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Luzon archbishops call for ‘full investigation of whiff of corruption’

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Sep 11, 2021, Lian Buan

MANILA, Philippines

‘Governance without direction kills. Corruption kills. The poor pay for the corruption of the powerful,’ says the Metropolitan Archbishops of Northern Luzon

In a strongly worded pastoral message, Catholic archbishops in Northern Luzon called for an investigation into allegations of corruption in the Duterte government’s pandemic spending.

“We commend, bless, and encourage the full investigation, by those in authority, of any whiff of corruption; as we also reproach, rebuke, and censure those who obstruct the legal process to arrive at truth and justice,” said the pastoral message issued on Saturday, September 11, by the Metropolitan Archbishops of Northern Luzon.

The message was signed by Nueva Segovia Archbishop Marlo Peralta, Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas, and Tuguegarao Archbishop Ricardo Baccay.

The pastoral message was politically loaded, calling the state of the nation “like living in the valley of death.”

“Killing of drug users and opponents; helpless death in the pandemic, death by governance without vision, death by shameless corruption that seems to break all records. Killings! Murders! Deaths!” said the message.

The pastoral message follows a series of discoveries, by state auditors, the Senate, and the media, of potential misspending by the budget department’s procurement service, awarding the most pandemic contracts to a questionable company which was being financed by President Rodrigo Duterte’s former economic adviser, Michael Yang.

“Viruses kill. Governance without direction kills. Corruption kills. Trolls kill with fake news. Hunger kills. When will the killings stop? The poor pay for the corruption of the powerful. The nation is sinking in debt,” said the archbishops.

The pastoral message was posted on the website of CBCP News, the news service of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines – now led by Caloocan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, one of the leading voices against Duterte’s bloody drug war.

“Journalists have been killed, political opponents have been murdered, court judges have been assassinated, priests have been shot and critics have been bullied and threatened. The killers are at large and the blind supporters of these murderers applaud the killers,” said the pastoral message.

“This is not the time for despair but courage. This is not the time to be quiet but to stand up for God. Against the tide of murders and plunder, let us bear witness to truth and life,” the archbishops added. – Rappler.com

7 tips paano maging bilyonaryo ngayong pandemya

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Sept 6, 2021, Rappler.com (Editorial)

Step 1. Maglagay ng kahit kalahating milyon lang sa bangko bilang kapital. Kahit kakarampot ang kapital mo, basta may koneksyon, ayos! 

Step 2. Tiyakin mo lang na hindi mabalitaan ng mga taga-Pilipinas na wanted ka pala dahil sa financial fraud sa ibang bansa tulad ng Taiwan. 

Step 3. Dapat sanggang-dikit mo ang isang negosyanteng matinik – halimbawa, isang Michael Yang – na matagal nang kaibigan ng isang politiko at tumulong dito noong eleksiyon.

Step 4. Hindi ka na kailangang maghirap mag-scale up at sumabak sa ibang malalaking kontrata. Kalimutan na ‘yang innovation. Kailangan lang ay koneksiyon.

Step 5. Hindi mo kailangan magpakahirap maging tunay na supplier – ‘yun bang ikaw ang magpo-produce ng finished product. Mag-middleman ka na lang – bili ka ng gamit sa Tsina nang mura, ibenta mo sa Pilipinas nang may patong! (Sa totoo lang, puwede namang dumiretso ang Pilipinas sa Tsina sa pamamagitan ng government-to-government deals.) Kaya nga dapat matindi ang konek!

Step 6. Dapat din ay na-appoint ang isang mag-fa-facilitate ng transaksiyon sa loob ng budget department – halimbawa ang dating Procurement Service-Department of Budget and Management (PS-DBM) undersecretary na si Lloyd Christopher Lao. Siya ang magbubulag-bulagan sa hindi pagiging wagas ng pagka-legit mo. Dahil sa Pilipinas, para mag-qualify makapag-bid sa isang proyekto ng gobyerno, kailangang maipakita ng kompanya mong nakakompleto ka na ng kahawig na project na di bababa sa 50% na halaga ng bini-bid mo ngayon.

Step 7.  Huwag na magbayad ng tamang taxes. Hanap na lang ng konek para makalusot dito.

Ang ‘enabler’?

Tandaan natin, hindi ito mangyayari kundi dahil kay Lao na appointee ni Pangulong Rodrigo Duterte. Dati siyang sidekick ng pinakasikat na sidekick – si pambansang photobomber Senator Bong Go.

