Duterte orders LGUs to open gates to repatriated OFWs
MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte ordered local governments to allow repatriated Filipino workers who were affected by the coronavirus disease pandemic to return to their hometowns.
In a public address aired late Monday, the chief executive said it is “cruel” to keep OFWs from coming home.
“In their desire to protect their respective turf, territories kaya ganun man, and I can say that if that is the way they would handle it… okay ‘yan. Pero alam mo hindi naman lahat talaga nagkasakit (not everyone was infected) and it is very cruel actually to deny them to go home,” Duterte said.
This came a day after he ordered the Department of Labor and Employment, the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration and the Department of Health to bring repatriated workers to their home provinces within one week.
Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said that all the 24,000 repatriated workers have tested negative for the coronavirus.
Duterte also stressed it is the “constitutional right” of OFWs to return home.
“You know, I’m ordering you to accept them, open the gates of your territories and allow the people—and allow the Filipinos to travel wherever they want,” the president said.
“Do not impede it. Do not obstruct the movement of people because you run the risk of getting sued criminally,” he added.
Some 62,000 migrant workers are expected to return to the Philippines soon, the president also said.
The government on Monday began sending home some 24,000 repatriated Filipino workers stranded at various quarantine facilities in Metro Manila. Despite testing negative for COVID-19 and staying in quarantine facilities beyond the mandatory 14-day isolation period, many OFWs were still stuck at quarantine facilities due to lack of clearances. — Gaea Katreena Cabico
President Rodrigo Duterte signed the bill that grants him special powers to address the novel coronavirus outbreak in the Philippines. Bookmark this page for updates.
Strategies proposed by the inter-agency taskforce against the COVID-19 pandemic need the approval of President Rodrigo Duterte, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque says.
He made the statement after news of a shift to "granular" lockdowns that will be first implemented in the National Capital Region starting September 8.
The government should extend 'Bayanihan 2', the legislation intended to address the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, Akbayan says as it joins the call of labor groups SENTRO and NAGKAISA for an extension.
"Millions of Filipinos are still without work thanks to the pandemic. Add the fact that the country is under recession for the first time since the Marcos years, and it becomes imperative that the State step in and continue to provide aid," the party-list says.
"We echo the view that terminating Bayanihan 2 now will push more Filipino families towards hunger and desperation. The government must realize that without a sustained comprehensive economic aid plan, people will be forced to leave their houses to get food, medicine and supplies, which increases the risk of getting COVID. And with hotspots multiplying outside the NCR, extending Bayanihan 2 is not only logical, but necessary," it also says.
The government should increase efforts to inform people about the benefits of getting vaccinated against COVID-19 instead of threatening to jail those who refuse or telling them to leave the country, Akbayan says.
"Mr. Rodrigo Duterte cannot jail his way out of this pandemic. Neither can he expel COVID-19 by throwing out of the country Filipinos who are hesitant of the vaccines. It is both sad and ironic that in the middle of a catastrophe, the President is so quick to threaten to expel his own people, yet chooses to remain silent on Chinese incursions in the West Philippine Sea," Dr. RJ Naguit, Akbayan spokesperson, says in a release.
"The global health crisis is not simply a law and order problem. The virus cannot be contained by penal servitude. This is exactly the simplistic and violent approach that continues to divide this country, the idea that there are only two kinds of people, those who obey, and those who don't. There is far more to this crisis than that," he says.
The government has often used the "pasaway" narrative, saying people are stubborn and do not follow guidelines, to explain surges in COVID-19 cases and other issues related to the pandemic. This, despite top government officials being among those often seen flouting the same safety guidelines.
Face shields are no longer required when leaving home, the Palace says.
People will still need to wear face shields in public transportation, markets and indoor establishments.
This change in policy comes after President Rodrigo Duterte told senators that the face shields should only be worn in hospital settings.
Prior to the president's remarks, agencies, inlcuding the Palace had insisted on the use of face shields, claiming wearing them over face masks is almost as good as being vaccinated against COVID-19.
A total of 1,415 golf workers in Metro Manila have received cash aid from the DOT and DOLE as part of the Bayanihan 2 act.
The golf caddies, golf workers and employees in five major golf clubs in the capital region received almost P7.075 million.
“For the beneficiaries of the cash assistance program with us today, I hope that this amount can help you and your families in this difficult time," Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat says.
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