Friday, July 10, 2020

Retards in the Government 162

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


Authorities arrested a municipal councilor of Babatngon, Leyte for alleged possession of illegal drugs worth P165,000 at 7:40 a.m. on Friday. 
Ceasar Bergula, 52, who is serving his second term as a councilor, reportedly transacted with a poseur-buyer at a public market in Barangay District 4, Babatngon town, reports reaching the Eastern Visayas police based in Palo town said. 
Seized from the suspect were five large heat-sealed plastic sachets containing shabu (methamphetamine) with a street value of P165,000, a medium-sized plastic sachet of shabu worth P5,000, and five P1,000 bills.
A town councilor nabbed for drugs.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/07/04/2025552/barangay-kagawad-shot-dead-manila
A barangay kagawad or councilman was gunned down by unidentified assailants in Sampaloc, Manila on Thursday night. 
Antonio Calma Jr., 43, was talking with his colleagues inside the barangay hall on Algeciras street when two men wearing face masks barged inside the room and opened fire, according to police. 
The incident was caught on closed-circuit television footage. 
Capt. Henry Navarro, chief of the Manila Police District homicide unit, said they recovered 14 spent shells of unknown firearm at the scene. 
Police sources said Calma was tagged as a high-value target because of his alleged involvement in drugs.             
Another barangay councilman involved in drugs gunned down in public.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/07/04/2025522/98-face-raps-over-sap-anomaly-western-visayas
The Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) filed charges against 98 barangay officials and civilians in Western Visayas over alleged anomalies in the implementation of the government’s social amelioration program (SAP). 
Lt. Col. Gervacio Balmaceda Jr., CIDG regional field unit chief, said 50 suspects were charged in this city, based on the complaints of 42 people. 
Ten others were charged in Negros Occidental, 29 in Iloilo, six in Antique and one each in Iloilo, Capiz and Aklan. 
Balmaceda said there are 92 complainants.
More barangay officials facing charges over SAP distribution anomalies.

Two police officers tagged in the killing of a 15-year-old girl in Cabugao, Ilocos Sur were arrested yesterday. 
S/Sgts. Marawi Torda and Dante Ramos of the San Juan police station were respondents in the complaints filed by the victim and her 18-year-old cousin for acts of lasciviousness and rape, respectively, on Thursday, according to Cabugao police chief Capt. Ramil Llarenas. 
The victim was shot dead by motorcycle-riding men shortly after she and her cousin filed their complaints on Friday.
Two cops rape a 15 year old girl, she files a complaint against them, and then they kill her. But that's not all!


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1303384/kin-of-girl-murdered-in-ilocos-sur-get-threats
Relatives of a 15-year-old girl who was raped and murdered in Ilocos Sur province said they were getting threats as the investigation of the case continued. 
Police Staff Sergeants Randy Ramos and Marawi Torda, both assigned to the San Juan police, had been sued for the crime and were relieved from their posts. They are under restrictive custody at the Ilocos regional police headquarters in La Union province. 
Melody Saniatan, the victim’s aunt, said the family had to leave their place in Cabugao town in Ilocos Sur for fear of their safety.

Now who could be threatening this family?
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1301779/bi-officials-sacked-for-fictitiously-encoding-widecard-coo-entered-ph
Some Bureau of Immigration (BI) officers were removed from their posts as they were found to have “fictitiously” encoded that the former chief operating officer (COO) of German payments processing firm Wirecard AG entered the country on June 23, the Department of Justice (DOJ) said Saturday. 
In a Viber message to reporters, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said the BI officers who encoded the entries have not only been relieved from their duties as they will also face administrative sanctions. 
He added that BI has established that former Wirecard AG exec Jan Marsalek did not arrive in the Philippines on June 23 “based on CCTV footage, airline manifests, and other records.” 
“He also did not depart on June 24, as there was no such flight to China as indicated in the database of the [BI],” he added.
Interesting that employees of the BI can manipulate the system that way. Why would they do it?

https://mb.com.ph/2020/07/01/solcom-chief-slapped-with-graft-charges/
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief of the Southern Luzon Command (Solcom) Maj. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr. has been slapped with a graft complaint before the Office of the Ombudsman for reportedly engaging in black propaganda and partisan political activities. 
Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Isagani Zarate filed the complaint before the Office of the Ombudsman seeking to have Parlade face charges for violation of Section 3(e) of R.A. 3019, the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, and Section 55 (Political Activity), Chapter 7 Subtitle A Title I of the Administrative Code of 1987 (Executive Order No. 292). 
In his complaint, Zarate said that Parlade, who was the Chief of Staff for Civil Military Operations, publicly engaged in black propaganda and negative campaigning against him and Bayan Muna Party-list and the Makabayan Coalition during the campaign period for the 2019 national elections, which took place from February 12 to May 11, 2019. 
Zarate and the rest of the Makabayan representatives initially filed a complaint-affidavit against the AFP on April 17, 2019 before the Commission on Elections (Comelec), which has already been submitted for resolution. Despite the filing of the complaint, Parlade reportedly intensified his attacks against them. 
Zarate cited several instances in which Parlade reportedly smeared his person and the reputation of Bayan Muna. One such instance was during Parlade’s speech at the Milipol Asia-Pacific 2019 Conference in Singapore on April 5, wherein Bayan Muna was accused as a “Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) front organization.”
The complaint is for red-tagging and black propaganda which falls under the anti-graft law. For now this is just a complaint.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1302844/village-exec-falls-in-drug-bust-after-selling-p500-in-meth-to-undercover-narc
Narcs arrested a village councilor in Baybay City in a drug buy-bust on Monday (July 6). 
Marco Antonio Villacorte, 37, alderman of Zone 20 village in Baybay, allegedly sold a pack of shabu, or crystal meth, worth P500 to an undercover agent. 
Cleveland Villamor, head agent of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency in Leyte province, said Villacorte also yielded three sachets of meth worth P16,000.
Another LGU busted for drugs.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1108151
Two police officers were nabbed for robbery-extortion in Malolos City, Bulacan, the anti-scalawag unit of the Philippine National Police (PNP) said on Tuesday. 
Brig. Gen. Ronald Lee, PNP Integrity Monitoring and Enforcement Group chief, identified the suspects as Senior M/Sgt. Vic Godwin Lajom and Pat. Jay Mark Tuazon, both assigned with the Malolos City Police-Community Precinct 5 (PCP), and their civilian accomplices, Wendell Mendoza and Kenneth Villena. 
In his report to PNP chief, Gen. Archie Gamboa, Lee said the four were arrested right inside the Malolos City PCP 5 around 12:30 p.m. Monday following an entrapment operation conducted by IMEG operatives, in cooperation with the PNP Intelligence Group and the Bulacan Police Provincial Office. 
“We have received several complaints regarding the involvement of the two policemen in a massive protection racket in their area where they demand money from tricycle drivers and traffic violators in exchange for the nullification of their traffic citation tickets,” said Lee. 
Lee added that the four were arrested shortly after they received a marked PHP500 bill from a complainant. 
He said his team conducted a series of validation in the area and discovered that the suspects are really known for apprehending erring tricycle drivers and other civilians for traffic violations. They would ask for money from them in exchange for the downgrading or nullification of their traffic offenses. 
“The two civilians were found to be acting as the middlemen of the accused policemen in collecting money from the violators,” Lee said.
Two cops along with the help of two civilians shaking down tricycle drivers and others for traffic violations.