May mga nagsasabing hindi raw ito pruweba na sangkot si Duterte at Go. Napaka-naive naman kung naniniwala tayo sa palusot na ito. Na-expose na si Lao sa kalakaran sa Palasyo kung saan ang boss niya ang pangalawang pinakamakapangyarihang opisyal sa bansa dahil lahat ng gustong kumausap sa Pangulo, dumadaan sa kanya. 

Siguro’y alam na niya kung gaano ka-rewarding ang maging malapit sa kapangyarihan, at gaano ka-rewarding ang pumabor sa mga taong maaaring magbalik ng pabor?

Sabi ni Lao, nag-apply siya sa puwestong PS-DBM undersecretary at sinuwerte. Hindi ito binili ng mga senador na nagsabing hindi naman na-a-appoint ang isang tao sa maselang puwestong may hawak ng susi ng kaban ng bayan nang ganoon-ganoon lang. 

Hindi ba’t si Lao ang enabler? Ang insider? Hindi ba siya ang mahalagang kawing sa network ng shady deals? 

Ang pagador

Lalong lumilinaw ang network ng katiwalian kapag ipinasok mo sa equation si Michael Yang. Si Yang ang Chinese na namimigay ng calling card na nagsasabing isa siyang Presidential Adviser kahit labag sa batas na mag-appoint ng adviser na hindi Pilipino. 

Si Yang ang iniugnay sa drugs pero mabilis na inabsuwelto ni Duterte dahil paano raw naging drug dealer ang konektado sa mga opisyal ng People’s Republic of China?

“Pagador” ang tawag ni Duterte mismo kay Yang na ibig sabihin ay paymaster. Sa mundo ng pailalim ng mga negosasyon, ang pagador ang tagabigay ng pabuya o kickback. 

Si Yang ang pagador na nasa gitna ng network na kapit-tuko sa Malacañang. Sanggang-dikit niya ang majority shareholder ng Pharmally Pharmaceutical, ang Singaporean na si Huang Tzu Yen at magkakaugnay ang bituka nila sa pamamagitan ng network ng ilang korporasyon.

Si Yang ang konektor na nagdala sa tatay ng Singaporean na si Huang sa Malacañang sa isang meeting na dinaluhan ni Duterte.

‘Premeditated plunder’

Ilan pang Lao ang nakapuwesto sa gobyerno? Ilan pang Yang ang nakaambang maging bilyonaryo sa laway lang at kakarampot na seed money?

Sabi ni Senator Frank Drilon, ang pagbibigay ng kontratang bilyones sa pinapaborang mga supplier ay maaaring maging kaso ng “premeditated plunder.”

Kung merong Janet Napoles noon na kumita sa pork barrel at mga koneksiyon, meron namang Pharmally ngayon. Si Napoles ang reyna ng mga pork barrel scam – ang maanomalyang paggamit ng discretionary development funds ng mga senador. Kapalit ang kickback para sa mga taga-Kongreso, hinigop ng mga pekeng non-governmental organization ni Napoles ang tinatantiyang P10 bilyong pondo.

Kung susundan natin ang alingasaw ng mga bulok na kasunduan, kung susundan natin ang money trail, dadalhin tayo sa isang kalye sa distrito ng San Miguel sa Maynila. Doon nakatayo ang isang palasyo sa tabi ng mabahong Pasig River.

Ang pinakamasaklap, nangyayari ito sa panahon ng pandemya. Kumikita ang mga korap sa ibabaw ng bangkay ng libo-libong Pilipinong namatay sa pandemya.

It all makes sense. Kaya pala palpak ang paglaban sa COVID-19. Kita ang inuna, hindi ayuda. – Rappler.com

Health workers score five major reasons why Duque should resign

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By Roy Barbosa – Sep 1, 2021, Manilatoday.net

The health workers’ 10-day deadline for Department of Health (DOH) to release COVID-19 benefits has ran out, and so did their patience.

“Ang isang paa namin ay nasa hukay na. Hindi namin alam, baka bukas makalawa, uuwi kami sa bahay naming abo nalang na hindi na kami makita ng pamilya namin na humihinga pa. Tapos ito ang gagawin ninyo sa amin?” decried Jose Reyes Memorial Medical Center Employers Union – AHW president Cristy Dunguines.

The health workers also again pressed for DOH Secretary Francisco Duque III’s resignation.

