World Bank,” he pointed out.

Marcos said the Philippines also saw a significant increase in foreign direct investment (FDI) net inflows, surging by 28 percent, reaching US$1 billion in November 2023 from US$820 million of net inflows recorded for the same month in 2022.

In addition, the Department of Trade and Industry-Board of Investments (DTI-BOI) approved PhP1.26 trillion in investment projects last year, which was an increase of 73 percent compared to the previous year recorded at PhP729 billion.

President Marcos also reported that for last year, the US was also Philippines’ 4th largest source of FDI.

“Over the years, the Philippines has acknowledged the significant contribution of the United States to our economic agenda. We have observed the consistent high ranking of the United States, as evident last year, being our third top trading partner,” President Marcos said.

But even thought the US contributes so much Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) the lack of FDI is being touted as a reason so many Filipinos are being deployed as OFW's.


https://qa.philstar.com/headlines/2024/04/12/2347168/historic-2023-ofw-deployment-moves-philippines-labor-migration-forward-pandemic

Migrant worker-sending Philippines has moved forward from the COVID-19 pandemic by posting a 55-year high in the number of deployed overseas Filipino workers (OFWs).

Fresh data from the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) showed that the Philippines had deployed 2,330,720 land- and sea-based migrant workers in 2023, higher compared to the 2,156,742 OFWs deployed in pre-pandemic 2019.

But various countries’ travel restrictions, economic recessions and labor market closures in 2020 plummeted OFW deployment figures in 2020 by 74.5%. Only 549,841 OFWs were deployed that year.

From 2020 to 2023, OFW deployments rose by 323.9%. Meanwhile, the government’s first record of deployed OFWs showed that 3,694 overseas contract workers (OCWs) were deployed in 1969.

Even the numbers of deployed land-based OFWs (1,752,094) and seafarers (578,626) both reached historic highs, DMW data show. Given that the pandemic shut down worker deployments abroad in 2020, the 2023 numbers for land-based and sea-based migrant workers were 426.7 and 166.3% higher, respectively from pandemic-hit 2020.

DMW is now the country’s lead migration agency, it being the merger of seven agencies and bureaus including the former Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) that usually releases OFW deployment data.

From the 2023 data, some 1,244,005 OFWs are rehires and 508,089 others are newly-hired migrant workers.

DMW data also showed that 49.8% of deployed OFWs were female, as “domestic cleaners and helpers” make up 31.1% (or 157,812) of these deployments.

The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in the return and repatriation of an estimated 2.3 million OFWs who suffered job losses, insufficient incomes and health problems. From March 2020 to August 2022, records from the Inter-Agency Task Force against Emerging and Infectious Diseases (IATF) show that the 2,348,098 returnee OFWs nearly outnumbered the 2020-to-2022 deployed OFWs (Total: 2,498,305).

The droves of return prompted had government agencies to pivot towards providing economic reintegration support to returnee OFWs through entrepreneurial loans, cash grants and skills training.

A 2021 survey by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) of over-8,000 OFW returnees showed that majority of them wish to go back and work abroad if borders re-open and overseas labor markets re-hire foreign workers.

The Philippines felt the overseas job losses given the pandemic while it almost saw the drastic decline in cash remittance flows from abroad. In 2023, the Philippines received record-high cash remittances (US$33.49 billion).

In 2021, analysts like University of the Philippines political scientist Dr. Jorge Tigno think that pre-pandemic migrant deployment “will not return overnight”.

But given the Philippines’ own economic recovery efforts, Tigno wrote that “The Philippines needs labor migration to weather through future economic crises, as well as to address the socio-economic issues caused by the pandemic.”

“In the absence of significant foreign direct investments entering the economy, the overseas employment program represents the only viable economic strategy the country has for some time to come,” Tigno added in a UP Center for Integrative and Development Studies (CIDS) paper.

Yet migrant civil society groups fear that continued labor migration post-pandemic will see persisting labor-related abuses and exploitation of Filipino workers in host countries.

