Friday, November 17, 2023

Retards in the Government 338

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

 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213393

Members of the anti-scalawag unit of the Philippine National Police (PNP) arrested two active police officers and a dismissed police officer for various crimes.

In a statement Thursday night, PNP - Integrity Monitoring and Enforcement Group (IMEG) chief Brig. Gen. Warren de Leon said Master Sgt. Joey Cauila, assigned at the Gattaran Municipal Police Station (MPS) in Cagayan province, was arrested in Tuguegarao City on Nov. 7 for a complaint of violation of Republic Act 9262 (Anti-Violence against Women and their Children Act of 2004).

De Leon said the complaint was filed by Cauila’s wife sometime in 2022 due to his failure to give financial support.

The complainant's identity was withheld.

The accused is currently detained at the Gattaran MPS.

Also on Nov. 7, Pat. Micheal Angelo Basa was arrested by the IMEG Luzon Field Unit (LFU) while on duty at the 1st Provincial Mobile Force Company in Cabanatuan City, Nueva Ecija on charges of grave threat under Article 282 of the Revised Penal Code.

Basa is detained at the Cabanatuan City Police Station for documentation and disposition pending the issuance of a commitment order from the court that issued the warrant of arrest against him.

On Nov. 6, the IMEG-LFU and other PNP units arrested dismissed cop Marvin Jay Pagulayan in Quezon town in Isabela for estafa under Article 315 of the Revised Penal Code.

The complainant said Pagulayan defrauded him by promising to process the titling of his land in exchange for PHP16,000.

The suspect, however, did not fulfill his promise and did not respond to messages after receiving the money.

The suspect is now detained at the Quezon Municipal Police Station in Isabela.

Two active duty cops and one dismissed cop have been arrested for various crimes. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213354

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) is now probing an election officer in Masbate who allegedly failed to follow an order involving a candidate in the recent Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections (BSKE).

In a message, Comelec chairperson George Erwin Garcia told reporters Thursday that the poll body's law department recommended the investigation on Aroroy, Masbate Election Officer Magdie Moran for reportedly failing to remove the name of a disqualified bet from the certified list of candidates for the Oct. 30 polls.

Based on an excerpt from the minutes of the Comelec’s executive session, Moran was directed on Oct. 25 to cancel the certificate of candidacy (COC) of Aniano Pancho Capinig, who was running for chairperson of Aroroy town's Barangay Cabas-an.

The Comelec's Second Division, in a resolution dated Oct. 9, disqualified Capinig after he was convicted of violating Section 31 of Republic Act 10591 (illegal possession of firearms).

Capinig got the most number of votes in the BSKE but the Comelec declared them as “stray votes.”

The poll body said the candidate who garnered the second highest number of votes will be declared as the Barangay Captain of Cabas-an.

It noted that COC of Capinig was administratively canceled and that his name should have been deleted or removed from the official list of candidates.

The Comelec added that Moran failed to implement its order “despite having enough time to delete/remove/cancel his name in the certified List of candidates.”

Garcia, meanwhile, said the election officer may be dismissed from the service if found guilty.

“Removal from office due to gross insubordination,” he added.

The Comelec is also looking at other cases of non-implementation of the poll body's rulings by field officers.

The COMELEC is probing an election officer for not removing a disqualified candidate's name from the ballot. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1857688/erc-flags-ngcp-for-pr-expenses-recouped-as-pass-on-charges

The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) on Thursday flagged the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) for spending billions of pesos on public relations and corporate social responsibility (CSR), representation and entertainment, advertising, COVID-19 donations, charitable contributions, and other miscellaneous items that should not be included in the operating and maintenance costs it passed on to consumers from 2016 to 2020.

According to the ERC, these expenditures, which the country’s lone power grid operator had collected from consumers, were disallowed and were among the expenses it had taken out of NGCP’s maximum annual revenue (MAR) for the period.

MAR is the maximum amount approved by the ERC as regulator that NGCP is allowed to earn to recover its operating expense and capital expenditures.

The ERC has flagged the NGCP for gross expenditures which were not allowed and were passed on to the consumers.

https://mb.com.ph/2023/11/11/lgu-employee-shot-dead-in-batangas

A municipal government employee was shot dead in Barangay District 5 here on Friday night, November 10.

Police identified the victim as Melchor Sale, 53, single, resident of Barangay Carenahan, this town.

Investigation said the victim was driving his motorcycle when he was shot in the head by two men onboard a motorcycle tailing him from behind.

Suspects fled and the victim was taken to the Metro Balayan Hospital here where he was declared dead.

Recovered from the crime scene were two fired cartridge cases for caliber .45 and two slugs of the same caliber.

Police are conducting follow-up operation.

An LGU employee has been assassinated. 

https://mb.com.ph/2023/11/13/village-chair-nabbed-for-shooting-drinking-buddy

An outgoing barangay chairman was arrested for shooting his drinking buddy in a drinking spree in Barangay Bolbok here on Sunday afternoon, November 12.

Police identified the suspect as Barangay Bolbok Chairman Herman.

Investigation said the suspect and the victim, Franco Tenorio, 62, a government employee, also a resident of Barangay Bolbok, were having a drinking spree when a misunderstanding erupted.

At the height of the argument, the pointed a gun to the victim but he lifted the suspect’s hand.

Herman fled with the gun but was nabbed in a follow-up operation in his house by the Taal Municipal Police Station. 

However, the firearm was not recovered.

Suspect faces a complaint for attempted murder.

A barangay chairman has been arrested for shooting his drinking buddy. 

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2023/11/13/2311182/drunken-cop-kills-niece-shooting-rampage

A drunken police sergeant shot his niece dead in a rampage in a residential area in Kidapawan City on Sunday morning, causing panic among villagers.

The Kidapawan City Police Office, in a report to Region 12 police director Brig. Gen. Jimili Macaraeg, on Monday said that the 13-year-old Yuki Maangue died instantly from a bullet wound in the throat

Citing accounts of witnesses, the local police reported that his uncle, Cpl. Roy Soliva Maangue, 36, first had an altercation with other relatives amid a drinking session in Sitio Mateo in Barangay Birada in Kidapawan before he pulled out a Glock 9 millimeter pistol and opened fire. This hit his niece fatally and sent people in the scene running for their lives.

Maangue, who is a member of the municipal police force in Magpet, an upland town in Cotabato province about 20 kilometers from Kidapawan, immediately scampered away but was eventually arrested by pursuing personnel of the Kidapawan CPO and barangay tanods.  