[We court death in this work. We don’t know if one of these days we will go home as ashes and our families would no longer see us alive. And this is what you will do to us?

President Rodrigo Duterte himself on August 21 ordered the DOH and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to “use whatever money there is” and pay the health workers who have yet to receive their long overdue benefits. Unpaid benefits were due the health workers since last year, while two-thirds of the current year has now passed.

However, as of publishing, medical and non-medical frontliners have waited in vain despite even the president’s ultimatum.

National day of protest

On September 1, the usually busy streets around the vicinity of DOH headquarters were filled with health workers demanding long overdue benefits, while rattling empty pots and kitchen utensils as part of their noise barrage protest.

Garbed in their PPEs and hospital uniforms, a group of nurses, doctors, as well as the hospital janitorial staff reiterated their demand for accountability and immediate resignation of Duque amid “gross negligence, inept, and inefficient response” to address the ongoing pandemic.

The groups noted the major anomalies and failures of Duque such as:

  • Yearly expired medicines as per Commission on Audit report
  • P15-billion PhilHealth scam
  • COVID-19 response failure
  • P11.9-billion unused funds for health workers’ special risk allowance (SRA) and active-duty hazard pay (ADHP)
  • P67.32-billion questionable and anomalous disbursement and expenditures of DOH COVID-19 response funds, among others

“Hanggang ngayon, ang ipinagmamalaki nilang special risk allowance na P311 milyon na nirelease kuno ng DOH at nakinabang ay iilan lamang na mga manggagawang pangkalusugan. P 11.9 bilyon pa na halaga ng pera ang anila’y para sa mga manggagawang pangkalusugan. Subalit ang sabi ng DOH, naghahagilap pa raw sila ng pondo,” said Dunguines.

[Until now, the DOH could only boast of the P311 million special risk allowance they released, from which only a handful of health workers would be able to benefit from that. There should be P11.9 billion for health workers. The DOH said they are still looking for funds.]

On August 25, DBM said they have released the P311.79 million for the SRA of both public and private sectors. Through this, the agency added that they were able to provide the promised risk allowance for 20,000 health workers secured under the “Bayanihan 2” law.

However, Duque emphasized that only health workers with “indirect” exposure to COVID-19 shall be entitled for the SRA.

This remark further agitated the healthcare workers. They lamented that not a single peso was given to them while they in fact are exposed to COVID-19 since last year.

“Ang SRA ay dapat ibigay nang walang pinipili. Ang virus ay walang pinipili at lahat tayo ay pwedeng maapektuhan. Ang SRA ay para sa lahat ng manggagawang pangkalusugan na nag-aalay ng serbisyo at pangangalaga ng mga pasyenteng nangangailangan sa amin.” Dunguines added.

[The SRA should be released unselectively. The virus does not choose who to infect and all of us could be affected. The SRA should be for all health workers who offer their services and care to the patients who need us.]

Dunguines also decried that the AHDP, same with SRA, has not yet been released to them.

She also pointed out that there is no distinction between public and private health workers and that they are all entitled for the benefits as per DOH Administrative Order (AO) 2020-0054.

Also under this directive, meals, accommodation, and transportation allowance (MAT) including life insurance and sickness and death compensation should also be received by the health workers apart from SRA and AHDP.

The fight shall continue

“Hangga’t may laban, kami ay lalaban. Hangga’t ang karapatan namin ay patuloy na tinatapakan, kami ay hindi hihinto sa pakikipaglaban,” said Dunguines.

[As long as we can fight, we will fight. As long as our rights are being trampled, we will not stop fighting.]

Dunguines said this is not only a matter of fulfilling their economic needs but rather a fight for justice.

Health workers vowed to continue their fight against COVID-19 and serve their patients as well as their resounding call to struggle for their protection, safety, welfare, along with the right to quality health care that all Filipinos deserve.

The ‘silent killer’

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Philippine Daily Inquirer / September 05, 2021

The World Health Organization (WHO) recently issued a warning about a “silent killer” that affects nearly 1.3 billion people globally. It was referring to elevated high blood pressure or hypertension, a serious medical condition that is a major cause of premature death worldwide and can significantly increase the risks of heart, brain, kidney, and other diseases, including COVID-19.

Being health-conscious is even more necessary at this time of pandemic restrictions, when more people can develop hypertension due to being confined to their homes, eating an unhealthy diet, living sedentary lives, and facing heightened mental stress (for many Filipinos, this could be due to the ongoing health crisis, endless government idiocy that only aggravates daily living, or personal circumstances like losing loved ones to the virus or losing jobs, etc.).

