Thursday, June 11, 2020

Coronavirus Lockdown: No Jeepnies, Wasted Vegetables, and More!

The country is now gradually reopening with Manila going from ECQ to GCQ and other places going from GCQ to MGCQ. This reopening has been fraught with chaos.


Jeepenies are dirty, smelly, cramped, and cheap but they are how the people get around. What will happen without them?

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1285323/crisis-seen-in-absence-of-jeepneys
Anger mounted in Metro Manila on Tuesday over lack of public transportation for workers allowed to return to their jobs after three months of quarantine, with senators calling the situation an emerging crisis and slamming transportation officials for their insensitivity and lack of foresight. 
Jeepneys, UV Express vans, and most public utility buses remain prohibited, even though more businesses were allowed to resume operations. 
Transport officials refused to allow jeepneys and UV Express vans to go back to their routes because these vehicles accept fare only in cash, which is the only way the majority of commuters—the low-income earners who don’t own smartphones—pay for their rides. 
The ban on jeepneys and city buses backfired on the government’s economic reopening plan, with thousands of workers again failing to get to their jobs or begging for rides on Tuesday and transport officials not backing down. 
“Three months under [quarantine] and still they have no clear plan in place. What happened to foresight? It’s good they have air-conditioned vehicles. Why don’t the DOTr officials try to commute from their homes to their offices?” Binay said. 
“[The] DOTr knew that Metro Manila and the rest of the regions will soon be transitioning to the new normal. They knew that 30 percent of those in [Metro Manila] will start going to work by June 1— and then they will deploy trucks for free rides [that] compromise and breach all health protocols, particularly physical distancing,” she said. 
Binay also criticized the ban on jeepneys, describing it as “unrealistic, anticommuter at antiworker.”
The government reopens the economy but bans jeepnies because they do not accept cashless payments. This leaves millions of people stranded and unable to get to their jobs unless they take the free truck ride provided by the DOTr.  This truck ride breaches the social distancing protocols. It's caused a real mess and the MMDA blames it all on the commuters!

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1285288/mmda-commuters-to-blame-for-chaos
MMDA General Manager Jose Arturo Garcia said the people “seemed to have lost focus” that the new coronavirus that causes the severe respiratory disease COVID-19 was still around and could spread wider with the easing of restrictions on public transportation. 
“They were focused on traveling even though they [knew], just as the Department of Transportation said, our first priority is health and safety,” Garcia said in a radio interview. 
He cited the crowding of hordes of commuters along Commonwealth Avenue in Quezon City on Monday, with no one giving others a wide berth as they waited for rides that never came. 
Garcia also mentioned the crowding on a truck that police deployed to ferry stranded commuters. 
“When they saw the free rides, many commented on social media that commuters fought over these, they were on the road, there were no lines. They were each to his own and forgot that the priority is to stay safe from [the coronavirus],” Garcia said. 
Ariel Inton, head of Lawyers for Commuters’ Safety and Protection, slammed Garcia’s remarks as insensitive, “assuming that people are stupid or stubborn.” 
“The only reason they are outside is because we reopened so many businesses, and they would not have gone [out to go to work] if they [had not been] asked,” Inton said. 
But they banned jeepneys, UV Express vans, and city buses that serve most of the routes through business districts in the metropolis because it would be difficult to implement the cashless fare system on these vehicles, making them risky for virus transmission. 
But without these vehicles, low-income workers, the bulk of Metro Manila’s workforce, cannot go to work. Transport officials encourage the use of bicycles, but don’t say how people can ride bicycles under heavy rain during the rainy season, which is almost here.
What did they expect?
A Filipino traveler from Japan who arrived in Manila on June 1 is at a loss waiting for a COVID-19 swab test that he said may never happen. 
Andy Navarrete, a banker in Manila, told Inquirer that when his repatriation flight from Japan arrived June 1 at Terminal 2 of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA), he expected a COVID swab test to be administered right there, and then stay in a hotel for two to five days to wait for the results. 
Navarrete is married to a Japanese who lives in Japan with their four children. He left Manila to visit his family in Japan just before the lockdown was imposed on March 16. His return flight to Manila had been postponed due to the extended lockdown, until finally he boarded a repatriation flight on June 1. 
“The Coast Guard commandant at the airport gave us an orientation (on the testing protocols for arriving travelers), but he said they cannot do the tests because they had no test kits,” Navarrete told Inquirer. 
Navarrete and the other passengers were advised to proceed to their respective hotels where a coordinator will arrange for the tests. 
He is not an OFW (overseas Filipino worker) so he knew he would pay for his own hotel stay. 
“There was no transportation from the airport so I also had to hire a taxi at my expense,” he said.
Th guy returned home, was told to quarantine pending a COVID-19 test, had to do to so at his own expense, but there are no tests available! 