He is now locked in a detention facility of the Kidapawan CPO, to be prosecuted for his criminal offense.

Macaraeg, whose office is in General Santos City, told reporters that he has ordered the filing of an administrative case against Maangue for him to get booted dishonorably from the police service.

A drunken cop in an altercation with relatives at a drinking session fired his gun and accidentally killed his niece. 

https://mb.com.ph/2023/11/13/criminal-admin-charges-filed-vs-leyte-town-mayor-3-others

Criminal and administrative complaints have been filed against Mayor Ramon C. Oñate of Palompon town in Leyte and three other persons before the Office of the Ombudsman (OMB) for their alleged "environmental transgressions" in 2017 that reportedly favored the business interest of the mayor.

Also named in the complaints were former municipal planning and development coordinator and now consultant Isagani A. Jaena, former forest ranger and now contract of service worker Terence S. Osmeña, and former municipal and environment resource officer (MENRO) Raoul T. Bacalla.

The complaints were filed last Oct. 18 by Palompon resident Henry I. Encarnacion who wanted them charged criminally with graft. In the case of Oñate, Encarnacion wanted the mayor also charged with violations of the Revised Forestry Code, the Expanded NIPAS Act, the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act, and the Water Code of the Philippines.

On the administrative complaint, Encarnacion claimed that Oñate's actions constituted grave misconduct and conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service.

The complaints stated that those charged initiated the updating and passing of the "defective" Comprehensive Land Use Plan (CLUP) even without the approved Forest Land Use Plan (FLUP). 

Barangay San Joaquin was even erroneously classified as an Industrial Zone, which Encarnacion alleged was done to accommodate Oñate's business interest in DBSN Farms and Agriventures Corporation in Lot No. 5143 of the said barangay.

Citing the CLUP from 2003 to 2013, Encarnacion alleged that the land use of Barangays Rizal, Taberna, Lat-osan, Cambacbac, and San Joaquin was timberland. However, he claimed that a reportedly new altered map covered some communities from the municipality of Villaba, the barangays of Sabang, Tinabilan, San Isidro, San Miguel, Tinago, Liberty and Santiago, Tinubdan, Himarco, Masala and Lomonon, which are all of the municipality of Palompon. The barangays, he alleged, are actually outside the coverage of Palompon Watershed Forest Reserve (PWFR).

Only barangays San Joaquin, Tambis, Cambacbac, and Mabini are within Palompon, he said. "The altered maps run counter to the concept of watershed in that it is defined not by political boundaries but the natural characteristics and physical features," he alleged. 

"As a consequence, the land areas situated in Barangay San Joaquin and other barangays that were originally part of the PWFR were declared as Industrial Zone," he also alleged.

When ownership of Lot 5413 was finally transferred to DBSN in 2018, Encarnacion claimed that the property was subdivided into two parcels of land and issued with new Tax Declarations with "astronomically high land valuations."

"From the sequence of events..., it is as clear as daylight that despite prior knowledge of the facts that said barangays (including barangay San Joaquin) were classified as timberland and originally formed part of the PWFR, Oñate, being the local chief executive of the municipality... initiated, through his MPDO Jaena and in connivance with Bacalla... the updating of the said 2018 to 2027 CLUP without the required Forest Land Use Plan (FLUP) and where the land use of barangay San Joaquin was conveniently and erroneously classified as Industrial Zone to accommodate his business interest at Lot No. 5143 in the said barangay," the complaints stated.

"By misrepresenting that Lot 5143 is located within an industrial zone, deliberately disregarding the environmental transgressions and refusing to take appropriate actions, Mayor Oñate, Jaena, Bacalla and Osmeña exhibited manifest partiality and extended undue favors to Zachary Farms and DBSN Breeder Farms at Barangay San Joaquin, Palompon," the complaints also stated.

Criminal charges have been field against the Leyte town mayor and three others for entering into agreements that favored the mayor's personal business interests. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213569

A kidnapping case was filed Monday against four persons, including a police officer, in connection with the disappearance of beauty pageant candidate Catherine Camilon in Batangas City.

In a press briefing held at Camp Crame in Quezon City, Philippine National Police spokesperson Col. Jean Fajardo said the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) Region 4A (Calabarzon) said those charged before the Batangas Provincial Prosecutor's Office were Maj. Allan Avena de Castro, Jeffrey Magpantay and two John Does.

Fajardo said the prosecutor will have at least 10 days to evaluate whether the cases referred by the CIDG will reach preliminary investigation.

"As we speak, the RFU (Regional Field Unit) 4A of the CIDG is preparing other documents to support the case they have filed. We filed a kidnapping case because the victim was reported missing from Oct. 12 and until today, we are still uncertain whether she is still alive or not. If we find additional evidence in the coming days, these will not preclude us from filing additional cases or at least upgrade the case to another offense,” Fajardo said.

De Castro, assigned to the Police Regional Office- 4A and who is allegedly in a relationship with Camilon, is under restrictive custody at the PRO - 4A headquarters.

De Castro was chatting online with Camilon before she disappeared, according to a testimony by the latter’s friend.

A cop and three others have been charged with the disappearance of a former beauty queen candidate. 

https://mb.com.ph/2023/11/15/three-rizal-cops-arrested-for-extortion

Agents of the police’s Integrity Monitoring and Enforcement Group (IMEG) arrested on Wednesday morning, Nov. 15, three police sergeants assigned in Rizal for allegedly extorting money from the husband of a woman they failed to arrest during their operation in Rodriguez town.

The three policemen were identified as Police Senior Master Sgt. Jose Reyes, Police Staff Sgt. Ramel Delorino and Police Staff Sgt. Glenn Libres, all assigned to the Rodriguez Municipal Police Station.

IMEG director Police Brig. Gen. Warren de Leon said the operation stemmed from the complaint of the victim that he was being forced to pay P100,000 in exchange for not arresting his wife.

De Leon said the three cops went to the house of the victim on Tuesday, Nov. 14, to serve a supposed arrest warrant against his wife.

When they found out that their subject was not around, the three cops handcuffed the victim and dragged him to the police car where he was allegedly mauled and threatened.

The victim said he was released later but with an agreement that he would produce the P100,000 on Monday morning. It was then that he sought the assistance of IMEG.

An entrapment was then conducted which resulted in the arrest of the three policemen at around 8 a.m. on Monday in Montalban, Rizal, according to de Leon. 