The chief inquest prosecutor of Manila City was shot dead by unidentified men in broad daylight Tuesday, in Manila. 
A report from Ermita police station said Manila Regional Trial Court chief inquest prosecutor Jovencio Senados (62) was shot by gunmen aboard a black SUV. 
The incident happened along Quirino Highway, corner Anakbayan, in Barangay 686 in Paco, Manila at around 11:05 a.m.
An independent tally of the National Union of Peoples’ lawyers showed that Senados is the 50th member of the Philippine Bar killed since the start of the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte. Among those killed are private and rights lawyers, government prosecutors and even active judges.
A government prosecutor is the 50th lawyer gunned down since 2016.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1108081
A person was wounded while 75 others--including a former city councilor here--were arrested after violence erupted Sunday morning in a disputed ancestral land in the outskirts of Tboli town, South Cotabato province. 
Maj. Irish Hezron Parangan, chief of Tboli municipal police station, said on Monday that a group of land claimants allegedly harassed and destroyed at least 20 shanties owned by members of the Palon family at a portion of Sito Pagang in Barangay Basag past 7 a.m. 
Parangan said the Palons were occupants of a portion of ancestral land in the village that was also being claimed by a group of residents from the city led by former City Councilor Minda Atendido. 
Carrying high-powered firearms and bladed weapons, he said the claimants led by Atendido reportedly stormed the site and harassed the occupants. 
An occupant identified as Junjun Menson Daroy, 21, sustained a gunshot wound from an undetermined firearm during the attack, he said. 
During the clearing operations past 9 a.m. along with elements from the Army’s 11th Special Forces Company, Parangan said they found the armed suspects on site along with the former city councilor.
Former city councilor leads an armed group of residents in a land dispute.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1303407/court-employee-arrested-after-selling-p1000-in-meth-to-undercover-agent
A court employee faces drug charges after he was arrested in a buy-bust operation in San Miguel town, Leyte province on Tuesday (July 7). 
Roy Labesig, 44, allegedly sold a pack of shabu, or crystal meth, worth P1,000 to an undercover narc, according to Cleveland Villamor, chief agent of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) in Leyte. 
Labesig was also allegedly caught in possession of more sachets of meth worth at least P81,600. 
The court employee, tagged as a high-value target, will be charged. He is now detained at the San Miguel police station.
A court employee, was a high value target, was caught selling drugs.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1303308/4-village-watchmen-in-killing-of-soldier-militiamen-in-basilan-surrender
Four village watchmen who were suspected of killing a soldier and two militiamen in Basilan last week have surrendered to the military, an Army official said. 
The suspects are members of the Barangay Peace Action Team, or BPAT, of Bohe Lebbung village in Tipo-Tipo town. 
On Friday (July 3), they attacked a group led by an Army soldier, militiamen and several civilians, killing four and wounding another four. They then fled to Sumisip town. 
Reyeg identified them as Ayatula Mohammad, 40, Saham Mohammad, 45, Lito Manisan, 45, and Kasim Manisan, 34. 
Manisan is said to have a personal grudge against a soldier, Pfc Mark Anthony Monte, who is assigned to lead militiamen at Bohe Lebbung village. 
Aside from Monte, two militiamen and a civilian were killed. Another two militiamen and two civilians were also wounded in the attack last Friday.
Four village watchmen kill a solider and two others over a personal grudge.

A pair of cops, disguised as a deliveryman and a civilian, tried but failed to serve on Tuesday, July 7, an invalid arrest warrant to a human rights group leader. 
Karapatan secretary-general Tinay Palabay narrated the foiled arrest in a Facebook post. She said that a cop who introduced himself as an “LBC courier” gave her the warrant over a revived perjury complaint against Karapatan’s officers by National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon. 
What was wrong with the warrant? It was already a null warrant. The warrant of arrest from Esperon’s case was issued while Palabay was out of the country in March. When she returned in April, she posted bail and attended online hearings with the court judge to secure her recall order for the warrant against her. 
As stated in the judge's recall order, the "warrant of arrest... issued against the accused is hereby LIFTED, RECALLED and RETURNED to this court." This means Palabay should no longer be arrested. 
Cops breaking basic procedure? Palabay pointed out that aside from wearing civilian attire and posing as a civilian, the cops did not read her her rights in their attempt to arrest her. She asked them why they failed to follow procedures. She said they replied that they wouldn’t arrest anyone if they followed procedures. (READ: If you're arrested or detained, know these rights) 
Palabay asked for their identification cards. The “deliveryman” initially said he had left his in their car, but he eventually pulled it out of his backpocket.
Two cops disguised as delivery men try to serve an expired warrant. They also attempted to arrest her without reading her her rights. Highly irregular.

If we don’t trust the Philippine National Police (PNP) and the government, we might as well “dissolve” them. 
This was according to Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa who slammed the report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) which stated that the number of those killed in the government’s war on illegal drugs in the Philippines may be “triple” than what the PNP has reported. 
At one point during the interview, Dela Rosa was asked why the drug war numbers from the PNP should be trusted. 
“If you do not trust the PNP numbers, we dissolve the PNP, if you don’t trust the government, tanggalin natin gobyerno. Let the human rights [groups], sila ang mag-rule sa ating bansa pag ganun, kung wala na tayong tiwala sa government instrumentality,” Dela Rosa said. 
(If you do not trust the PNP numbers, we dissolve the PNP, if you don’t trust the government, let’s remove the overnment. Let the human rights groups rule the country, if we don’t trust government instrumentalities). 
“Sige, dissolve natin lahat pati gobyerno pag ‘di tayo maniwala,” he added. 
(Let’s dissolve it all, even the government if we don’t trust them).
What he is really saying is trust the government or else. The problem is the Philippine government is not trustworthy. His dichotomy of absolute trust in the government or it's dissolution presents a false choice. Besides that the constitution declares that the power of the government originates in the people.

Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa on Thursday told employees of ABS-CBN to just look for other jobs should congressmen reject the network’s franchise application and permanently stop their operations. 
“Hanap ng ibang trabaho para mabuhay, magsumikap (Look for other jobs, work harder). May ibang paraan pa naman siguro para mabuhay tayo hangga’t may ibang jobs (There are other ways to earn for a living as long as there are other jobs),” the administration senator said in a virtual interview with reporters. 
“Alangan namang sabihin ko sa kanila na maghimagsik kayo, magwala kayo (I cannot tell them to protest, start a revolution). Maghanap na lang ng ibang trabaho para mabuhay pamilya ninyo (They can just look for other jobs so their families will still live),” he added. 
Despite saying that he feels for the employees of the broadcast company, and that it would be difficult to look for employment amid the COVID-19 pandemic, he said other workers are equally affected by the closure of several businesses. 
The neophyte senator also shared his belief that the shut down of ABS-CBN would not have an impact to the country, contrary to the concerns raised by most of his colleagues in the Senate. 
“Wala akong nakikitang epekto (I don’t see any effect). Hindi naman ako apektado dahil ‘di naman ako [taga-]ABS-CBN (I am not affected because I am not from ABS-CBN),” he said. 
“Wala akong nakikitang epekto dahil kung sasabihin niyo mawalan din ng news, meron naman din ‘yong ibang mga ibang news outfits na nagpe-perform (I don’t see any impact, because, if you will say that we will lose sources of news, there are other news outfits that could perform). So, wala akong nakitang epekto, sa akin (I don’t see any effect),” he reiterated.
This man has no empathy. What else would you expect from a man who said about an infant killed during police operations, "Shit happens?"


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1303497/duterte-calls-maria-ressa-a-fraud
“Ressa is a fraud. Believe me. Give us time. [It’s] too early for you to enjoy your awards. You are a fraud. We are just compiling [information] at this stage and someday in bold letters, we will show your incongruity,” Duterte said, speaking partly in Filipino, in a speech aired early Wednesday. 
And without mentioning anyone, he warned that: “One of these days, we will also judge you in the same way and with more ferocity. And it will come, it will come… Just be careful.” 
I have some folders given to me all throughout the years. You will have a dose of your own medicine one of these days. I’m not threatening you. Go ahead and expose anything about corruption in this government. As I said, if that’s big, I will resign,” he added.
Who is "We?"  Who has given Duterte folders and what do they contain? What does any of this have to do with the Office of the President? He has said such nonsense before about telephone conversations  of his enemies being recorded and given to him by a foreign power. Nothing came of those alleged recordings and likely nothing will come of this.

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Coronavirus Lockdown: New Coronavirus Strain, Junk Food Taxes, and More!

More news about the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1300566/over-15k-detainees-released-to-decongest-bjmp-jails-dilg
The Bureau of Jail Management and Penology has released more than 15,000 prisoners as the Philippines races to halt coronavirus infections in its overcrowded jails, the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) said Thursday. 
The 15,322 persons deprived of liberty were released from March 17 to June 22 by the “authority of courts” following a directive by the Supreme Court to send home those awaiting trial but remain in prison because they could not afford bail. 
Of the total number of released prisoners, the DILG said 5,910 are from Metro Manila, 1,557 are from Calabarzon, 1,487 from Central Visayas, 1,041 from Central Luzon, 897 from Zamboanga Peninsula, 762 from Northern Mindanao and the rest are from other regions. 
The majority of the freed inmates were senior citizens and those with “light or bailable offenses,” the DILG said in a statement.
Amazing. The jails are overcrowded with old folks and people who cannot afford bail. Languishing until a trial comes and taking up room. But it is only now in the midst of a pandemic that anything has been done to rectify this situation. This article was published on July 2nd and only covers March 17 - June 22.  Five days later an update was published showing that between March 17 - July 3rd 43,171 were set free.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/07/08/2026534/courts-released-over-43000-detainees-lockdown-march
That means in a period of 11 days 27,849 more inmates were released! Seems rather incredible.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/265502-roque-response-swim-with-dolphins-ocean-adventure-subic-bay
Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque tried to convince the public that his visit to a marine park on Wednesday, July 1, was not for leisure and thus not in violation of quarantine measures. 
"Hindi po siya leisure kasi first trip ko doon, as APOR (It's not for leisure because it's my first trip there, as an authorized person out of residence)," he said in response to questions during a virtual Malacañang briefing on Thursday, July 2.  
An APOR is a person allowed to leave home for essential errands or for work. Roque said his visit to Ocean Adventure Park in Subic, Bataan, was just a "sidetrip" of an authorized trip to check on his family's swine business and to distribute personal protective equipment to a nearby hospital. 
He further rationalized that he hails from Bataan, and that it was Bataan's first day under modified general community quarantine (MGCQ) when partial operations of leisure establishments like theme parks and resorts are allowed. 
But Roque resides in Quezon City in Metro Manila which is still under the stricter general community quarantine (GCQ). Residents in Metro Manila are told not to leave their homes for leisure purposes. 
"I asked if they (Ocean Adventure) were open. I said, 'Why not?' because they were near where I was going. As far as my trip there is concerned, I was an APOR even before because food was my business," said Roque in a mix of English and Filipino. 
He said he stayed at Ocean Park for an hour, partly because he wanted to check out its famous "Dolphin encounter" activity. 
Photos posted by Ocean Adventure but later deleted showed Roque in a rash guard and swimming cap, posing beside dolphins on a beach. 
"Kung may linabag na social distancing, ang katabi ko mga dolphin (If there was any social distancing rule violated, I was only beside dolphins)," he said. 
The Duterte spokesman then apologized if his visit to the park "offended" people. 
"For those I offended I'm sorry, tao lang po (I'm only human)," he said.
An interesting story. Roque was traveling and just happened to pass by a resort he had no vested in a long time and decided to go for a swim with the dolphins. Pictures were then uploaded onto the resort's Facebook page but deleted amidst public backlash. For his part Roque justified this visit by saying:
“Those of you who have been offended, sorry, just people. If you ask the Malacañang Press Corps, my job is, there is no Saturday or Sunday. If there is a break, insert it. To those I offended, I sincerely apologize. Let it go, it won't be repeated, ”Roque said. 
“This is the first time that the area is MGCQ (modified general community quarantine), and even under GCQ (general community quarantine), swimming is allowed because it is a non-contact sport. No social distancing was violated, my neighbors were dolphins, not people, ”he said. 
Roque said that he only visited Bataan to check on his former business ventures, including hog raising, which he said have gone bankrupt due to COVID-19. 
"It was a side trip," Roque said, referring to his visit to the Subic resort.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/745172/no-violation-in-trip-to-subic-resort-roque-says/story/
Who knew Roque was a hog farmer? Perhaps it was not an unlawful trip but it sure is bad optics to have Roque swimming with the dolphins while the whole country is reeling from the restrictions during the pandemic.
Mayor Edgardo Labella said in an interview with ABS-CBN News Channel that the deployment of military and police in the city would help enforce discipline amid the imposition of enhanced community quarantine in the area. 
“I think there is no harm if there are military personnel and military tanks, and I think it would also give more significance to the fact that this fight against COVID-19 is like a war,” he said. 
This war is rather more difficult because we are fighting an invisible enemy, and it requires all of us (to have) self-discipline among ourselves. I think this visibility of our military and PNP personnel, of course, show of force, I think, is one of the ways by which we can show and impose discipline on our residents,” he said.
It's like a war but the enemy is invisible but tanks on the streets is to impose discipline on everyone. How is that not militarization? Note that the tanks are not in the streets to fight the virus but to impose discipline on everyone which means making sure they stay in their homes or else.
At least 127,000 locally stranded individuals (LSIs) in Metro Manila are still waiting to be sent home to the provinces following the moratorium on local repatriation, with the government requiring them to undergo swab testing for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said yesterday. 
Lorenzana said the spike in the number of COVID-19 cases in the provinces has been blamed on the repatriation of stranded travelers. 
“The problem is that the first batches of LSIs who returned to the provinces were tagged as the source of infections. That’s why local government units are reluctant to receive them,” he said. “It is unfair for the LGUs to be overwhelmed because they do not have the quarantine facilities.”
127,000 people still stranded in Manila because LGUs don't want to take them back as they might be infected and their quarantine facilities are overfilled. One man from Estonia was stranded at NAIA for 110 days.