This coming May 1, the country commemorates the 50th year of the 1974 Labor Code (Presidential Decree 442), whose provisions instituted the formalizing of what is called the country’s “labor export program."

How can the economy be recovered and doing so well while at the same time there are so few jobs that pay a living wage? How can a country be expected to survive when "the overseas employment program represents the only viable economic strategy the country has for some time to come?"

Tourism is recovering but without any help from the Chinese. 

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/568040/chinese-tourist-absence-hampers-ph-tourism-recovery

Bank of America’s (BofA) recent report pointed out that the Philippines, along with China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, are still struggling to catch up in tourism recovery compared to other parts of Asia, as tourist arrivals in these destinations have yet to reach prepandemic levels.

The slow return of Chinese tourists specifically has been a major factor in holding back progress.

In the Philippines, BofA noted that foreign visitor arrivals were still 76 percent of prepandemic levels as of February this year, albeit much better than Hong Kong’s 73.7 percent and Taiwan’s January 2024 figure of 69.6 percent.

Among the laggards, BofA said China was an “outlier” after it reopened its economy much later than other Asian destinations. Data compiled by the bank showed foreign tourist arrivals in China were 36.3 percent below prepandemic level as of December 2023.

In turn, the later reopening of China’s economy weighed on tourism recovery in countries that heavily depend on Chinese holidaymakers, such as the Philippines and Hong Kong.

Data compiled by BofA showed Chinese arrivals are only tracking at 20 to 30 percent of prepandemic levels in the Philippines, below trends elsewhere in the region. And the recovery is unlikely to speed up anytime soon, with BofA noting the “changing preferences” of Chinese consumers.

“The typical Chinese traveler these days is increasingly interested in exploring domestic cities that offer unique cultural experiences. This has also slowed their return to international destinations,” BofA said.

“The return of Chinese travelers might be a gradual process,” it added.

Well, there are plenty of POGO workers here and they continue to arrive. 

Mental health was a big thing during the pandemic and not the government wants PhilHealth to offer coverage for it. 


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1929778/govt-eyes-mental-health-under-philhealth-benefits

The government is considering including mental health care under the packages of state health insurer Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) to raise awareness and provide competitive compensation to mental health professionals.

The Philippine Council for Health Research and Development (PCHRD) of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) noted the importance of mental health, which was highlighted during the Covid-19 pandemic lockdowns.

Some cases of depression, anxiety and traumatic disorders all surfaced during the pandemic, which is why communities must have awareness of mental health concerns, according to Jaime Montoya, executive director of the DOST-PCHRD.

“But even before that, we already did mental health research and development, even prior to the passage of the mental health law in 2018, and that actually helped in raising awareness among Filipinos about the importance of mental health,” Montoya told reporters last week on the sidelines of the DOST-PCHRD’s first mental health research symposium in Pasay City.

He said the PCHRD coordinated with the Department of Health to support mental health “even at [the] primary level.”

Mental health care has always been at the “tertiary level” of health, but Montoya said the PCHRD wants to change this by bringing mental health care to the community level “because this should not be hospital-based only.”

The problem is [that] our barangay health workers don’t even know what mental health is,” Montoya said.

“So, that is part of our objective. We are developing modules that will be adopted. We have separate projects on that which can be used by health workers and not just by doctors and nurses,” he added.

Montoya explained these projects can help in the early detection of mental health problems “and, therefore, to make the appropriate interventions.”

At present, he said the PCHRD is currently working with PhilHealth to include mental health care in its packages so that professionals will receive the proper compensation.

Who would have through that forcing everyone inside for nearly two years, stripping them of their jobs, and scaring them daily with death threats would have made the public go crazy?

Some hospitals have still not received health allowances.

https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/16/dbm-chief-urges-doh-to-accelerate-hea-releases

Department of Budget and Management Secretary Amenah F. Pangandaman has urged to fast-track the creation of a mapping system to track hospitals that have not received health emergency allowances.

During a radio interview, Pangandaman called on the Department of Health (DOH) to address the issues that slow down the release of HEA claims.