Nine individuals were ordered to swim in a canal in Barangay San Antonio in Davao City as punishment for violating the curfew amid the quarantine. 
According to Cedric Castillo's report on "24 Oras" on Wednesday, the curfew violators fear they might get sick after swimming in the filthy canal. 
Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte, meanwhile, also condemned the punishment, saying it was "not humane." 
However, barangay officials said there was nothing wrong with the punishment.
That is absolutely disgusting and no way is that a canal.  That is a sewer!

During the lockdown people have been without a job and an income. That means they cannot pay their rent.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/740896/covid-survivor-leaves-rented-house-over-arguments-with-landlady/story/
A single mother who survived the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on Tuesday left her home in Barangay Batasan Hills, Quezon City to escape further arguments with her landlady who pressuring her to pay the two months of rent that she owed. 
According to Ivan Mayrina’s report on “24 Oras,” Mary Glen Dosal had several arguments with her landlady Vicky Mariveles over her failure to pay the P7,000 rent that she owed. 
On Monday, barangay officials helped settle the conflict by giving Dosal until June 15 to leave her rented home, though she need not pay the P7,000. 
However, Dosal decided to leave earlier than June 15.
The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said tenants cannot be forced to pay for missed rent or move out of their houses amid the pandemic. 
“The grace period will begin either upon the lifting of whatever community quarantine. Puwede siyang hindi pa magbayad or gamitin niya ‘yung memorandum circular on rental natin. Ang 30-day grace period will already commence at the time that she is able to work,” Trade Undersecretary Ruth Castelo explained.
This is horrible especially seeing as Duterte repeatedly warned landlords not to pressure tenants for rent and the DTI has mandated that all tenants be given a 30 day grace period to pay up.

It's funny how the pandemic has effected everything.  And not funny ha-ha.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1286298/tomato-glut-forces-farmers-to-dump-produce-at-vizcaya-ifugao-roadsides
On June 2, tons of tomatoes were abandoned along the roads of Tinoc town in Ifugao. A week earlier, tomatoes were also dumped at roads in the Nueva Vizcaya town of Bambang. 
“The sorry sight of dumped tomatoes add to the woes of farmers,” who are suffering from the impact of the quarantine imposed to stop the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), said Adrian Albano, administrator of the Ifugao Highland Farmers’ Forum in a June 4 telephone interview. 
The supply glut had also been attributed to “the erratic scheduling of transport of vegetables from Ifugao,” he said. 
Tomatoes were priced down to P4 to P5 a kilo, which was too far from “the desirable P12 a kilo so that farmers can profit,” Albano added. 
This was reflected in the June 4 transactions at the Nueva Vizcaya Agricultural terminal in Bambang. Squash was sold for P6 to P7 a kilo there, while yellow ginger was he purchased for P15-18 a kilo. 
Farmers donated some of the crops to quarantined communities, Albano said.
The quarantine has made led to an "erratic scheduling of transport of vegetables from Ifugao" which has lead to a dramatic price drop. This has led to farmers dumping their crops on the side of the road. What a waste!

Public transportation continues to be an issue in some cities. In Cebu the cops have decided to give free rides to commuters.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/315464/police-deploy-patrol-cars-to-offer-free-rides-to-commuters-in-cebu
With still less public transportation on the road, commuters are still having a problem finding a ride even as Cebu City has shifted to general community quarantine (GCQ). 
But the riding public got a bit of a help on Wednesday, June 3, 2020, as police stations took the initiative to deploy their mobile patrols and offer free rides to commuters on the streets. 
According to Police Brigadier General Albert Ignatius Ferro, director of Police Regional Office in Central Visayas (PRO-7), the move is part of the Philippine National Police (PNP) program called “Libre Sakay.” 
“This is not a new initiative. [We did this] even before, when we were still in ECQ. We prioritize the old, pregnant women and persons with disability,” said Ferro. 
There were no specific routes for the free rides as patrol cars went around the city to search for those who needed a ride.
Not all deaths of frontliners during the pandemic have been from COVID-19.


https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/06/07/2019145/pnp-doctor-dies-after-being-sprayed-disinfectant
Another source said Gutierrez became ill after he was sprayed with sodium hypochlorite, a chemical also referred to as bleach. 
Directly spraying the chemical on a person, especially if not diluted, is dangerous due to its high level of toxicity, the source said. 
Gutierrez was wearing personal protective equipment but the source said it does not matter for as long as the victim inhaled the chemical. 
“You should not directly spray that chemical on a person,” the source said. 
A similar incident happened on June 1 in the same facility just two days after Gutierrez’s death. 
According to a police report obtained by The STAR, two PNP medical personnel became sick after undergoing decontamination at around 3 p.m. 
The two police officers were being disinfected after taking 10 swab samples from COVID-19 patients. They were brought to the PNP General Hospital when they had difficulty breathing.
Sounds like a stunning case of negligence.