They are now facing charges of Robbery, Extortion, Illegal Detention, Trespass to Dwelling.

De Leon said administrative cases will also be slapped against the three policemen.

Three cops have been arrested for extortion. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1860312/solons-order-detention-of-ex-mayor-tumang-for-violation-of-house-rules

Former Pampanga’s Mexico town mayor Teddy Tumang has been cited for contempt and ordered detained for 30 days at the House of Representatives facility for leaking details supposedly mentioned during an executive hearing.

During the House committee on dangerous drugs’ hearing on Wednesday, Antipolo 2nd District Rep. Romeo Acop moved to cite Tumang for contempt, to be fair with people cited for the same due to violation of House rules.

This was for publicly talking about details mentioned in a closed-door meeting between lawmakers and select anti-drug officers regarding the two drug busts conducted in Pampanga last August and September 2023.

Committee chairperson and Surigao del Norte 2nd District Rep. Robert Ace Barbers approved the motion.

Last October 13, Barbers said that Tumang may be cited for contempt after he held a press briefing where he discussed one of the points raised during the closed-door meeting.

Barbers initially did not reveal what Tumang said in the briefing, but in the video uploaded on Facebook, the former mayor said Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga 3rd District Rep. Aurelio Gonzales Jr. was supposedly asking National Bureau of Investigation agents if Tumang is really involved in the drug issue.

A former mayor has been ordered held in contempt and detained at he House of Representatives for leaking information at a closed door hearing.  

https://mb.com.ph/2023/11/16/sc-cites-maguindanao-del-norte-vice-gov-sinsuat-in-contempt-requires-explanation

Maguindanao del Norte Vice Governor Bai Fatima Ainee L. Sinsuat has been ordered by the Supreme Court (SC) to explain why she should not be cited in contempt for not promptly informing the court of her appointment, oath taking, and assumption as vice governor of the province.

Sinsuat filed a petition with the SC when she was acting governor of Maguindanao del Norte.  On April 28, 2023 she accepted her appointment by President Marcos as vice governor of the province and assumed the post while her petition was pending with the SC.

She did not inform the SC of her appointment and assumption as vice governor of Maguindanao del Norte. The SC ruled in favor of her petition which she filed as acting governor of the province.

In a resolution issued last Monday, Nov. 13, Sinsuat was ordered to submit a written explanation on contempt citation within 10 days from receipt of the resolution.

A press statement issued by the SC’s public information office (PIO) said that Sinsuat’s “silence and omissions appear to constitute intentional concealment which tends to disrespect the Court’s authority as final dispenser of justice.”    

“Her actions tend to cripple the Court’s authority to render an informed and just resolution of the case,” the PIO quoted from the resolution which has yet to be made public in the SC’s website.        

Sinsuat won as vice governor of Maguindanao during the 2022 national and local elections or four months before Republic Act No. 1550, the Charter of the Provinces of Maguindanao del Norte and Maguindanao del Sur, was ratified in a plebiscite conducted by the Commission on Elections.

Sinsuat then assumed the post of acting governor of Maguindanao del Norte.  She asked the Bureau of Local Government Finance - Regional Office No. XII (BLGF Region XII) to designate Badorie M. Alonzo as provincial treasurer.    

When informed that the designation needs the clearance of the BGLF Central and the Ministry of Interior and Local Government (MILG) of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), Sinsuat filed with the SC a petition to compel the designation of Alonzo or any qualified person as provincial treasurer.

On June 26, 2023, the SC granted Sinsuat’s petition and ordered the processing of Alonzo’s designation.    

In its resolution, the SC affirmed the clear legal right of Maguindanao del Norte, represented by Sinsuat as acting governor, to recommend the appointment of its provincial treasurer.    

However, the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), representing the BLGF Region XII and BLGF Central, filed a motion to set the petition for oral arguments and that the June 26, 2023 ruling of the SC be reversed.    

In its motion, the OSG told the SC that on April 26, 2023, President Marcos had appointed several officers for the provinces of Maguindanao del Norte with Sinsuat as vice governor.

With her appointment and assumption as vice governor on April 28, 2023, the OSG said that Sinsuat effectively abandoned her claim as acting governor of Maguindanao del Norte and relinquished the authority to appoint its provincial treasurer.

Through Associate Justice Amy C. Lazaro-Javier, the SC said that Sinsuat is deemed to have abandoned her claim to the position of governor of Maguindanao del Norte when she accepted her appointment, took her oath, and assumed office as vice governor of the newly created province.      

With her assumption as vice governor, the SC said that the issues raised in Sinsuat’s petition have been rendered moot since her authority to represent Maguindanao del Norte had ceased.

Since Sinsuat abandoned her claim to the position of governor of Maguindanao del Norte, the Court ruled that the issues raised in the petition have been rendered moot and her authority to represent the province of Maguindanao del Norte had ceased warranting the dismissal of the case.

The SC then reversed its June 26, 2023 ruling for being moot.

The SC pointed out that while the court takes judicial notice of the official acts of the President in appointing Sinsuat, the parties should have at least informed the court of the supervening events which significantly altered the possible outcome of the case. 

A former acting governor is being held in contempt for not informing the SC that she was appointed and assumed the post of vic-governor of a newly created province by President Marcos. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1860495/maguindanao-del-sur-school-head-teacher-slain-in-sultan-kudarat

The head teacher of a school in Maguindanao del Sur  was killed in an ambush on Wednesday afternoon in Lambayong, Sultan Kudarat, police said.

Major Jethro Doligas, Lambayong police chief, said Hermielex A. Kapusan, head teacher of Tukanakuden Elementary School in Barangay Tukanakuden in Sultan sa Barongis, Maguindanao del Sur, was ambushed by two gunmen at past 5 p.m. along the national highway in Barangay Tinumigues, Lambayong.

Doligas said Kapusan, 40, was heading home aboard his Yamaha NMAX motorbike when he was attacked.

Responding militiamen rushed Kapusan to a local hospital where he was declared dead upon arrival.

Doligas said they are still investigating the possible motive of the attack.

The head teacher of a school has been assassinated. 

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Coronavirus Lockdown: 2,600 Priests, Fully Jabbed Kids, and More!

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

2,600 priests and bishops recently went on a holiness retreat in Cebu City.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1857262/2600-priests-bishops-on-holiness-retreat-in-cebu-city

Some 2,600 priests and bishops from all over the Philippines are in Cebu City for the three-day National Retreat for Priests (NRP) 2023, the biggest gathering of the clergy after the COVID-19 pandemic.