https://www.philstar.com/lifestyle/on-the-radar/2020/07/08/2026542/real-life-the-terminal-foreigner-trapped-naia-110-days-finally-flies-home
European tourist Roman Trofimov — who was forced to make a home out of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) for over three months — is finally flying back to his home country Estonia. 
“With the help of God and thanks to all people who supported me in this difficult time, I am going home now!!! My flight will land in Tallinn on July 8th at 13:20 (1:20 p.m.)! Thanks for sharing my story with the world. Good advice you give me and kind words of support. We made it people!” Roman capped his 110-day stay at the Manila airport beginning March 20. 
Through a viral post last Friday, he appealed for help from local and international media who have since picked up his story in order to aid his repatriation. 
“I am European from Estonia held in Manila International Airport for more than 100 days need any help getting out of here. I arrived in Manila on March 20th and been denied entry, the airline who flew me in, AirAsia took my passport and stopped operations that same day I am not allowed to fly out...I am a person with disability, my health is getting worse because of malnutrition, lack of sun and fresh air.” 
Prior to returning home, Roman had been staying at the departures area and even slept on the floor of the Philippines' busiest airport. 
He had been living off donations of food and hygiene products from airport staff.
At least he finally made it home.  But there are chairs in the departure area.  No need to sleep on the floor.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1301977/solons-deped-not-ready-for-new-normal-classes
Lawmakers in the House of Representatives on Friday expressed concern over the supposed lack of readiness of the Department of Education (DepEd) for the new school year in August with an overhauled educational system that adapts to the “new normal” under a coronavirus pandemic. 
The House committee sought updates from the DepEd on the “learning continuity plan” it has developed under the “new normal,” wherein students would not be required to attend face-to-face classes. 
Pangasinan Rep. Christopher De Venecia aired his concern that with the “distance learning” system that the DepEd was proposing, other parents might also not have the means to supervise their children while doing school activities at home. 
Education Undersecretary Nepomuceno Malaluan said that DepEd remained confident on the readiness for the Aug. 24 opening of classes, and was now shifting to concrete application of the learning continuity plan it had developed. 
“If it is very visible that this cannot be done, we will be the first to admit, but at this time we are confident that our timetable is moving along,” he said.
Classes will be shifting online due to the coronavirus and some lawmakers are expressing concern that the country will not be ready.  The DepEd says they will be ready. But that remains to be seen. 

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/07/06/2025991/junk-food-tax-eyed-covid-funds
With the fiscal deficit expected to widen and the government under pressure to give subsidies to distressed sectors, some senators are eyeing the imposition of taxes on so-called junk food to raise funds for easing the economic impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. 
The senators, however, stressed that raising funds through new taxes must be carefully calibrated even if there are tempting “low-hanging fruits” such as taxes on the so-called “sin products,” which have not been been fully implemented yet. 
“The other possible sin tax that government may possibly look at is from junk food, which has zero nutritional value and targets the youth. It has been proven that junk food causes obesity and other heart ailments,” Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, vice chairman of the Senate committee on economic affairs, said over the weekend.
The government is running out of funds to fight COVID-19 and are now eye excise taxes on junk food to raise money.