Two more illegal COVID-19 clinics catering to the Chinese have been raided and shut down.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1287497/2-more-underground-clinics-for-sinos-busted-total-now-6
On Friday afternoon, the National Bureau of Investigation also found a makeshift rapid testing clinic in a Las Piñas City market. 
The bureau’s National Capital Region chief Cesar Bacani said agents who conducted a surveillance operation saw about a hundred Chinese nationals undergoing tests at the clinic for COVID-19. d 
Authorities were still verifying if the Chinese were working for a Philippine offshore gaming operator, or POGO. 
The NBI earlier gathered that they were undergoing testing as a “preemployment” requirement, Bacani said. A still-unidentified Chinese physician was said to be facilitating the tests, reportedly assisted by a Filipino. 
A total of six illegal clinics catering to Chinese nationals have been discovered since April, including two in Parañaque that were raided earlier that month and in May.
If these clinics are used as a preemployment screening for POGOs then there are surely more of them.

In the new normal eating out will never be the same again.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1287802/iloilo-city-restaurants-seat-stuffed-toys-for-distancing
At Royal Zhang Palace in Grand Xing Imperial Hotel on Iznart Street, teddy bears and other stuffed toys are seated alternately in four-seat tables to keep customers apart. This means only two will be seated at each table. 
Ronito Medianista, head waiter of the Chinese restaurant, said the idea came from hotel managers to prompt physical distancing among diners. 
To diners, the idea of sitting with 22 mostly teddy bear toys in brown and white colors appears to be refreshing. “They are excited because they have ‘company’ when dining here,” Medianista told the Inquirer. 
At Razon’s By Glenn Iloilo in the Festive Walk Mall, dining table mates include Walt Disney cartoon characters Mickey Mouse and Goofy, and just seeing them is enough to cheer one up. 
“Our customers are happy when they see the stuffed toys. We have received many inquiries if the toys are free or for sale,” said Patricia Kaye Mislang, the store’s franchisee who collected the cuddly toys while working at Walt Disney Parks and Hotels in California. 
She said the restaurant was mulling over the possibility of selling the toys or giving them for free for a minimum order at customers’ requests.
It's like date night with a stuffed Teddy Bear or Mickey Mouse.

The new normal means no more back riders on motorcycles. But there might be a way around that.


https://www.panaynews.net/motorcycle-with-divider-solution-to-angkas-ban/
Necessity is the mother of invention – and motorcycle modification. 
With the firm stand of the national government prohibiting backriders on motorcycles at this time of coronavirus pandemic, Gov. Arthur Defensor Jr. thought of a modified motorcycle design that ensures no physical contact between the driver and the backrider. 
He submitted his proposal to Land Transportation Office (LTO) assistant secretary Edgar Galvante through LTO regional director Eric Lenard Tabaldo late afternoon on June 5. 
The modified motorcycle design featured a divider or windshield made of non-porous and transparent material installed between the driver and the backrider. 
Defensor personally commissioned a builder in Iloilo City to execute his design using the motorcycle of his staff. 
The modified motorcycle was presented to the public on Friday afternoon. 
A handle bar has been attached to the divider’s frame that the backrider could grip for a more secure ride. 
As part of the health protocol, said Defensor, both the driver and backrider must wear crash helmets, facemasks and gloves and perform disinfecting procedures immediately before and after the trip.
In my area I am not sure if back riders are banned or if people just don't care because I have seen 2 and 3 on a bike just like before the pandemic.

The quarantines have hit everyone hard causing jobs and money to disappear. One little boy has stepped up to help his family.


https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/lifestyle/familyandrelationships/741512/9-year-old-boy-sells-medals-he-won-at-school-to-buy-food-for-family/story/
A nine-year-old boy recently went viral for selling medals he had won at school to buy food for his family amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. 
For P20 each, he was willing to sell the medals so his family could have something to eat. 
His mom Cherryl, who worked as a security guard and househelp, had lost her source of income due to the pandemic. That’s when Kenneth decided to sell his medals. 
However, because of the pandemic and the possibility of classes resuming online, Kenneth felt hopeless because he didn’t have a computer or a strong internet connection. 
Because of their financial problem, Kenneth began selling his medals online. 
Fortunately, generous donors responded and sent help to the family. 
Dr. Khristian Santos, who owned an online laptop shop, gave the family a laptop. The “Kapuso Mo, Jessica Soho” team, meanwhile, gave the brothers their own internet broadband and financial aid. 
Kenneth was willing to let go of all his medals for his family. After all, he said, his greatest pride was his mother.
It's not clear if he actually sold the medals or if people saw what he was doing and stepped in to offer help. It would pretty callous if somebody actually bought them.