The gathering, which started on Tuesday, Nov. 7, included at least 30 bishops and carries the theme “Priesthood: a call for holiness.”

Priests consider this gathering as a renewal and to improve the quality of the clergy in the Philippines amid issues confronting the Catholic faithful.

For Fr. Roniel Sulit of the Archdiocese of Lipa, the gathering is a way for colleague priests to be together after the pandemic.

He said seeing their elder priests would be an inspiration for him and others, who were recently ordained, to bolster their commitment to stay on with priesthood.

“It is part of our formation. The Church is not asleep. We are talking about issues of society also,” he said.

With more than 200,000 followers online, Sulit is a popular young priest who became famous by preaching through social media posts.

Sulit, 31, was ordained in December 2019 about a few months before COVID-19 struck the world.

It's the largest gathering of clergy since the pandemic. 

The pandemic exacerbated a lot of health problems. Now children fully immunized children is on the decline. 


https://www.sunstar.com.ph/manila/fully-jabbed-kids-in-ph-on-a-decline

THE Department of Health (DOH) on Friday, November 10, 2023, sounded the alarm over the stark decline in the number of fully immunized children (FIC) over the past three years amid the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) pandemic. 

In a data provided by the health department, it noted how the number of FICs has been dropping since 2020 up until 2022.

"The proportion of fully immunized children has been decreasing since 2020," said the DOH. 

From being at 69.08 percent in 2019, the DOH noted how it continuously dropped to 65.18 percent in 2020, and to 62.86 percent in 2021.

"In 2022, only 53.60 percent of children aged zero to 12 months were fully immunized," said the DOH. 

An FIC is an infant who has received one dose of bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG), three doses of oral poliovirus vaccines (OPV), three doses of diphtheria-Haemophilus influenzae-hepatitis B (DPT-HIB-HepB) vaccines, and two doses of meningococcal vaccine by 12 months. 

In a previous interview, DOH Undersecretary Eric Tayag said the pandemic was a huge factor in the drop in the number of FICs. 

"The numbers run aground because of the pandemic, when parents were unable to bring their children to health centers due to the restrictions and lockdowns," Tayag said. 

And this trend is all a result of the pandemic locking everyone in their homes. 

A symposium on post-pandemic education is being held. 

https://manilastandard.net/spotlight/314388477/diverse-panel-of-experts-to-grace-brainrx-philippines-symposium-on-post-pandemic-education.html

BrainRx Philippines, a renowned provider of 1:1 cognitive training programs, is thrilled to announce an exceptional lineup of speakers for their upcoming symposium, “Managing Attention & Supporting Students Post-Pandemic.” These speakers will bring a wealth of expertise and diverse perspectives to address the pressing classroom management challenges in the post-pandemic educational landscape.

“This symposium is a platform for educators to learn from a diverse array of experts who approach the challenges of post-pandemic classroom management from various angles,” said Regina Mison, Education Advocate & Event Consultant at BrainRx Philippines. “We are excited to have these distinguished speakers on board, and we believe their collective insights will provide a comprehensive perspective on addressing attention-related issues.”

The symposium is an excellent opportunity for educators, school administrators, and anyone involved in the education sector to gain a deeper understanding of the evolving educational landscape and equip themselves with practical tools to meet its demands.

Yes, now everything has changed because students are so behind thanks to schools being locked down which didn't do a thing to stop the spread of the virus. 

The Philippine Senate is preparing to host the 31st Asia-Pacific Parliamentary Forum. Senator Zubiri says this is a great forum to discuss post-pandemic recovery. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213426

The Philippine Senate continues to prepare for the country's hosting of the 31st Asia-Pacific Parliamentary Forum (APPF31), which will be attended by its 28 member-countries on Nov. 23 to 26.

Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri said APPF31 will focus on finding common understanding and approaches to existing and emerging challenges facing the Asia Pacific region.

"The Philippines has consistently participated in APPF's Annual Meetings as we find great value in the various deliberations with our fellow parliamentarians, especially on key issues relating to regional security, transnational crime, free and fair trade, climate change adaptation and sustainable development, migration, and most recently, on global health pandemics and ensuring post-pandemic economic recovery," Zubiri said.

"This is a great start for the President's (Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.) administration, to show that the Philippines is once again open to the international community, in this period of post-pandemic recovery," he added.

Just how long will this post-pandemic recovery period last? 

Health workers have still not received their COVID allowances. 


https://www.onenews.ph/articles/p62-billion-covid-allowances-for-health-workers-remain-unpaid

Over P62 billion worth of health emergency allowance (HEA) remains unpaid to health care workers (HCWs) who served during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Department of Health (DOH).

“The remaining arrears for C.Y. (Calendar Year) 2021-2023 amounts to P62.2 billion,” the DOH said in a statement. “The estimated arrears for request for HEA covers the period of July 1, 2021 up to July 20, 2023.”

In order to reduce the amount payable to health workers, the DOH last Sept. 4 formally requested from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) the amount of P25.9 billion.

The DBM on Oct. 13, 2023 issued the release of P4 billion for the payment of HEAs.

“This amounts to 16 percent of the requested amount, thus still falling short in the fulfillment of the entire funding request from operating units,” said the DOH.

The health department though said it has already ordered the fund transfer of P4 billion to the concerned regional offices, hospitals and health care facilities.

“The DOH encourages all health facilities to coordinate with their respective regional health offices in submitting the required documents (e.g. memorandum of agreement, liquidation re-ports and requirements for disbursements) to ensure the timely release of HEA,” the DOH noted.

It likewise said that as of Nov. 3, 2023, it has already released a total of P50,555,284,869.50 for HEA.

Of the amount, 90.07 percent, or P45,532,813,132.35, have been released to health workers.

“During this period, a total of 6,789,044 claims have been processed,” said the DOH.

The DOH says they have released the money and it's up to health facilities to coordinate with local DOH offices to "ensure the timely release of" the money. 

The DOH says there has been a slight uptick in COVID cases after Undas. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1859165/doh-records-uptick-in-covid-19-cases-after-undas-holidays

A week after the commemoration of All Saints and All Souls’ Day or “Undas,” the Department of Health (DOH) on Monday said that it had recorded higher COVID-19 infections from November 6 to 12 at 1,132.