[ requested that the DOH have a HEA mapping so that they don't have a hard time with the list of hospitals they monitor. From what I see, the most difficult thing is validating the hospitals and their names]

[If they were able to release a few billion, they should know where that billion pesos fund went so it's easier to see who the hospitals that haven't been paid.]

The DBM chief said that the DOH already has a link for the HEA mapping and that it is still subject for adjustment.

[They promised that they would fix that link. So, maybe, let's give them time. I hope they finish it within the month.]

In a meeting held earlier this year, the DBM suggested that the DOH develop a HEA mapping that will capture and present all HEA claims and payments by region and health facilities to aid hospitals monitor the status of HEA releases.

It will also help in expediting the final determination of the actual amount of deficiency to cover the full settlement of arrears, the DBM said.

Of the P91.283 billion released by the DBM for public health emergency benefits and allowances since pandemic, over P73 billion was allocated for health emergency allowance and one COVID-19 allowance, P12.90 billion for special risk allowance, P3.65 billion for COVID-19 sickness and death compensation, and P1.4 billion for other benefits, such as meal, accommodation, and transportation allowance.

[This year, our total budget for the HEA is P19.962 billion. So the GAA has about P20 billion. Our budget this year is being comprehensively released. We have released all to the DOH. So, they are in charge of disbursing.]

Out of the P91 billion budget released by DBM to the agency, the DOH has so far disbursed P64 billion, based on the data submitted to DBM.

Pangandaman also suggested that the DOH consider the use of a blanket memorandum of agreement with the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) and private organizations to solve bottlenecks in releasing the remaining unpaid HEA claims, mostly from private hospitals and local government units (LGUs).

[However, we assure our healthcare workers that we will continue to act on the matter. President Bongbong Marcos wants the government to settle the unpaid HEA claims of our healthcare workers as soon as possible.]

It's 2024. Will this situation of health allowances ever be sorted out? 

Representative Villafuerte hopes so.


https://mb.com.ph/2024/4/17/villafuerte-seeks-swift-release-of-unpaid-covid-allowances-to-health-frontliners

Camarines Sur 2nd district Rep. LRay Villafuerte is urging the Department of Health (DOH) to release the unpaid Covid allowances worth at least P27 billion that have been due to healthcare workers (HCWs) since 2021.

“It’s nearly a year after the WHO (World Health Organization) declared the worldwide health emergency spawned by Covid-19 as officially over, and yet many of our HCWs who were at the frontlines of that three-year global war have yet to receive the economic benefits due them for their untold sacrifices to save lives during the pandemic,” Villafuerte said in a statement on Wednesday, April 17.

Thus, the lawmaker said he is backing a proposal from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to address the delays in release through a nationwide mapping of all the due allowances.

According to DBM Secretary Amenah Pangandaman, the mapping will be broken down per region and per health facility to ensure that all HCWs receive their unpaid Public Health Emergency Benefits and Allowances (PHEBA) in full.

This proposal likewise pushes the DOH to enter a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) and private organizations to speed up the release of unpaid allowances in private hospitals and local government units (LGUs).

“Such a fast-tracked mapping and the use of a blanket MOA with the DILG and private organizations to address bottlenecks in the release of HEA claims mostly in hospitals and LGUs—as both suggested by the DBM— would let the DOH come up with a definitive amount as to how much Covid-19 extra benefits exactly are still due our medical frontliners,” said Villafuerte.

Based on an April 16 report of the DBM, a total of P91.238 billion for the PHEBA of all HCWs have been released.

Of this amount, the DOH—as the implementing agency—has so far disbursed P64 billion. This leaves a balance of about P27 billion that is yet to be handed to medical workers.

Villafuerte noted that the DOH will be able to speed up their paperwork for the intended beneficiaries by carrying out a quick mapping system for all claims and payments.

“With the end of the Covid-19 health crisis almost a year ago already, the prompt and full release of the benefits long due them is the least we can do for our HCWs and non-HCWs who were at the forefront of the war to save lives during the pandemic,” he emphasized.
 
Based on the most recent data from the DOH, a total of 4.14 million Covid-19 cases had been recorded, of which 66,864 infections resulted in deaths.