Liquor bans are being lifted across the country but drinking in public is still banned. That has not stopped some from going hog wild.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1288172/6-arrested-in-ecija-for-alcoholic-binge-that-violated-gcq-protocol
Six people, including a senior citizen, were arrested after they were caught in a drinking session that violated protocol, according to police here. 
Lt. Col. Alexie Desamito, the town’s police chief, said the six were consuming alcoholic drinks at a public place, which is banned by guidelines under general community quarantine (GCQ), supposedly a response to coronavirus transmission less restrictive than enhanced community quarantine (ECQ). 
Those arrested were identified as Ricardo Francisco, 62; Giliver Pagtalunan, 29; Orlando Bernabe, 45; Florante Balbin, 43; Maricel Rauza, 38; and Andy Simon, 30. 
Police said they caught the suspects after responding to a report that one of them pointed a gun at a farmer.
Does every drinking party in the Philippines have to involve a gun?

Church has been cancelled during the quarantine but now worshippers are being allowed to congregate once more.  In smaller numbers of course. For Catholics there will be paperwork.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1288934/catholics-must-fill-out-form-when-going-to-church
Catholics will have to bring pens when they go to church, as they will have personal information forms to fill out when the government allows religious gatherings to resume under a more relaxed coronavirus quarantine. In an administrative decree issued on Monday, the Diocese of Pasig said the requirement would be part of the rules for the reopening of churches for the celebration of Mass. 
The personal information forms will be used for contact tracing to halt the spread of the new coronavirus in the country.
“At the entrance doors of the church, they will be given a form, which they can bring [to the pews]. They will fill [out] the forms upon [sitting] in the pews, [giving their name, address, contact number, date and time of the Mass attended and seat number],” said Pasig Bishop Mylo Vergara.
Will paperwork really halt the spread of the virus? 

This year's Independence Day celebration in Rizal park will be very different.  

With only a handful of participants, the gathering at Rizal Park in Manila on June 12 to celebrate the country’s 122nd anniversary of independence is perhaps the smallest ever. The Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) has allowed the celebration of Independence Day but “this is limited to 10 people only,” presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said on Tuesday.
Who will these 10 people be? Does this include spectators?

Some COVID-10 patients have been experiencing neurological symptoms. Could that be why one patient in Cebu committed suicide?


https://theconversation.com/coronavirus-many-patients-reporting-neurological-symptoms-136692
In a statement posted Tuesday evening, Dr. Gerardo Aquino Jr., VSMMC medical chief, said the patient “was admitted due to Covid-19 pneumonia” on Monday and was staying in a room at the third level of the regional hospital. 
Aquino said the nurse on duty noticed on early Tuesday morning the sudden behavioral changes on the patient, who would sing then shout and hit the room's glass door with his fist. 
The guard on duty then spotted the patient roaming around the third-floor lobby and ignored calls to calm down. 
“The patient forcibly broke the glass window near the elevator and jumped to his death towards the ground floor of the ND Building,” Aquino said.
It sure seems that way.

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

A New Normal or A New Philippines?

What does the new normal look like?  It looks like this:


What is he doing???? This security guard is dumping sanitizer onto a tiny mat that you walk on and....I don't know...sanitize your shoes? Kill the coronavirus on your shoes???  Seriously what the heck?  What else does the new normal look like?  How about this:


This is the new normal? Shutting most of the entrance to the store and having people wait in a line because only 5 are allowed in at a time is now normal?  This is supposed to keep the public healthy??

No!

This new normal is not about keeping people healthy at all. The government's main concern is controlling individual behavior because it allows them to exercise petty authority and gives their otherwise  meaningless existence a sliver of self importance.

We were told that social distancing was necessary for a limited time to flatten the curve and get back to normal. Now we're being told that social distancing is the new normal forever.  Even though it can only ever be selectively enforced because it is totally unfeasible in the real world.