Based on the DOH’s latest weekly tally, the COVID-19 infections translated to a daily average of 162, which is 21 percent higher than the 128 average cases recorded from October 30 to November 5, or where a total of 895 cases were recorded.

Twelve of the new infections were tagged as critical or severe, with a total of such admissions at 246.

On the other hand, 10 additional deaths were added in the country’s COVID-19 death toll, all of which were backlogs from July to October 2023.

Meanwhile, utilization of ICU beds decreased from 12.3 to 11.5 percent, while non-ICU bed utilization rate rose from 17.7 to 18.3 percent.

Look how they added ten new deaths for the week but then say they were backlogs from July to October. How is that honest?

The DOH says the Philippines COVID-29 vacation data has been hacked from WHO computers. 

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/topstories/nation/888291/doh-looking-into-possible-covid-19-vaccination-data-breach-after-who-cyberattack/story/

The Department of Health (DOH) has yet to determine the extent of the possible breach into the country’s COVID-19 vaccination data after the World Health Organization’s (WHO) database was hacked, Health Secretary Ted Herbosa said Tuesday.

In an ambush interview, Herbosa confirmed receiving reports that the COVID-19 vaccination data from the Philippines’ house with the WHO has been “compromised and breached.”

“In response, the DOH is currently in close coordination with the WHO and the Department of Information and Communications Technology to ascertain the veracity of this report, as well as to determine the extent of any possible data breaches, and the appropriate interventions, should there be any,” he said.

The Health chief said that the DOH will be providing public additional information once available.

Of what possible use is that data to anyone unless someone thinks the DOH vaccination program is fishy? 

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

The God Culture: 100 Lies About the Philippines: #13 Pigafetta Says the Lequios Are From Luzon

Welcome back to 100 lies the God Culture teaches about the Philippines. Today's lie concerns the identification of the Lequios and Lucoes. Because this lie is so intricately weaved I will be breaking it down into several smaller articles. The gist of it is that Timothy Jay Schwab identifies the Lequios and Lucoes people groups as being the same. They are Filipinos from Luzon.

As I showed in lie #2 Ferdinand Pinto visited the Lequios islands and charted them at 29 degrees north. That means the Lequios islands are not the Philippines but the Ryukyu Islands. However Tim teaches something completely different which needs to be broken down. The first aspect of this lie comes from Tim's total misunderstanding of Pigafetta's Journal. 

The Lequios of Luzon: Key to Finding Ophir and Chryse. Clue #52

13:31 While in Visayas Antonio Pigafetta who traveled with Magellan, historian who chronicled everything, writes from Visayas: Towards the Northwest is the island of Luzon which is at two days distance a large island indeed. To which come to trade every year six or eight junks of the people called Lequii, Lequios, Lucoes same people it's there Pigafetta says they are in Luzon. Not in Taiwan not in Malaysia and Magellan says they are Ophir and Tarshish. Done.

15:19 So, the Lequios are from Luzon. This is settled. Magellan tells us they are Ophir and Tarshish.

Can Tim not read? At no point does Pigafetta say the Lequii or Lequios are FROM Luzon. He says they come to Luzon to trade. 

Tim gets this even more wrong in his book The Search for King Solomon's Treasure. 

However, Antonio Pigafetta tells us where the Lequios originated.

[From Visayas] “Towards the North-west is the island of Lozonwhich is at two days’ distance; a large island, to which come to trade every year six or eight junks of the people called Lequii.” “...One of these junks carries as much cargo as our ships.” – Antonio Pigafetta, 1521

This clearly reads that the Lequios, who originate in Luzon, journey to Cebu regularly to trade in their six or more, large junk ships just as Pinto describes.

Solomon's Treasure, pgs. 162-163

This is totally wrong. Read carefully. He says Luzon is a large island TO WHICH the people called Lequii came to trade. He is not saying the Lequii came to Cebu from Luzon to trade. Pigafetta is not even writing from Cebu but from Butuan fifty leagues from Cebu!! He is saying that Northwest of Butuan is an island called Luzon and the Lequii came there every year to trade. Therefore the Lequii are not the Lucoes who actually do inhabit Luzon. How does Tim get this wrong except on purpose?

This is one lie among many concerning the Lequios people that Tim propounds. It is a totally false reading of Pigafetta. How did he get this wrong? Can he not read? It's not a complicated passage. 

Tuesday, November 14, 2023

Insurgency: DepEd CIF Cut

The House of Representatives has decided to strip the Department of Education of all its confidential intelligence funds. DepEd Secretary Duterte said such funds were necessary to stop recruitment by the NPA in the nation's schools. Now Senator Bato says teachers must remain vigilant and watch out for recruitment activities.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213384

Senator Ronald "Bato" dela Rosa on Thursday urged teachers to watch out for the possible boost in the recruitment of insurgents from among the basic education learners after the confidential and intelligence funds (CIF) was removed by Congress from the Department of Education (DepEd).

This, after Vice President and Education Secretary Sara Z. Duterte conceded from asking the lawmakers for the CIF for both the Office of the Vice President and the DepEd, which dela Rosa commended saying the move "spared the Senate from debates."

"My appeal to them is that even without the confidential funds, we can should make sure that no student will be recruited by the CPP-NPA in remote areas then fight our government and die," dela Rosa said in his manifestation during the Senate plenary debates of the DepEd's proposed 2024 budget.

"We are on the last stretch of our campaign in this insurgency but now they are motivated, the communists because it seems like they really won. They stopped DepEd from having their confidential funds which is supposed to be used against the recruitment of the students in Senior High School," he added.

Dela Rosa cited the previous investigation conducted by the Senate in response to missing Senior High School learners who turned out to be recruited by the insurgents.

In a previous statement, the DepEd said that its CIF is being used to eliminate threats to the learning environment, as well as safety, and security of DepEd personnel which may include sexual abuse and all other forms of violence; graft and corruption; involvement in illegal drugs of learners and personnel; recruitment to insurgency, terrorism, and violent extremism; child labor; child pornography; and recruitment to criminal activities, gangsterism, and financial and other scams.

These unlawful acts, the DepEd statement said, need the support of surveillance and intelligence gathering "to ensure that projects of DepEd are target-specific and will result in the broader protection of our personnel and learners."

The DepEd was asking for PHP150 million as CIF but was cut by the House of Representatives.