The Philippines has the second most COVID-19 cases in Southeast Asia as of Monday night with a total of 46,333 infections. 
This developed after the country logged 2,099 additional cases, enough to surpass Singapore which currently has 44,983, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. 
Indonesia continues to top the region with 64,958 cases. 
However, it was the Philippines that has the most active cases with 32,845, followed by Indonesia’s 31,798 and Singapore’s 4,516. 
In terms of fatalities, Indonesia is currently first with 3,241, while the Philippines has 1,303 at second, followed by Malaysia with only 121. 
With 12,185 total recoveries, the Philippines is third behind Singapore (40,441) and Indonesia (29,919).
Despite these numbers and despite the exponential rise in cases the government continues to tell the public that everything is fine and they are winning the war against COVID-19.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1303103/palace-insists-ph-winning-vs-covid-19-despite-ranking-2nd-in-sea-virus-count
Malacañang on Tuesday refused to budge in its claim that the Philippines is winning its fight against the coronavirus disease pandemic even as the country became the nation with the second most coronavirus infections in Southeast Asia. 
But despite the surge in new cases, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque, citing the country’s “low death rate” and its capacity to continue to provide hospital care, claimed that the Philippines is still winning against the contagion. 
(To those who don’t believe that we are winning, then that’s your personal commitment and you should accept that. But while the patients are not dying, as we have the capacity to provide medical care to the sick, I cannot accept that we are not winning against this disease.) 
(I’m sorry but the data is clear. We don’t invent data.)
The Department of Health (DOH) said it has observed an increase in infection in the past two weeks, which it attributed to the increased contact among the population as a result of the relaxation of quarantine measures. 
(Most of our active cases are mild or asymptomatic. And what we watch out for is those who are suffering from severe or critical illness and we make sure that we are capable enough to give them care. That’s the critical care capacity we are talking about.) 
(So to me, there’s no reason to worry, we just have to put up our tested weapons against COVID-19.)
Roque is right. The data is clear and not invented and it indicates that cases of COVID-19 are on the rise. New UP predictions say 100,000 by the end of August.
https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/07/07/20/coronavirus-disease-cases-may-top-100000-by-august-warns-up-expert
Cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the Philippines may surpass the 100,000-mark by the end of August, an expert from the University of the Philippines said Tuesday, as he urged the government to tweak pandemic protocols. 
The health department on Tuesday confirmed a record-high jump in "fresh cases" or those whose results were released in the last 3 days, which brought the total tally to 46,333. 
The cases are increasing by at least 1,000 cases a day and areas without any COVID-19 case before lockdowns were eased recently became virus hotspots, said mathematics professor Dr. Guido David, a member of the UP OCTA Research group. 
"Sa nakita ko, iyong trend niya mas mataas pa, hihigit pa sa 100,000 kung hindi natin baguhin iyong ating sistema, ating pag-handle ng pandemya," 
(Based on what I saw, the trend is that it will increase, surpass 100,000 if we don't change our system, our handling of the pandemic.)
Cases are increasing by 1,000 a day and areas without any COVID-19 cases are becoming hotspots! How is that winning the war? Sounds like enemy is enriching on new territory. This recent surge could be more deadly as some doctors warn the virus has mutated and become stronger.
https://cnnphilippines.com/news/2020/7/6/new-coronavirus-strain-might-have-reached-country-expert-says.html
A local infectious diseases expert has warned the new strain of COVID-19 might have reached the country. 
Dr. Edsel Salvaña noted the new mutation of coronavirus may have contributed to what he called as “definite increase” of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the country. 
“Based on the behavior of the increase in cases, I would say it’s probably here in the Philippines. We’ve seen it in Taiwan, in Australia, and in Japan as well,” Salvaña told CNN Philippines’ Rico Hizon on Monday. 
Last week, a global study published in the scientific journal Cell revealed a new form of the coronavirus has spread from Europe to the US. 
Salvaña, however, clarified that medical experts in the country have yet to do a research if the new coronavirus strain has in fact entered the country. He added the Philippine Genome Center only holds a coronavirus sequence from March. 
Salvaña explained that it will only take 48 to 72 hours to sequence a virus, to validate if indeed the new coronavirus strain entered the country already. 
The infectious diseases expert also attributed the rise of COVID-19 cases in the country to the increased mass testing efforts of the government, backlogs in testing, and the gradual reopening of the country’s economy. 
“We have to think about the fact that more infectious virus can be driving this as well. Because in terms of what’s happening in the rest of the world, it would be strange if it wasn’t happening here as well,” said Salvaña.
In the face of rising cases and the preponderance of data the DOH is still making major flubs.


https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/07/07/2026261/doh-apologizes-mistakenly-identifying-emerging-covid-19-hotspots-metro-manila
The Department of Health issued an apology Monday night hours after it mistakenly announced that four cities in Metro Manila had been classified as emerging virus hotspots.  
In a televised briefing Monday afternoon, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire identified the cities of Marikina, Muntinlupa, Makati and Quezon City as emerging hotspots. 
She said Marikina City had 51 cases for a case growth rate of 43.47%, while Muntinlupa had 30 cases for a case growth rate of 35.16%. Quezon City’s 406 cases represented a 34.5% growth rate and Makati’s 135 cases for a 30.18% growth rate. 
The data that Vergeire mentioned, however, were from June. 
“The following cities were mistakenly classified as hotspots and was based on a report last month,” the DOH said in a statement Monday night.
It's just the latest mistake made by the DOH.

The government is gung-ho about jeepney modernization but the pandemic could be throwing them a monkey wrench.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/07/07/2026161/modern-jeeps-could-worsen-virus-transmission
A coalition for better transportation has asked the COVID-19 National Task Force to review the design of air-conditioned modern jeepneys amid reports that poor ventilation in confined spaces could worsen the spread of the coronavirus disease 2019. 
Alt Mobility PH, Commuters PH, Komyut and Sentro sent a letter dated June 5 to COVID-19 response chief implementor Carlito Galvez Jr. informing him about a June 22 advisory from the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control titled “Heating, ventilation and air-conditioning systems in the context of COVID-19.” 
The letter was also sent to Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez and Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) chairman Martin Delgra III. 
According to the coalition, the advisory “shines a light on the vulnerabilities of the Philippine government’s measures in reducing COVID-19 exposures and transmissions.”
It cited several cases of virus transmission in confined spaces due to poor ventilation.
 
The coalition said it reviewed the designs of the modern jeepneys and noted that “most have sealed windows with limited natural ventilation and airflow,” which could increase the risk of virus transmission. 
The group said the importance of ventilation may have been “overlooked” by the Department of Transportation and LTFRB in giving priority to modernized jeepneys over traditional ones.
Looks like the smoke belching twenty-year-old jeepnies might be better after all.