The government has even crafted legislation to enforce this new normal.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1265835/house-execs-define-new-normal-in-newly-filed-bill
“This bill will prepare and educate the Filipino public for life after the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions and to adapt to the new norms of physical distancing. It institutionalizes a new way of life after the Enhanced Community Quarantine and serves as a guide to the public,” it added. 
The bill proposes that among the measures to be imposed in public places are the mandatory wearing of masks, the availability of handwashing or sanitizing stations in public areas, temperature checks, and physical distancing of at least one meter, but preferable two meters, in all public spaces. 
For public transportation, physical distancing shall also apply in ticket queues, and passengers in all types of public transportation vehicles shall be required to wash their hands or sanitize before boarding the vehicle and be seated a seat apart and be at all times in face masks. 
“Contact-less” payment mechanism shall also be implemented.
"It institutionalizes a new way of life." What that means is that it regulates new behaviors and creates a new class of criminals if they do not behave in the approved way such as wearing a face mask in public. People will also have to practice social distancing in public at all times. Everyone is on board with the new normal. From the DOH to the DOT all sectors of Philippine life will have to adjust.  There is no going back as Harry Roque said.
https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/04/26/2009938/we-cannot-go-back-general-community-quarantine-new-normal-malacaang-says
In an interview with DZMM on Sunday morning, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said that the Philippines cannot return to life as usual because of the overwhelming effects of the global pandemic. 
“We are no longer back to normal as we know it po. The GCQ is already that, it is the new normal. For as long as there is still no vaccine, we cannot go back to normal as we know it,” he said in a mix of English and Filipino.
Meanwhile...
Two children had died while 42 others had been downed by what health officials believed was an outbreak of diarrhea on an island village of Maguindanao, health authorities reported. 
Health Minister Saffrulah Dipatuan of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao confirmed to reporters that the diarrhea was triggered by contaminated water sources. 
Dipatuan said a health team sent to Barangay Bongo Island off the coast of Parang, Maguindanao, traced the contaminated water from two sources tapped by residents, who are mostly Maguindanaon fishermen. 
One of the water sources is an open well, while the other is a closed well, but both have been found to have a high concentration of e-coli, Dipatuan said. 
“One team sent there to treat the sick and investigate had gathered stool samples that confirmed high e-coli bacteria from water sources,” Dipatuan told reporters. 
Many residents have no toilets and dispose of their human wastes elsewhere. 
The dry spell has ushered in, the time when residents rely mainly on open wells as sources of drinking water.
Wearing face masks, washing your hands, and social distancing are not going to help a community whose water supply is contaminated. What the Philippines needs is not a new normal where everyone is forced to wear a face mask at all times or wash their hands every time they enter a store.  Rather the Philippines needs a total make over and a revamping of society at practically every level. A make over which will lead to a healthier and more sanitary nation. 

Where to even begin?  How about the prisons and jails? Overcrowding has long been a problem in the Philippines. It is only now with the threat of COVID-19 that the government has decided alleviate the situation. 
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1266479/govt-expedites-probation-parole-work-to-decongest-jails-amid-health-threat
“I’ve heard from the mouth of (Justice) Sec. Guevarra himself that they are expediting the processing of individuals who may be qualified for probation and parole to decongest our detention facilities,” Palace spokesman Harry Roque said in an interview over ABS-CBN News Channel Wednesday.
Why wait for a crisis to occur before decongesting the jails and prisons? Why not have this be everyday policy? Of course this would also mean speeding up the courts and not having trials last years on end. 

Can you see what a new normal with the goal of making society heathy really entails?  It requires a total revamping of Philippine society at every single level. From the courts down to the way people behave. Not astroturfing society by having people wear face masks and wash their hands or stay 6 feet away from everyone.  

Or covering EVERYTHING in plastic!



Creating a fire hazard won't stop the spread of COVID-19 but that's not stoping Robinson's Supermarket.



Even one local SM Supermarket locked their side door creating a one way in, one way out situation, and a fire hazard.


Why did these stores do this? Now everyone has to enter and exit the same door and that is not social distancing. How is this not illegal? 

Oh wait. It is illegal!
Section 9. Prohibited Acts. The following are declared as prohibited act and omission.  
(f) Locking fire exits during period when people are inside the building; 


https://lawphil.net/statutes/presdecs/pd1977/pd_1185_1977.html
Is anything going to change in the Philippines? No. Not really. Not fundamentally. I have been out and about since ECQ and GCQ was lifted and it's pretty much the same. I have to wear a face mask, get my body scanned, and get spritzed with alcohol if I want to go inside a store but that's rather superficial. Even before COVID-19 people were wearing face masks because the air is so polluted. People are continuing with the same behaviors from all I have seen.