It goes without saying that Senator Bato is as dumb as a rock which is befitting his name which means rock. How exactly did the CPP-NPA stop the DepEd from being allowed confidential intelligence funds? They did not. This is a backhand effort at labeling certain Representatives as CPP-NPA members. In reality the House of Representatives as a whole voted to realign CIF from several agencies to security agencies because of the threats facing the nation especially from China in the WPS.

The fact is the DepEd does not have any intel gathering mandate. Stopping recruitment falls to the AFP, the NICA, the NBI, and the PNP. Those agencies are all tasked with gathering intel to keep the nation safe. 

Local and barangay officials are expected to step up anti-insurgency campaigns in Negros Oriental following the signing of an MOA. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213373

Local chief executives and barangay officials in Negros Oriental are expected to step up their individual and collective efforts to stamp out the communist insurgency in their areas after the signing of a memorandum of agreement (MOA) on Thursday, an Army official said.

Brig. Gen. Joey Escanillas, commander of the 302nd Infantry Brigade based in Tanjay City, Negros Oriental, said in an interview that the agreement identifies the specific roles of the local government units (LGUs) and barangay officials in assisting law enforcement units in addressing the insurgency problem.

Escanillas noted that in the current provincial government-led program to end local communist insurgency, some local executives appeared to be not proactive enough.

“Actually, the main role in the anti-insurgency fight should be with the mayors because many of the members of these communist terrorist groups are their constituents,” he said.

The issues and concerns raised by these insurgents have to be addressed first and foremost by the LGUs and barangays through their officials while the military and the police are tasked to deal with the problem through armed operations, Escanillas added.

The city, municipal, and barangay officials, he said, know their constituents better and have linkages with them, making it easier to reach out to them and address their issues.

The usual issues raised by the communist groups against the government, such as land, delivery of basic services, and project implementation, ought to be given attention to prevent the resurgence of the insurgency in their areas, Escanillas said.

The MOA between the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the Philippine National Police, the Provincial Peace and Order Council, and city and municipal mayors in Negros Oriental aim to come up with harmonized programs and projects to eradicate the insurgency problem.

It also calls on the LGUs to activate their respective Local Peace Engagement efforts to reach the grassroots level.

The agreement also stipulates that mayors and even barangay officials, in a proactive role, would initiate the filing of cases against persons financing terrorism; monitor and report to the AFP or PNP the presence of suspected urban-based communist groups and their activities; coordinate with the security sector in verifying groups that may have links to the rebel groups; and establish a systematic referral of primary local issues, among others.

Escanillas said there is a monthly reporting system for the mayors regarding their undertakings to carry out the MOA.

No mayor was present during the activity, which Escanillas said was due to the late delivery of invitation letters. They, however, sent their representatives. 

Once again this is a program reducing good governance to an anti-insurgency program. What are these mayors and barangay officials supposed to do? Go out to the NPA camps and plead with them to surrender because new farm-to-market roads have been built? 

The fight against the NPA in Negros continues with both surrenders and clashes. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213335

Some 10 Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) rebels and two militia members surrendered to the military in central and south Negros in recent months, the Philippine Army said in reports on Thursday.

Among them are two rebels from the remnants of Central Negros Front 2 who turned themselves in to troops of the 94th Infantry Battalion (IB) after an encounter in Barangay Buenavista, Himamaylan City, on Wednesday. 

“The successful encounter delivered a substantial blow to the already weakened NPA presence in central Negros. In the wake of this significant victory, I extend an open invitation to all remaining NPA members to surrender,” Lt. Col. Van Donald Almonte, commanding officer of 94IB, said in a statement. 

After a 15-minute firefight, some of the nine NPA rebels fled, leaving behind their comrades, who eventually surrendered to the government troops. 

During the clearing operation, the soldiers recovered weapons, including three M16 rifles, an M653 rifle, an M1 Garand rifle, two M14 rifles, a shotgun upper receiver, and assorted live ammunition. 

Meanwhile, the 15th Infantry Battalion reported the surrender of eight NPA rebels and two Militia ng Bayan members from Sipalay City and Cauayan and Candoni towns in the past several months at its headquarters in Cauayan as a result of the intensified community support program operations. 

The first group included five NPA leaders and members and one militia member, while the other batch comprised three combatants and another militia member. 

All the surrenderers belonged to Platoon 3 of South West Front, operating in the mountainous areas of the province’s sixth district.

According to the 15IB report, they decided to surrender due to a lack of food and physical exhaustion since they could no longer conduct extortion activities because of the sustained presence of military forces.

Oh look, it's another encounter delivering "a substantial blow to the already weakened NPA." That's what the AFP says every single time they encounter the NPA except this time 9 of them got away!

Two NPA fighters were killed in a recent clash. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1857243/2-npa-rebels-slain-in-negros-occidental-clashes-says-army

Two alleged communist rebels were killed Tuesday in encounters with government soldiers in Cauayan town, Negros Occidental.

The Army’s 15th Infantry Battalion soldiers engaged about 10 members of the South West Front (SWF), Komiteng Rehiyon-Negros, Cebu, Bohol, Siquijor in two consecutive encounters at Sitio Cambaga in Barangay Yao-Yao, Cauayan, said Lieutenant Colonel J-Jay Javines, 3ID Public Affairs Office chief.

The clashes resulted in the deaths of two unidentified alleged members of the New People’s Army whose bodies were recovered from the encounter site.

Seized from the site were an M-653 rifle, M-14 rifle, .45 caliber pistol, an anti-personnel mine with blasting cap, M-14 magazines, ammunition, medical paraphernalia, personal belongings, and antigovernment documents with high intelligence value.

The same group of rebels were involved in an encounter on Sept. 21 with 47th Infantry Battalion troops in Barangay Tabugon, Kabankalan City, which led to the deaths of six NPA members, he added.

The seized .45 caliber pistol belonged to Sergeant Jhoerom Meguillo, one of the two soldiers killed in an ambush on April 3, 2021 by the same NPA group, Javines said.

This same group was involved in an encounter with the AFP back in September which means they regrouped and did not disband or stay home to lick their wounds. The NPA remains active and dangerous. 

In October 25 NPA surrenders and 3 were killed in the Visayas. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1855990/25-npa-rebels-surrender-3-killed-in-visayas-in-october

At least 28 New People’s Army (NPA) rebels were neutralized during eight government-initiated encounters in the Visayas last month.

Lieutenant General Benedict Arevalo, commander of the Visayas Command (Viscom), said the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)-NPA suffered devastating losses in October after the deaths of three rebels.