Even though the lockdowns have eased up a bit the Philippines is not totally open for business, or business as usual anyway, and Duterte is not keen on fully reopening the economy.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1303490/reopen-entire-ph-economy-and-we-are-in-deep-shit
“We have to be very circumspect in the reopening of the economy. Just go slowly. If ever there is going to be a spike again, there might be many who will be infected or reinfected. At least, the calibrated number of people we allow to go out would be still within manageable numbers,” Duterte said, speaking partly in Filipino, in a taped address aired early Wednesday. 
Because if you open the entire Philippines and thousands upon thousands of new cases would happen, then we are in deep shit. We will really suffer. First of all, we don’t have money,” he added. 
Duterte made this assessment despite the government’s easing restrictions in several areas nationwide, including Metro Manila, the country’s economic center, starting June.
"Thousands upon thousands of new cases" are already happening. So where does that leave the Philippines but in the deep?

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Motorcycle Madness 8

More motorcycle madness from the Philippines.  I am going to include tricycles because after all they are just motorcycles with a sidecar. Tricycle riders also like to pose for the camera.







Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Insurgency: Brink of Collapse

The end of the NPA is imminent!  So says top NPA commanders who have surrendered.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1107477
Three ranking leaders of the New People’s Army (NPA) who have returned to the fold of the law have admitted that the communist organization is on the brink of collapse. 
The three, who belonged to the Komiteng Larangan Gerilya Sierra Madre (KLG SM) operating in the province, surrendered and yielded their high-powered firearms to the Army’s 91st Infantry Battalion (91IB) and Philippine National Police (PNP) from Aurora and Nueva Ecija in a secluded area in Sitio Balitwak, Barangay San Isidro, San Luis, Aurora last Saturday. 
The rebel leaders surrendered two M16 5.56mm rifles and an M653 5.56mm rifle or Baby Armalite. 
In an exclusive interview with the Philippine News Agency (PNA) on Monday, the ranking NPA surrenderers, who introduced themselves as alias "Ka Dingdong", "Ka Dong" and "Ka Junjun", said what remains of the NPA membership is already weak. 
Ka Dingdong, a squad leader, and team leaders Ka Dong and Ka Junjun, said from the previous three platoons of KLG SM, there is now only one platoon under the leadership of its commanding officer Harold Miňosa and vice commanding officer Sudario Lee alias "Ka Aura". 
They said the rebels are already dwindling in numbers as many have surrendered due to the hardships they are experiencing in the mountains. 
“Sa totoo lang hindi na namin kaya ang paghihirap sa loob ng kilusan. Ito ang nararanasan ng hukbo, gutom at pagod, nararamdaman namin na wala ng patutunguhan ang ipinaglalaban namin. Nalinlang kami ng dati naming mga kasamahan. Lakad lang kami ng lakad, walang katapusan kaya kusang loob na kaming sumuko at nagbaba ng armas (The truth is we can no longer bear the hardships inside the movement. This is what the comrades are experiencing, hunger and fatigue. We feel that what we were fighting for nothing. We were fooled by our former comrades. We were just walking and walking and there is no ending. That is why, we decided to surrender and yield our firearms),” they said. 
The surrenderers said they were NPA fighters since 2017 and had engaged in close fights with government troops five times in the provinces of Nueva Ecija, Nueva Vizcaya and Aurora.
Coming from former NPA rebels instead of hopeful AFP commanders makes this rhetoric seem more authentic and plausible. But who knows what to believe when the AFP was caught last year faking a photo of surrendering rebels? Have 4,000 surrendering rebels received millions in aid from the government?


The financial aid was distributed through the agency’s Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program (ECLIP), a “locally-driven, managed, and implemented program which veers away from the past practice of pre-packaged interventions designed at the national level,” the DILG said in a statement. 
The DILG’s ECLIP provides each rebel surrenderer with an immediate cash aid of P15,000, livelihood assistance amounting to P50,000, and reintegration assistance of P21,000, as well as firearms remuneration for each surrendered firearm. 
Of the total P304.43 million, the DILG said that P58.845 million was in the form of immediate assistance to 3,923 former rebels, P121.250 million of livelihood assistance was given to 2,426 former rebels, P57.217 million for firearms remuneration of 858 former rebels and P67.116 million was for reintegration assistance to 3,196 former rebels. 
As of May 31, the 4,190 ECLIP beneficiaries composed of 2,646 were former regular members of the New People’s Army, while 1,544 were from the Militia ng Bayan, who are auxiliary members of the Communist Party of the  Philippines, the agency said. 
The program is “heavily concentrated” in Mindanao, particularly the Davao Region, which has  1,035 beneficiaries,  Northern Mindanao with 498 beneficiaries, Caraga with 496 beneficiaries, Soccksargen with 370 beneficiaries, and Zamboanga Peninsula with 159 beneficiaries, the DILG said. 
There are 349 ECLIP beneficiaries in Eastern Visayas while 121 are from Western Visayas and 72 from Central Visayas. 
In Luzon, the DILG said it has assisted 245 former rebels in the Bicol Region, 203 in Mimaropa, 174 in Central Luzon, 179 in Cordillera Administrative Region, 101 in Cagayan Valley, 27 in Ilocos Region, and seven in the National Capital Region.
Those are interesting statistics but we are not told if the number 4,000 is cumulative since the beginning of the E-CLIP program or from some other fixed period. It cannot possibly be cumulative because the AFP claimed over 10,000 rebels and supporters surrendered in 2018 alone.
As this develops, the AFP official said the number of regular NPA members and their supporters, who have surrendered to government forces from Jan. 1 to Nov. 28 this year, has now reached 10,698. 
 https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2019/10/martial-law-continues-to-lose.html
So where does the number 4,000 come from? The number 4,000 has come up before in 2018.
From January 1 to March 15, the AFP has claimed recording 4,356 NPA regular members and supporters who have surrendered. 
Of this number, 626 were either NPA regulars or Sangay sa Partiko Lokal members and 3,730 were Militia ng Bayan, Underground Mass Organization members and mass supporters. 
 https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2019/10/martial-law-continues-to-lose.html
I have written about this math problem before and the again the numbers do not add up. There are either more NPA members than the AFP would care to admit or something else is happening.

A recent situation in Jolo has raised some serious questions about how the war against terrorism is being conducted. Just how has Abu Sayyaf been able to operate for so long? Who is financing them?  Who is protecting them?