We have not seen DOH COVID-19 data in a while. 66,864 deaths out of a population of 110 million is hardly a pandemic to be worried about!

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Cebu City Officials and PNP Refuse to Enforce the Law

The Philippines is a nation with laws but it is not a nation where the rule of law takes precedence. Enforcement is very selective. Here is the latest example from Cebu City. 

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/561348/little-cardo-dalisay-in-cebu-nabbed-accused-of-hurting-people-who-do-not-give-alms

Harvey Cuervo, 19, dubbed as the Little Cardo Dalisay in Cebu, went viral once again. But this time, not for the right reasons.

Cuervo is now detained at the Cebu City Police Station after police arrested him on Sunday midnight, March 10, for illegal possession of firearms.

Prior to his arrest, photos of the young adult circulated on social media when reports that he allegedly hurt passengers who refused to give him money after singing and begging for alms in jeepneys surfaced.

Basak Pardo Captain Dave Tumulak said his office had received multiple complaints since the first week of March, accusing Cuervo of harming them when they did not give him money.

Some of the victims claimed they were scratched, and their feet stomped, Tumulak said.

“Mao nang pasalamat ta nahipos ra sad siya sa mga pulis,” he told CDN Digital in a phone interview.

(We are grateful that he was arrested by the police.)

The suspect, in a separate interview with reporters, claimed he decided to get a gun as ‘self-defense.’ Since his photos went viral online, he said he began fearing for his life.

The barangay chief also confirmed that Cuervo was the kid who went viral in 2018, earning the nickname ‘Little Cardo Dalisay in Cebu’ when videos of his singing skills inside a jeepney circulated on social media.

Aside from illegal possession of firearms, Cuervo might also face cases for violating the city’s Anti-Mendicancy Law, and for committing slight physical injuries and threats to passengers, Tumulak said.

Officials initially planned to lodge these charges against the suspect before his arrest last Saturday but dropped them after he issued a public apology, through a pre-recorded video, on the internet last March 6.

He also vowed not to hurt passengers anymore.

But just a day after his apology video was published, Tumulak received another series of complaints, alleging that Cuervo broke his promise by hurting jeepney passengers again.

“This time, mu-file na sad mi og separate case against niya,” Tumulak added.

(This time, we will file a separate case against them.)

In the meantime, the village chieftain urged individuals, who were victimized by Cuervo to come forward so they could build their case against him.

“Pwede ra sila mureach out sa akoa sa Facebook,” said Tumulak.

(They can reach out to me in Facebook.)

He also told the riding public to be always vigilant of their surroundings, and for barangay tanods (village peacekeepers in English) to strengthen their monitoring in areas frequented by beggars.

A 19 year old street beggar who has been begging at least since he was 13 has been arrested for harming people who did not give him money. Complains were lodged to the police and they were prepared to arrest him. But he issued a public apology so they decided to forgive him. Isn't that so gracious and lovely of the police? Just look how repentant and sorry he is:

Unsurprisingly he not only broke his promise but he also procured a gun for his own protection after his face was blasted all over social media. How exactly was he able to obtain a gun when he begs for his living? 

Because he started harming people again city officials decided that now they would finally arrest him and charge him with a crime. But they need the public's help. They need victims to come forward so they can build a case. Why would the public come forward now when they were ignored in the first place? What good is having a police force or a local government who REFUSE to enforce the laws?

That includes the anti-mendicancy laws. In the Philippines it is illegal to beg and illegal to give to beggars.  Yet this man has been on the street since at least 2018, for SIX YEARS!! Everyone thought he was cute as a 13 year old singing and dancing for change but now he is a grown man with a grudge and a gun. How long before he causes real and lasting harm to someone? And all because the laws in the Philippines are not enforced.

The Cebu City officials who declined to prosecute this man because he posted an apology on Facebook are a danger to society. They have shown that they are untrustworthy people who do not care about protecting the community. They need to be removed from office and replaced with people who will protect the community from criminals who do harm to law abiding citizens.