Of the 25 who surrendered, 19 were regular NPA combatants, while six were members of the Militia ng Bayan (People’s Militia).

At least 61 CPP-NPA supporters also denounced their support for the communist group and pledged allegiance to the government in the same month.

“Defeating the CPP-NPA in the Visayas region remains on top of our list amidst our mandate to support the Comelec (Commission on Elections) in ensuring the success of the recently concluded Barangay and SK (Sangguniang Kabataan) Elections,” Arevalo said in a statement.

“Our efforts against the CPP-NPA will never falter, as we respond to the call of our people for just and lasting peace in the entire region,” he added.

Governent troops also seized 30 firearms and six anti-personnel mines in October.

Arevalo vowed to sustain the efforts to eliminate members of the communist group in the region as he appealed to the NPA rebels to surrender.

“As for the few remaining members of the CPP-NPA, Christmas is fast approaching, just imagine your families and loved ones and how happy they will be to celebrate the season with you. Choose the path of peace and return to the fold of the law now, while you still can,” he said.

With only six weeks to go it remains to be seen if the promise of ending the insurgency this year will be fulfilled. 

Monday, November 13, 2023

Philippine Elections Are Violent Because Filipinos Lack Civic Virtue

Like the United States of America the Philippines is a Republic. Practically the whole system of governance was bequeathed to the Philippines by the USA during the colonial period. Why then is the political system in the Philippines so vastly different from the USA? Why, despite the gun and liquor bans during election season, are Philippine elections so incredibly violent? Because Filipinos lack civic virtue.

In The Story of Civilization Book 11 Will Durant writes the following:

https://bawar.net/data0/books/5cb1af64a9e1e/pdf/Durant_Will_-_The_story_of_civilization_11.pdf

He thought of virtue in Montesquieu's sense, as the indispensable basis of a successful republic; without unpurchasable voters and officials democracy would be a sham.

Montesquieu defines virtue thusly in Chapter 5 of In The Spirt of the Laws:

IT is in a republican government that the whole power of education is required. The fear of despotic governments naturally rises of itself amidst threats and punishments: the honour of monarchies is favoured by the passions, and favours them in its turn: but virtue is a self-renunciation, which is ever arduous and painful.

This virtue may be defined the love of the laws and of our country. As such love requires a constant preference of public to private interest, it is the source of all private virtues; for they are nothing more than this very preference itself.

This love is peculiar to democracies. In these alone the government is intrusted to private citizens. Now, government is like every thing else: to preserve it, we must love it.

https://oll.libertyfund.org/title/montesquieu-complete-works-vol-1-the-spirit-of-laws

The influence of Montesquieu on the founders of the United States of America and the framers of the Constitution of the United States would be hard to overstate. Every single one of those men are very clear that only a virtuous people are capable of freedom.

Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters. - Ben Franklin

“Is there no virtue among us? If there be not, we are in a wretched situation. No theoretical checks, no form of government, can render us secure. To suppose that any form of government will secure liberty or happiness without any virtue in the people, is a chimerical idea. If there be sufficient virtue and intelligence in the community, it will be exercised in the selection of these men; so that we do not depend upon their virtue, or put confidence in our rulers, but in the people who are to choose them.” - James Madison

"Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable  supports.” - George Washington

https://nccs.net/blogs/articles/only-a-virtuous-people-are-capable-of-freedom

Th big difference between the Philippines and the United States is that the USA is the culmination of 2,000 years of political history beginning with Greece. Americans, Western Europeans in general, fought tooth and nail against emperors, kings, and tyrants to eventually form what has been called the American Experiment of self-governance or as Abraham Lincoln said in his Gettysburg address:

Government of the people, by the people, and for the people.

The Philippines went from thousands of years of tribal leader ship to a colonial monarchy for 300 years and then to being given a republican form of government practically overnight. 

It's no wonder why the USA wanted to give Filipinos time to learn how to govern themselves before handing them the reigns. Teddy Roosevelt issued this stern warning about the dangers of giving the Philippines self-governance too soon:

In our anxiety for the welfare and progress of the Philippines, may be that here and there we have gone too rapidly in giving them local self-government. It is on this side that our error, if any, has been committed. No competent observer, sincerely desirous of finding out the facts and influenced only by a desire for the welfare of the natives, can assert that we have not gone far enough. We have gone to the very verge of safety in hastening the process. To have taken a single step farther or faster in advance would have been folly and weakness, and might well have been crime. We are extremely anxious that the natives shall show the power of governing themselves. We are anxious, first for their sakes, and next, because it relieves us of a great burden. There need not be the slightest fear of our not continuing to give them all the liberty for which they are fit.  
The only fear is lest in our over anxiety we give them a degree of independence for which they are unfit, thereby inviting reaction and disaster. As fast as there is any reasonable hope that in a given district the people can govern themselves, self-government has been given in that district. There is not a locality fitted for self-government which has not received it. But it may well be that in certain cases it will have to be withdrawn because the inhabitants show themselves unfit to exercise it; such instances have already occurred. In other words, there is not the slightest chance of our failing to show a sufficiently humanitarian spirit. The danger comes in the opposite direction.
https://www.infoplease.com/homework-help/us-documents/state-union-address-theodore-roosevelt-december-3-1901
The Philippines finally became independent on July 4th, 1946 and what have we seen since then? We have seen a fulfillment of Manuel Quezon's famous dictum that he would rather "have a government run like hell by Filipinos than a government run like heaven by Americans." He would later expound upon that remark.
It is true, and I am proud of it, that I once said, “I would rather have a government run like hell by Filipinos than a government run like heaven by Americans.” I want to tell you that I have, in my life, made no other remark which went around the world but that. There had been no paper in the United States, including a village paper, which did not print that statement, and I also had seen it printed in many newspapers in Europe. I would rather have a government run like hell by Filipinos than a government run like heaven by any foreigner. I said that once; I say it again, and I will always say it as long as I live.

But that is not an admission that a government run by Filipinos will be a government run like hell. Much less can it be an admission that a government run by Americans or by the people of any other foreign country, for that matter, can ever be a government run like heaven.

We have had four years of our government—the Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines—a government run by Filipinos, and I defy anybody, American, foreigner or Filipino, to tell me that ours today is a government run like hell. I should say that this is the best government we have ever had in the Philippines, and I will now enumerate the facts to prove this to you.