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/regions/744707/4-army-men-killed-by-policemen-in-jolo/story/
Four soldiers were killed following an alleged misencounter with policemen in Barangay Walled City, Jolo, Sulu, according to a report from the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao and the police. 
The initial report said the Jolo Municipal Police Station (MPS) and the Provincial Drug Enforcement Unit were on patrol at Barangay Bus-Bus when they spotted a gray Montero SUV boarded by four armed men along Sitio Marina, Barangay Walled at around 2:40 p.m. on Monday, June 29. 
When confronted by the Philippine National Police team, the men introduced themselves as members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. They were then directed to proceed to Jolo MPS for verification. 
Upon arrival at the station, police said the men fled toward Martirez, Barangay San Raymundo. 
When PNP personnel chased them, the police said the men disembarked from their vehicle with firearms. The men pointed their firearms towards the personnel, however, before they could pull the trigger, the police was able to shoot them in defense, the report said. 
The report added police could not find any motive yet for the shooting. A team from the Scene of the Crime Operatives is currently processing the scene.
That is the initial story given by the PNP and it turns out it was a lie. Those AFP soldiers were undercover operatives and they would not have had weapons on their person. That means they did not fire their weapons.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1299853/army-chief-killing-of-4-army-intel-officers-in-jolo-is-murder-top-sulu-cops-should-be-axed
Army chief Lt. Gen. Gilbert Gapay on Tuesday (June 30) called for the sacking of Sulu provincial police commanders for the killing of four Army intelligence officers by policemen in the province’s capital, Jolo.
The four intelligence officers were tracking two suspected suicide bombers from the Abu Sayyaf Group when their vehicle was flagged down by police on Monday (June 29) afternoon. 
The Army officers had identified themselves to the policemen but still ended up being shot by the policemen when one of the officers alighted, unarmed, from the SUV they were riding in. 
The police have a different version of what happened. The Sulu police force claimed that its men stopped the vehicle carrying the intelligence officers and instructed them to go to a nearby police station for verification of identities. 
According to the PNP narrative, as the police team and the Army officers neared the police station, the officers’ SUV sped off, which triggered a car chase. Police said they only defended themselves as the soldiers opened fire. 
Gapay called the case as one of “murder” and described the police account as “fabricated.” 
“We find the report fabricated, full of inconsistencies. Parang sine and very misleading (It’s like a movie and very misleading),” he said. 
“There was never a firefight. Walang gunfight and our men never fired a single shot (There’s no gunfight and our men never fired a single shot). There were witnesses, there were CCTVs and we have personnel tailing,” he added. 
The policemen also fled the scene after the shooting, which Gapay said puzzled him. 
“After na mapatay nila lahat they fled. SOP ba ‘yun? Diba pag namatay you have to cordon the area and wait for the SOCO? Wala, nagtagbuhan lahat (After they killed everyone they fled. Is that SOP? Isn’t it that when someone is killed you have to cordon off the area and wait for the SOCO? No, they all fled) ,” he said.
The AFP says there was no gunfight and that the PNP officers fled the scene. The NBI says one solider was shot eight times.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/07/02/2025177/nbi-one-soldier-jolo-incident-police-shot-eight-times
The National Bureau of Investigation found that one of the four soldiers killed by cops in Jolo, Sulu suffered eight gunshot wounds while the two others had at least three gunshot wounds each.
Eight times seems like overkill. Why would the PNP stop these soldiers and blast them? What motive could they possibly have to execute these four men in broad daylight and then flee the scene? Those four intel soldiers were on the trail of 2 suicide bombers who have now escaped capture.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/323701/another-army-team-misses-abu-targets-after-agents-killing
An Army unit awaiting a signal to swoop down on an Abu Sayyaf bomb maker and two suspected female bombers instead received word that four of their comrades had been gunned down in Jolo, Sulu, a military spokesperson said on Thursday, July 2, 2020. 
The team rushed to where the four Army intelligence operatives had been shot near the Jolo police headquarters on Monday afternoon, June 29, 2020, minutes after they were informed that the group’s leader, Maj. Marvin Indammog, had been killed, Army spokesperson Col. Ramon Zagala told the Inquirer. 
“These soldiers were prepared to go after Sawadjaan once Major Indammog tracked down his location,” Zagala said. He was referring to Mundi Sawadjaan, a bomb expert and a target of Indammog’s group. 
“We don’t know how close they got to pinpointing Sawadjaan and his cohorts’ location because they were already shot to death and all focus turned to the incident,” Zagala said.
Maj. Gen. Corleto Vinluan Jr., commander of Joint Task Force Sulu, said Indammog’s team was about to conduct a raid on the suspected bombers somewhere in Jolo that Monday afternoon.
 
“They came from Barangay Mauboh, in Patikul town, on their way to Jolo for this mission. It has been their packet mission for three weeks,” Vinluan said. 
Alleged IS leader in PHHe said they were set to capture Sawadjaan and two newly trained female suicide bombers when their plan was stalled after they were stopped at the checkpoint in Barangay Busbus. 
“When they were ordered to report to Jolo Municipal Police Station, everything was no longer going according to Indammog’s plan, until they were fired upon by the cops,” Vinluan said. 
Sawadjaan, who is in his early 30s, is a nephew of Abu Sayyaf subleader Hatid Hajan Sawadjaan, the alleged leader of the Islamic State (IS) group in the Philippines. 
The military said Mundi Sawadjaan was behind a series of deadly blasts in Sulu in 2019. These include the Jan. 27 twin bombings at the Jolo Cathedral, which left more than 20 dead and over 100 wounded; a suicide bombing that killed eight people at an Army camp in Indanan, Sulu, on June 28, in which he fitted explosive vests on the two Egyptian bombers; and a checkpoint bombing also in Indanan on Sept. 8, which killed three people, including the foreign female suicide bomber.
Three weeks of surveillance on a high value target down the drain. Now that Sawadjaan knows he was being watched he has certainly moved to safety. Perhaps the stupidest response to this incident is Senator Hontiveros' call for more legislation.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/07/02/2025146/hontiveros-calls-extensive-reform-after-police-shoot-4-soldiers-jolo
Sen. Risa Hontiveros on Thursday filed a resolution calling on the Senate to launch a probe that will aid legislation in response to the killing of four soldiers by police officers in Jolo, Sulu. 
Hontiveros said her resolution "aims to institutionalize measures against the excessive use of force and violence within the police force." 
Congress can hold investigations in aid of legislation because it has oversight powers on how the executive branch implements laws and policies.
Senator  Pangilinan had the same reaction as Hontiveros thinking that legislation is the problem. Particularly he thinks the new Anti-Terror bill will cause an increase in such incidents.
“Nakakabahala ang balitang ito. Ngayon pa lang na hindi pa batas ang anti-terror bill, may nangyayari nang ganito. Ano na lang ang laban ng ordinaryong tao?” Pangilinan said in a statement. 
(This news is alarming. The anti-terror bill has yet to become law but an incident like this already happened. What can an ordinary citizen do?) 
“This incident is disturbing because it appears that the police are quick in pulling the trigger without careful judgment,” Pangilinan said. 
“If they can do this to their fellow uniformed men, how much more to the ordinary civilians who are unarmed and defenseless?” he added.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1300439/pangilinan-wants-senate-to-probe-killing-of-4-army-men-in-jolo
We will all have to wait for the NBI to finish their investigation before making any judgements but it appears that the soldiers were targeted for death by the cops who killed them. That is not a problem legislation will fix. It also has nothing to do with the anti-terror bill which has now become law. Hard questions must be asked and hard answers will surely be uncovered by the NBI. The question that must be asked is, "Is the PNP protecting Abu Sayyaf?" 