The Philippines needs a lot of changes if it wants to become sanitary and healthy.  To do that the mindset of the people must be changed. Here is a great example of the mindset that has kept the Philippines a polluted wasteland.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1277808/waste-segregation-more-crucial-amid-pandemic
Waste segregation at source has become more critical amid the pandemic as the volume of potentially infectious waste from household sources is growing, an official of the National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC) said on Tuesday. 
Given these circumstances under the “new normal,” reduction in waste generation must be given priority, while garbage collection systems must quickly respond to this growing concern, said Crispian Lao, NSWMC vice chair who represents the private sector in the commission.
A reduction in waste must be given priority? Sure. That is what RA 9003 is about. But no one pays attention to that law and there is no infrastructure in place to implement it. 

Right now the new normal involves a lot of plastic with the intent of separating people. If the Philippines wants to get healthy that is not the way. Running water, toilets, proper sanitation and waste collection, and a mindset against littering is needed. More than that is needed. A whole revamping society is needed.

That change won't come easy.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Insurgency: Suspension of VFA Termination

Big news this week regarding the Visiting Forces Agreement. Duterte has ordered the suspension of it's termination.


The Philippines has informed the United States that it was suspending for six months the termination of the Visiting Forces Agreement, the treaty which governs the presence of US soldiers conducting military exercises in the country. 
Posting a copy of his note verbale to the US Embassy in Manila on Twitter, Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin said the suspension of the military accord was upon President Rodrigo Duterte's instruction and "in light of political and other developments in the region." 
"I issued this diplomatic note to the US Ambassador. It has been received by Washington and well at that," Locsin said. 
The note, dated June 1, said: "The suspension shall start on even date and shall continue for six months, which period is extendible by the Philippines for another six months, after which the tolling of the initial period in Note Verbale No. 20-0463 dated 11 February 2020 shall resume." 
Shortly after Locsin's tweet, the US welcomed the Philippine government’s decision. 
"Our long-standing alliance has benefited both countries, and we look forward to continued close security and defense cooperation with the Philippines," a US Embassy statement said.
This reversal is in contrast to Duterte's previous statements saying his mind is made up and indicating the VFA was gone for good. It is however only a temporary suspension good for six months and extendible for six more months. That's better than nothing.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1104926
“Ang nangyari lang po, nasuspinde ang termination. Hindi pa po niya sinasabing hindi na tuloy ang termination. So wala pong nagbago sa pag-iisip ng ating Pangulo (What happened is the termination was just suspended. He’s not saying that the termination is already lifted. The President has not changed his mind),” Roque said. 
The Philippine government has decided to suspend the abrogation of VFA “in light of political and other developments in the region.” 
Roque said the Philippines is recognizing the US, its long-time ally, as a “friend” who can lend a hand especially in the fight against terrorism. 
“Alam niyo po, bago na ang anyo ng terorismo ngayon. Wala na pong kinikilalang mga border at wala na pong kinikilalang mga bansa. So lahat po ng bansa na ating kaibigan, Amerika, Tsina, Russia, India, Australia, lahat po sila, importante lahat (You know, terrorism now has a new face. It knows no borders and countries. So, countries like America, China, Russia, India, and Australia are important because we consider them as our friends),” he said.
Of all those countries it is America who gives the most. And the Philippines knows that! 
https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/06/03/2018434/duterte-saw-untimely-abrogation-vfa-us-during-covid-19-pandemic-lorenzana
In a virtual interview with CNN Philippines' "The Source", the Defense chief said he was told that the Philippines needs cooperation from other countries amid the pandemic, which has infected more than 6 million people across the globe. 
"We need to cooperate with other countries to fight the pandemic and I think the president (Duterte) thought that it's untimely to end the VFA at this moment," Lorenzana said in the interview Wednesday morning. 
Asked if he was consulted on Duterte's decision to temporarily halt the termination of the military pact, Lorenzana said the issue came in a meeting with the president about a month ago. 
"We discussed about it... I think he said it's not timely to end the VFA because of what's happening worldwide," Lorenzana said. 
With the six-month suspension of the abrogation of the VFA, Lorenzana said the US may increase its assistance to the Philippines to fight the COVID-19 crisis. 
"They already gave us some help, assistance especially in providing equipment in our quarantine facilities," Lorenzana said. 
Data from the US Embassy as of May 19 show that the US government has provided more than P785 million (nearly $15.5 million) worth of COVID-19 assistance to the Philippines. 
The US government's assistance to the Philippines has so far supported the increase of DOH testing capacity, upgraded laboratories and strengthened specimen transport system.
The US may increase its assistance? So it's all about the freebies! Are they even paying attention? The US has no plans to stop giving assistance to the Philippines. They have already given millions to fight COVID-19. The US military continues to give support of all kinds in the fight against terrorism. The Philippines is a strategic country in the South Pacific and the USA will continue to have a presence here with or without the VFA.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1105005
The United States embassy in the Philippines said on Friday it will give an additional PHP201 million or USD4 million aid to support the vulnerable population in Mindanao affected by the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic. 
This brings Washington's total assistance to the Philippines to over PHP978 million or approximately USD19.5 million. 
The funding, to be implemented by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), aims to reach over 100,000 persons with distributions of essential hygiene supplies, handwashing stations as well as promote hygiene to reduce transmission risk. 
The aid agency will also continue providing water supply in transitory sites in Lanao del Sur for families displaced by the Marawi Siege and in North Cotabato for earthquake-affected communities.
Almost a billion pesos in aid to fight COVID-19 through USAID. The Philippines has nothing to worry about in terms of freebies. That means the reason for Duterte's suspension of the termination is likely because he knows terminating it is a bad idea no one in the region wants except China and he is looking for an excuse to reverse his rash decision. I suspect the VFA will ultimately not be terminated but we shall see.