But while hypertension can be easily diagnosed by monitoring one’s blood pressure and getting treated with low-cost drugs, half of affected people are unaware of their condition and thus are not treated, according to a joint study by the WHO and the Imperial College London published in The Lancet. The WHO said more than 700 million people worldwide with hypertension are untreated, and that the number of those affected by this condition has doubled to 1.28 billion since 1990. In 2019, almost 18 million people died from cardiovascular diseases, with hypertension identified as a major factor. In addition, more than two-thirds of those with the condition live in low- and middle-income countries.

In the Philippines, data from the Department of Health’s (DOH) 2018 Philippine Health Statistics, the latest on record, show that hypertension was the second leading cause of morbidity in the country, with 637,078 cases and a rate of 602.4 cases per 100,000 population. Per preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority as of last June, it was also the sixth leading cause of mortality, just a notch above COVID-19.

In the last two years, there was a marked increase in deaths caused by hypertensive diseases, from 27,764 in 2019 to 31,610 in 2020. Experts said this could have been due to patients not being able to go for regular checkups because of the lockdowns, or who could no longer afford to go for treatment due to the decreased financial support from government institutions such as the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office.

Hypertension is “far from being a condition of affluence, it’s very much a condition of poverty,” said Majid Ezzati, professor of global environmental health at Imperial College London.

Bente Mikkelsen, director of the WHO’s department of noncommunicable diseases, pointed out that aside from genetic risk factors for hypertension, there are “modifiable risk factors” linked to lifestyle, including unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, tobacco and alcohol consumption, uncontrolled diabetes, and being overweight. Obesity, Mikkelsen warned, is “really the tsunami of the risk factors.”

These lifestyle-related risk factors are especially significant and should be looked into in light of a mobile survey conducted by the DOH in January showing that many Filipino adults have developed unhealthy lifestyle habits during the pandemic: About 40 percent said they have turned to alcohol, while 15 percent smoked tobacco.

“On alcohol use, consumption was high, with four in 10 Filipinos (40.1 percent) reporting that they drank alcohol in the 30 days prior to the survey. Alcohol use was higher in men compared to women, with 51.4 percent of men and 28.9 percent of women reporting current drinking use… On tobacco use, the survey revealed that overall, 15.5 percent of Filipino adults are tobacco smokers, with 22.6 percent of men and 8.5 percent of women currently smoking tobacco,” the DOH said in a statement released on Aug. 17. Men reported higher rates of drinking sessions, as well as increased “smokeless tobacco use” (vaping). The survey also showed that 90.1 percent of respondents reported consuming less than the recommended five servings of fruits or vegetables on a daily basis, and there was higher salt intake in diets.

Overall, the DOH said, one in 10 adult Filipinos reported receiving a clinical diagnosis of raised blood sugar or diabetes, while a quarter of adult Filipinos (25.8 percent) reported being told by their doctor that they were hypertensive. More than half or 54.5 percent of those diagnosed with hypertension were on medication to control their condition.

Among the WHO’s recommendations for reducing hypertension are decreased salt intake (to less than 5g daily), eating more fruit and vegetables, regular physical activity, and avoiding tobacco and alcohol. It also said patients must reduce and manage stress, and regularly check blood pressure. For Filipinos, that may mean exercising extra caution when reading or watching the news. (photo from Reuters)

Duterte’s Davao mafia

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COLUMN, Virtual Reality

posted September 03, 2021 by Tony Lopez, Manila Standard

It is now abundantly clear: Rodrigo Roa Duterte has been running a Davao Mafia all these years. It is cronyism multiplied a thousand times.

The cabal gobbled up choice government contracts of all kinds—the bigger, the better, the more profitable. We are talking about public works, buildings, supplies, and lately COVID medicines, equipment, and PPEs. 

COVID-19, what Duterte calls “veerus,” has been a blessing like manna from the devil himself. The crisis prodded Congress to pass gargantuan expenditure bills disguised as bayanihan (at the expense of the bayan) and without biddings.

To scare critics and oppositors, Duterte imposed the severest and longest lockdown in the world. This prohibited mobility, rallies, mass protests, even church gatherings wherein the pulpit could bully the powers that be.

This is the condom approach to security. Lockdown gives you a sense of security while you are being scr**ed.