Don't forget that during the Marawi siege weapons with AFP markings were found.


http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/930750/militants-fighting-in-marawi-using-govt-owned-guns-says-army-exec
Most weapons recovered from slain militants belonging to the Maute group and its allies or from areas they had vacated in this Lanao del Sur provincial capital bore marks which indicated that these came from the government, a military spokesperson said. 
“It only meant that somebody from the government sold it to them,” said Capt. Jo-ann Petinglay, spokesperson for the Joint Task Force Marawi. 
Petinglay, however, did not say how many of these recovered firearms had been confirmed to have come from the government armoury. 
The military has recovered at least 628 firearms—among these high-powered weapons like Barrett .50 caliber sniper’s rifles and Armalite, Garand and M14 rifles—since fighting began in late May when Islamic State-inspired militants took over sections of Marawi. 
According to Petinglay, finding out who are responsible for the delivery of the firearms to the Maute group and its allies is not the military’s priority, noting that the investigation can be conducted after the fighting here ends. 
“It’s easy to track where (the firearms) came from (based on the markings). But it’s not our priority right now. Once the fighting is over, we will commence our investigation,” she said.
Later the AFP did a 180 and claimed none of the weapons came from the military.
“As for the (seized Maute Group) firearms inventoried so far, we are still to see any weapon (serial numbers) matching those in the inventory of the AFP,” Guerrero said in Filipino when asked during a press briefing in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City whether AFP weapons were found among the terrorists’ arms cache.
https://news.mb.com.ph/2017/12/17/seized-weapons-in-marawi-not-from-military-afp/
These weapons were then destroyed and with them all hope of finding their true provenance.
https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/12/13/17/duterte-witnesses-destruction-of-marawi-firearms
President Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday witnessed the destruction of firearms seized from Islamic State-inspired extremists during the 5-month siege in Marawi City. 
A total of 652 weapons that were either captured, confiscated, surrendered or recovered from Maute terrorists were destroyed at the Philippine Army headquarters in Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City. 
A road roller vehicle flattened machine guns, squad automatic weapons, rifle propelled grenade launchers, sniper rifles, M16 rifles, shotguns and airguns. They were then cut into pieces using a metal bond circular saw. 
The military said all destroyed firearms will later be burned. Metal residues and scrap will be properly kept for final disposal in accordance with the Armed Forces’ policies and directives, Tiongson said.
Did the AFP lie when they first claimed that the weapons bore AFP markings? Why would they do that?  How did Maute rebels obtain those firearms?  Aside from Islamic terrorists the NPA is most certainly receiving financial assistance from government officials namely through extortion taxes.

http://davaotoday.com/main/politics/new-peoples-army/npa-taxation-a-reality-just-pay-them-says-duterte/
December last year, Duterte drew flak when his pronouncement during a visit at the Communist Party of the Philippines quoted him as saying that he pays revolutionary tax. A youtube video later circulated accusing him of giving P125 million as annual revolutionary taxes. 
He clarified that he attended the CPP anniversary at a Typhoon Pablo-affected area where he gave some amount for the typhoon victims; the funds were sourced out from private donors. He said he merely kidded that the funds were the taxes that he would pay to NPAs, but because there was no barangay captain around to receive the donation, he coursed it through local NPA leaders. 
In Thursday’s trade expo, Duterte said, “I can talk, but I can’t talk them out of their ideology. You have to realize the Communist Party is entering its 45th year here. You have to admit there’s been historical injustice committed on the people.” 
Duterte said the national government should deal with the revolutionary groups by talking peace. 
“Crimes I can deal with it. But with the revolutionary (groups), I give it to the (national) government, but here, I advised government not to make arrests of revolutionaries” he said. 
As to the NPAs asking taxes he said “I cannot put it to a stop. So factor that in your investments. If you pay to the BIR (Bureau of Internal Revenue), you prepare also for the NPA.” Some participants giggled and smiled on this remark.
Duterte said the above in 2013. He not only advocated paying NPA but he also sympathized with them as being revolutionaries who are attempting to correct historical injustices. Today the same problem continues to stymie the government's efforts to end the insurgency.

https://www.dilg.gov.ph/news/DILG-349-government-execs-pay-CPP-NPA-extortion-money-permit-to-campaign/NC-2019-1060
The DILG Secretary says that of the 349 officials, there are 11 provincial governors; five vice governors; 10 provincial board members; 55 mayors; 21 vice mayors and 41 councilors. 
Also in the list are 126 barangay captains, 50 barangay councilors, and eight other barangay officials. 
"This number is not alarming as compared to the total number of barangays in the country, but it sends a message that extortion starts at the community level, down in the grass roots," Año says. 
Other source of extortion money are 11 former local government unit (LGU) officials, 10 incumbent congressman, and one former congressman.
Clearly the insurgency is being funded in part, whether small or large, by government officials.

The big question to ask from the incident in Jolo is were those soldiers killed to protect Abu Sayyaf? It is not out of the realm of possibility. Hopefully an NBI investigation will make the matter clear. A Senate inquiry into the Marawi siege would also clarify things. But instead of calling for that the so-called opposition wants more useless legislation.