In the meantime it's business as usual with the AFP fighting rebels, rebels surrendering, and rebels being given huge amounts of freebies at taxpayer expense.

https://pia.gov.ph/news/articles/1043867
Forty-seven former rebels (FRs) in South Cotabato received P65,000 financial aid from the government as beneficiaries of the Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program (E-CLIP). 
The cash aid handed to the FRs in a ceremony at the South Cotabato Gymnasium and Cultural Center on Thursday  included P50,000 livelihood assistance and P15,000 immediate assistance from the Department of the Interior and Local Government. 
In separate events earlier this year, these individuals received P20,000 each from the Provincial Government of South Cotabato as well as technical trainings, such as poultry production, from the Technical Education and Skill Development  Authority (TESDA). 
Josephine Leysa, regional director of DILG XII in a message read by a representative, told the FRs, “I remember Gov. (Reynaldo) Tamayo Jr, mention in one of his speeches for barangay officials who attended a regional gathering where he announced the surrender of rebels who had enough of the difficult life in the mountains and forests. The governor said, ‘the rebels came down dahil ramdam nila ang tulong ng gobyerno.’ Your presence here today is a testimony of that fact.”  
Apart from the P65,000 aid for each of the former rebels,  the government units that received  the FRs also received a total of P987,000  or P21,000 for each FR  as reintegration assistance. 
Reintegration assistance funds  are intended for the subsistence of the FRs as well as for expenses in securing documents such birth certificates and identification cards, and  expenses for mobility. 
These FRs are being cared under the  Regional Intelligence Unit XII of the Philippine National Police and  the 27th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army. 
They surrendered and laid down their arms to government troops in December 2019 and January 2020. 
That's P86,000 for some of these rebels just for surrendering! 18 rebels in Samar recently graduated with new skills.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1104915
At least 18 former rebels in Northern Samar completed on Thursday the skills training program of the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA). 
In a statement, TESDA Eastern Visayas Director Dante Navarro said the graduates have undergone a three-month training on bread and pastry production and cookery at Las Navas Agro-Industrial School in Las Navas town. 
TESDA awarded certificates of training to the graduates and distributed starter tool kits consisting of an electric oven, pastry blender, and other cooking and baking materials. 
Each former rebel also received PHP4,900 allowance, Navarro said. 
During the awarding ceremony, 12 of the former rebels, who are farmworkers of the provincial agriculture office, also received their monthly salary. 
Some of them have also got their Philippine Health Insurance Corporation identification cards, which they can use to avail of the government’s universal health care program, the Northern Samar provincial information office reported. 
Meanwhile, the Philippine Army expressed their continued support as the former rebels carry on with their reintegration process in society. 
“We are here to guide and help them as they start living a normal life and become part of the province’s progress,” said Lt. Col. Juan Gullem, commanding officer of the Army’s 20th Infantry Battalion.
From fighting in the revolution to learning how to bake bread and pastries! Actually bread baking seems to be a common career path for former rebels.

https://www.kalinawnews.com/army-tesda-distribute-cash-allowance-to-scholars/
The primary beneficiaries of the program who undergo Technical-Vocational training are those former members of Underground Mass Organizations (UGMO) and Former Rebels within the Army unit’s Area of Operation as a result of the Community Support Program Immersions. While on training, the students are given a daily allowance of Php100. There was a delay on the distribution since the country faced an unexpected pandemic during the past few months. Upon the declaration of Modified General Community Quarantine in the whole Province of Cotabato, TESDA, in partnership with 72IB, was able to reach out to the students in their respective barangays. The distributions took place in barangays of Gayola, Kidapawan City; and New Cebu, Pres Roxas where students took up Nail care/ Bread and Pastry training and Automotive training respectively; while at Brgy Basak, Magpet, the students also took up the Bread and Pastry and Shielded Metal Arc Welding trainings.
Can you imagine a former rebel who probably has blood on their hands giving you a pedicure or a manicure? Or baking your bread?