Lockdowns, which began on March 16, 2020 and have never been effectively lifted, were supposed to create breathing space to beef up treatment, testing, contact tracing. But the government did little of those. Why? To deepen the crisis.

The graver the crisis, the more access the syndicate had to bigger tax money –without bidding, without audit, without opposition, without accountability.  

Lockdowns produced the worst economic collapse ever, the highest unemployment, the highest poverty, and strangely, the highest presidential ratings.

But the fiesta can only go on for so long.

The Commission on Audit published on its website an audit report on alleged irregularities in the utilization of funds by the Department of Health to cope with the COVID pandemic.

“Various deficiencies involving some ₱67,323,186,570.57 worth of public funds and intended for national efforts of combating the unprecedented scale of the COVID-19 crisis were noted. These deficiencies contributed to the challenges encountered and missed opportunities by the DOH during the time of state of calamity/national emergency, and casted doubts on the regularity of related transactions,” said the COA report. 

“Drugs, medicines and other types of inventories with a total value of ₱95,151,889.46 were found to be nearly expired and/or have expired due to deficient procurement planning, poor distribution, and monitoring systems, and identified weakness in internal controls,” COA also noted.

The P67 billion and the expired medicines could have saved lives or mitigated the plight of millions.

Galling is the DOH’s transfer of P42 billion to the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management.  The money was supposed to buy face masks, face shields, PPEs, and other supplies to cope with the pandemic.   The DOH claimed it did not have the manpower and the capacity to make such purchases on its own, and so transferred the funds to PS-DBM.

Indeed, the PS-DBM showed remarkable capacity—to spend the money on overpriced supplies. Under Executive Director Lloyd Christopher Lao, PS-DBM farmed out the purchase contracts to favored suppliers, some of whom are not even in the business of making, importing or supplying such items. 

Lao has since left the office.  A lawyer, he wanted to be the Ombudsman, the anti-graft prosecutor.

Pharmally Pharmaceutical Corp., a company established only in September 2019 and with just P599,000 of capital, bagged an P8.68 billion contract to supply face masks, face shields, and PPEs.  Pharmally’s prices were routinely higher than those of other suppliers and even of the Philippine National Red Cross.

DBM bought from Pharmally face masks for P27.70 apiece, 58 percent to 105 percent higher than the P13.50 to P17.50 pricing of other suppliers.  Test kits sold for P1,720 per set, an 86 percent overprice over the P925 quoted by other suppliers.  PPEs were bought for P1,910, 102 percent higher than the P945 from other companies.

Another company, Philippine Blue Cross Biotech, sold to DBM face shields at P120 apiece, 140 percent to 363 percent the going prices of P26 to P50.

A Chinese Davao businessman, Michael Yang has been linked to Pharmally Pharmaceutical, either as its alleged owner or agent or both.

Addressing the nation on Aug. 31, 2021, President Duterte angrily defended Yang from his detractors, led by Sen. Richard Gordon, chair of the anti-graft Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, and opposition Senators Frank Drilon and Panfilo Lacson.  

“He (Yang) has been 20 years with me,” said Duterte who recalled that the businessman began as a seller of cellphones in Davao.   Yang is apparently well-connected.  One time the former Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Zhao Jianhua (who left Manila in late 2019) visited Davao.  He stayed in the house of Yang, according to Duterte.  “He (Yang) has contacts in Chinese,” the President pointed out.

Duterte also disclosed it was he who ordered Health Secretary Francisco Duque to make emergency purchases of the anti-COVID medical supplies without bidding.

“When the pandemic started, we had nothing. We had no face mask, personal protective equipment, testing kits, nothing. And the same people criticizing today are the same people telling us last year that we were too slow and we’re not prepared,” the President said on television Aug. 31.

As to lawyer Christopher Lao, who headed DBM’s Procurement Service and farmed out billions of purchase contracts to favored suppliers, “they are my fraternal brothers,” the President declared.   Lao and another lawyer helped then Davao mayor Duterte “with legal matters and concerns”.  

“What is wrong if I pay a debt of gratitude?”  Duterte asked.

 What is wrong, indeed. 

Hospital ‘heroes’ protest: We’ve lost trust in DOH

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By: Dona Z. Pazzibugan, Maricar Cinco -Philippine Daily Inquirer / August 31, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — As Filipinos celebrated them as modern-day heroes, medical workers protested outside their hospital duty hours on National Heroes’ Day on Monday, setting the scene for bigger rallies that may include walk-outs or mass resignations until the government releases their long overdue salaries and benefits.