This speech was made four years after the enactment of the Commonwealth when the Philippines was making its transition to full independence. Four years is not a time frame by which to judge a nation. The Commonwealth was set up in 1935 which is 88 years ago. What have we seen in that time frame if not a government run like hell with corruption in all levels of government culminating in the disastrous and dictatorial reign of Ferdinand Marcos Sr?

But this is less about political institutions and more about the common man because as the 1987 constitution makes clear:

The Philippines is a democratic and republican State. Sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from them.

https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/constitutions/1987-constitution/

Thus the burden of governance falls squarely on the shoulders of the Filipino people. In idea at least the Philippines is a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. 

Going back to Montesquieu can we really say that Filipinos love the laws of the country and put the public interest over their own?

This virtue may be defined the love of the laws and of our country. As such love requires a constant preference of public to private interest, it is the source of all private virtues; for they are nothing more than this very preference itself.

Absolutely not. 

Take a look at the recent local elections. There was vote buying. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213455

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has disqualified 21 candidates, including 10 who won in the Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections (BSKE) on Oct. 30.

In a statement late Friday, the poll body said the BSKE bets were disqualified after the First and Second Division found them liable for premature campaigning and vote buying.

"The Commission on Elections has granted motu proprio Petitions for Disqualification against 21 candidates in the October 30, 2023 Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections," the statement read.

Of the 10 winning candidates, two are barangay chairpersons, three barangay kagawad (councilors), two SK chairpersons and three SK councilors.

Out of the 11 losing bets, nine ran for SK kagawad and two for barangay kagawad, the Comelec said.

The poll body said there are still 318 pending motu proprio disqualification cases against BSKE candidates. These include 292 disqualification cases for premature/illegal campaigning and 26 for vote-buying and/or vote selling.

Earlier, the Comelec ordered the suspension of the proclamation of winning candidates who have pending disqualification cases.

There was violence with 26 ending up dead. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1213437

The number of validated election-related incidents (ERIs) from the Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections (BSKE) has climbed to 96, nearly two weeks after the polls.

In a press conference on Friday, PNP spokesperson Col. Jean Fajardo said there were actually 305 incidents recorded from Aug. 28 to Nov. 9.

Of the total, 13 were undergoing validation while 196 were classified as not related to the Oct. 30 polls.

The confirmed poll-related incidents left at least 26 dead and 96 injured, she added.

The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao has the most number of validated ERIs at 55, followed by Northern Mindanao with 14; six in Eastern Visayas; five in Cordillera; four in Bicol; three each in Ilocos and Central Visayas; and one each in the National Capital Region, Calabarzon, Mimaropa, Western Visayas, Soccskargen and Zamboanga Peninsula.

The majority of the verified election-related incidents were shooting, mauling, and physical injury.

On the other hand, the police arrested 2,211 BSKE gun ban violators and confiscated 1,689 firearms.

A total of 2,425 firearms were also deposited to the PNP for safekeeping while 1,785 were surrendered.

The election period for the BSKE will end on Nov. 29.

And as of this writing 5 newly elected officials have been assassinated. 

https://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/5-newly-elected-brgy-officials-killed-a-week-after-polls

A TOTAL of five newly elected barangay officials were killed a little over a week following the just concluded Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections (BSKE), the Philippine National Police (PNP) reported.

Of the five victims, two were from villages in North Cotabato, and one each from Pasay City, Davao del Norte, and Pagadian City in Zamboanga.

In a press conference on Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2023, PNP spokesperson Colonel Jean Fajardo said they recorded six violent incidents involving newly elected government officials, which two were in Soccsksargen and one each in the National Capital Region, Calabarzon, Northern Mindanao and Davao Region.

Of the six victims, two were newly elected barangay chairmen, while four were barangay councilors.

On Nov. 1, Suharto Antillino was gunned down by a still unidentified suspect shortly after he was proclaimed as among the winning barangay council candidates of Barangay Poblacion in Midsayap town.

Barangay 37, Pasay City Kagawad Lina Camacho was also shot dead while inside the barangay hall on Nov. 6. One of the two suspects was arrested.

On Nov. 7, Barangay Datu Abdul Dadia in Panabo City chairman Paul Albert Saquian was gunned down while driving his car.

On the same day, Barangay Dolores, Antipas, North Cotabato councilman Edmar Perero was also shot dead while on board a tricycle.

The latest victim was newly elected Lapedian, Pagadian City village chief Rodolfo Dacol, who succumbed to a bullet wound in his abdomen on Thursday, Nov. 9.

Fajardo considered the first six incidents as election-related.

Fajardo said they are still monitoring post-election activities and scenarios.

He added that regional directors and field commanders were given the discretion to determine if they would lower their alert status, particularly their security deployments in areas where they see that the situation is still hot especially even after the election.

That is NOT the doings of a virtuous people. 

One has to wonder why there was so much violence over local elections. It comes down to power. Filipinos are clannish and so all the barangays in the nation as well as cities and various fiefdoms are run by families and they will do anything to keep their family in power. 

But this is nothing new. Filipinos have been terrorizing Filipinos since long before the Spanish arrived. The natives even thanked the Spanish from saving them from the tyranny and domination of their chiefs. 

“We answer that we wish the king of España to be our king and sovereign, for he has sent Castilians to us, who are freeing us from the tyranny and domination of our chiefs, as well as fathers who aid us against the same Castilians and protect us from them.

The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume XXIII, 1629-30, pg. 253

Manuel Quezon is wrong. The government of the Philippines, from barangay to Malacañang, is run like hell. The reason why is because Filipinos have no civic virtue. As it is the Philippines remains one of the most lawless nations on the planet. 

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2023/10/26/2306513/rule-law-philippines-remains-one-weakest-region

Rule of law in the Philippines remained one of the weakest in East Asia and the Pacific, as the country fell one spot in the latest index of the World Justice Project. 

With a score of 0.46, the Philippines ranked 100th out of 142 countries in the WJP Rule of Law Index 2023. 

In the East Asia and Pacific region, Manila ranked 13th out of 15. Other nations with low scores in the region were Myanmar and Cambodia. 

Countries get a score of zero to one, with one indicating strongest adherence to rule of law. 

The Philippines scored 0.47 in constraints on government powers, 0.43 in absence of corruption, 0.47 in open government, 0.40 in fundamental rights, 0.67 in order and security, 0.47 in regulatory enforcement, 0.45 in civil justice, and 0.31 in criminal justice. 

Filipinos do not love let alone respect the laws of this nation. But they do love power. Especially the power that "grows out of a barrel of a gun."