There is a new anti-terrorism bill awaiting Duterte's signature which has caused a furor among its opponents.  They say that it puts a damper on free speech and lends greatly to Red-tagging.  One of the most famous instances of Red tagging was the Morong 43 back in 2010. 

This was a group of alleged health care workers arrested over possession of firearms and explosives. They were basically all released.


https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/208580/court-orders-release-of-morong-43-health-workers/story/
A local court on Friday ordered the release of the “Morong 43" – the group of health workers arrested in February on suspicion that they are members of the New People’s Army (NPA). Judge Gina Cenit-Escoto of the Morong Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 78 on Friday granted the health workers’ freedom after 10 months in detention, upon motion of the Department of Justice (DOJ) to withdraw criminal charges filed against them. The charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives, as well as violation of the election gun ban, were originally filed against the Morong 43. 
The presiding judge said in the resolution that the health workers were arrested during an “illegal search," since the warrant used to raid the place where they were nabbed did not satisfy certain constitutional requirements. “The search warrant… should particularly describe the place to be searched… The subject search warrant made mention of an entire barangay where the properties to be seized may be found," Cenit-Escoto said in the resolution. The decision likewise ruled that the Morong 43 cannot be prosecuted since items being used to prove their guilt cannot be admitted by the court. “All the items seized during the illegal search are prohibited from being used as evidence. Absent these items presented by the prosecution, the conviction of accused-appellant for the crime charged loses its basis," the document read.
All evidence was thrown out because the illegal search made it inadmissible! Just goes to show that the authorities must stick to the letter of the law no matter how hard it is. It turns out these people were probably not just "health workers."
https://www.kalinawnews.com/one-of-morong-43-dies-after-2nd-mindoro-encounter-in-four-days/
One female NPA terrorist died after a 10-minute encounter against soldiers at Brgy Mangangan Uno of Baco, Oriental Mindoro on Thursday afternoon. 
The military identified the dead terrorist as Lorelyn Saligumba alias Fara, the Political Instructor of KLG ICM’s Platoon Dos and a member of “Morong 43” whom left-leaning organisations branded as “plain health workers” when they were apprehended in 2010. 
According to Col Jose Augusto Villareal, Commander of the 203rd Infantry Brigade which has operational jurisdiction over Mindoro Island, government troops recovered from the encounter site one firearm, an IED, technical gadgets, personal effects, food stuff, medicines and voluminous enemy documents with high intelligence value. 
He said that “our troops were responding from reports from concerned citizens about the presence of about 10 NPA extortionists who were forcing people to give them food” which, according to him, “is an indicator of the NPA’s crumbling mass base support and the prevailing extreme hunger that they are now suffering in the mountains of Mindoro due to our relentless focused military operations.”
What can we learn from this? That there are indeed communist front groups in the Philippines? Of course that is standard communist tactics having front groups. There are plenty of those in the Philippines. Everyone knows this. What we can really learn is that not all red-tagging is without merit.

You know this insurgency is one more indicator of how backwards the Philippines is. While the rest of the world has moved on as the Cold War ended 30 years ago the Philippines continues to fight a communist revolution! 50 years of fighting a communist revolution!! Just give up already.  It took Mao, Castro, and the Bolsheviks only a few months to win their respective communist revolutions! What is wrong with the Philippines?

According to the AFP it's almost all over.
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1104503
"As we come close to the second half of this year, we are proud to report that our internal security operations continue to bring us closer to realizing our vision of a complete victory against the communist scourge in the country,” AFP chief-of-staff Gen. Felimon Santos Jr. said in a statement. 
This came as six members of the New People's Army (NPA) were killed and eight others were captured in joint military and police operations from May 24 to 30. 
“Our troops on the ground continue to prove their operational excellence in neutralizing the threats posed by the communist terrorist group in the countryside. Our strong partnership with local chief executives also helped NPA members to safely return to the fold of the law,” he added.
Seeing as the AFP has been saying this for at least 30 years since Cory Aquino took office I take it with a huge grain of salt. Best to just keep on fighting instead of making predictions.