Hospital unions also called for the resignation of Health Secretary Francisco Duque III amid a surge in COVID-19 infections because “we’ve already lost our trust in the people running the (Department of Health),” Jao Clumia, president of the workers’ union at the private St. Luke’s Medical Center in Quezon City, told the Inquirer.

Clumia said the unions did not allow their members to leave their posts so as not to disrupt hospital operations, and only those who were off their duty shift joined the rallies.

Aside from St. Luke’s, other health workers—some of them wearing hospital protective suits—also protested at different times of the day at the University of Santo Tomas (UST) Hospital, Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital and at Calamba Medical Center in Laguna province.

Public health workers at the National Kidney and Transplant Institute and at the San Lazaro Hospital in Manila shared the call of their colleagues in the private sector and joined protest actions also on Monday.

“We will fight for what’s rightfully ours,” said Jaymee de Guzman, a nurse at the San Lazaro Hospital and an officer of Filipino Nurses United (FNU).

FNU and another group, the Alliance of Health Workers, earlier gave the government until Sept. 1 to release their special risk allowances (SRA), subsidies for meals, accommodation and transportation as well as the active hazard duty pay that went as far back as September 2020.

But this early, Clumia said they doubted if the government could beat its own deadline set by President Duterte since it had so far released only P311 million for the SRA alone.

“The money hasn’t reached our hospital directors yet. And that amount only covers Sept. 15 to Dec. 19 (2020),” he said.

Nurse Manuel Payao, union president at the University of the East Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Medical Center, said the pandemic had “exposed the reality that our public health system is broken and not responsive to the needs of the Filipino people and that the Duterte administration has failed to protect the ordinary workers during the crisis.”

Federation of Free Workers vice president for Mindanao Aida Brillante said too many health-care workers had died during the pandemic.

“While there is honor in dying while on duty, we need our health-care workers alive, healthy and motivated as they battle an enemy that is adapting to the environment by the day,” said Brillante, who is also union president at the San Pedro Hospital.

The coalition All Workers Unity led by Kilusang Mayo Uno also gave tribute to health-care workers facing a “seemingly endless battle” due to the government’s bungled pandemic response.

“Despite the holiday, we have nothing to celebrate. We have always been referred to as ‘modern heroes’ for our hard work and dedication despite the worsening pandemic. We are outraged at the injustice and systemic neglect inflicted upon us by the government,” said Donell Siazon, union president at the UST Hospital.

Noble sacrifice

Elsewhere, Filipinos celebrated on National Heroes’ Day the country’s medical workers and front-liners for their courage and resilience in the face of a global health crisis.

President Duterte on Monday paid tribute to them and all essential workers, calling them modern-day heroes “who sacrifice their lives, comfort and security to serve our fellow Filipinos.”

“May we all learn from the valiant example of the past and present heroes and build on them to achieve a stronger future for all,” the President said in a message aired during the broadcast of the official celebration at Libingan ng mga Bayani in Taguig City.

Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea led the flag-raising and wreath-laying ceremonies at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Libingan.

Among those who also recognized them was Vice President Leni Robredo, who said heroism could be found “even in the small actions as long as they are done for others.”

“Today we recognize the courage, sacrifice and greatness not only of our famous heroes but also the many Filipinos who have laid their lives for the country,” she said in a statement on Monday. “While history may not know their names, their legacy and dreams live on in us: a country that is safe, free and humane.”

But for militant groups like Bayan, the only way to truly show appreciation for health workers’ hard work is to continue calling for Duque’s resignation as he has “failed many times” to protect them from the pandemic.

Bayan secretary general Renato Reyes said the pandemic had only revealed how the administration “prioritizes corruption over the benefits of our health workers,” reacting to the Commission on Audit’s report revealing billions of pesos in unused pandemic funds and medical supply contracts awarded to questionable companies reportedly with ties to Mr. Duterte.

Pay upgrade

In a virtual dialogue also on Monday, the Philippine Nurses Association also asked the Department of the Interior and Local Government why local government units (LGUs) in the provinces had yet to enforce the salary upgrade of nurses and reinstate Nurse II positions, after they were effectively demoted by Circular 2020-4, or the entry salary upgrade from Salary Grade (SG) 11 to SG 15, issued by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM).

Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said they were awaiting the joint DOH and DBM guidelines for LGUs to follow in implementing the pay upgrade of nurses.

—WITH REPORTS FROM JEROME ANING AND KRIXIA SUBINGSUBING INQ

Pacquiao ‘ready’ to run independent if Comelec, SC favor Cusi wing PDP-Laban

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By: Christia Marie Ramos – Reporter / INQUIRER.net /August 30, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — Senator Manny Pacquiao is ready to run as an independent candidate in 2022 elections should both the Commission on Elections (Comelec) and the Supreme Court recognize the PDP-Laban Cusi wing as the legitimate party representative, an ally said Monday.

“Yes, ready po siya kasi po ganyan po katibay ang prinsipyo ni Sen. Manny Pacquiao,” PDP-Laban executive director Ron Munsayac, identified with the Pacquiao faction, told reporters in an online interview.

(Yes, he is ready, that’s how strong Sen. Manny Pacquiao’s principle is.)

Pacquiao’s group has been at odds with the faction of Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi, which recently endorsed the tandem of Senator Bong Go and President Rodrigo Duterte for the 2022 polls.

Pacquiao is said to be eyeing the presidency next year. The senator, however, earlier announced he will make a decision in September.

‘No back-up parties’

While many parties are ready to throw their support for Pacquiao in the 2022 elections, Munsayac stressed that the boxer-politician remains loyal to PDP-Laban and will not join any other political group.

“No back-up parties but there are several parties ready to support Manny Pacquiao whatever his decision is…Sinasabi niya po sa amin kay Sen. [Koko] Pimentel at sa ibang leaders ng partido namin na, ‘Ron, Koko, I will not leave PDP-Laban. Ipaglaban natin ito kasi sa mga miyembro ito e, ipaglaban natin ito,’” Munsayac said.

(No back-up parties but there are several parties ready to support Manny Pacquiao whatever his decision is…He told me and Sen. Pimentel and other leaders of the party that ‘Ron, Koko, I will not leave PDP-Laban. We should fight for this because this party belongs to its members, let’s fight for this.)

“Hindi niya po iiwan ang PDP-Laban kasi napamahal na po siya sa prinsipyo, ideolohiya at sa nakita niya po yung suporta ng mga miyembro namin sakanya so he will not leave the PDP-Laban no matter what the consequences are,” he added.

(He will not leave PDP-Laban because he has grown to love its principles, its ideology and he saw how the party’s members have supported him so he will not leave PDP-Laban no matter what the consequences are.)

“Yung consequences lang naman po talaga is kung hindi po pumanig yung Comelec at yung Supreme Court sa amin ay magiging independent po siya,” he further said.

(The only consequence is that if the Comelec or the Supreme Court will not side with us then he will be an independent candidate.)

Ready for SC

Earlier, Comelec chair Sheriff Abas said deciding which of the two factions is the legitimate representative of PDP-Laban will be “bloody.”

“The Comelec will decide based on the documents and based on the law and the constitution and by-laws of the party,” Abas had said.

Munsayac said their faction remains confident that the Comelec will make a decision in their favor but added that the Pacquiao wing is prepared should the conflict within the ruling party reach the Supreme Court.

“We’re already prepared and we’re already expecting na aabot talaga sa Supreme Court…We’ve repeatedly said na malaki at mataas ang paningin namin at paniniwala sa Comelec, sa Supreme Court na titignan nila yung merits ng kaso. Kung sino po talaga ang mga orihinal, kung sino yung mga totoo at kung sino yung mga recognized na members ng PDP-Laban, hindi lang po yung nakaupo yung may pera,” Munsayac said.

(We’re already prepared and we’re already expecting that this will reach the Supreme Court…We’ve repeatedly said that we have high regards for the Comelec, the Supreme Court and believe that they will look at the merits of the case, who are the original, who are the true and recognized members of the party, not only those in power or have money.)

Sa Araw ng mga Bayani: Iwaksi ang mga huwad na bayani

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Aug 30, 2021 Rappler.com

“I need a hero.” Pangkaraniwang tema ‘yan sa pelikula at maging sa buhay pulitika.

Nang tumakbo si Rodrigo Duterte bilang pangulo noong 2016, ipinangako niyang “Change is coming.” Ang subliminal message ay ito: Bayani ninyo ako dahil babaguhin ko ang buhay ‘nyo.

Siguro nga binago niya ang buhay natin, pero hindi sa paraang ikatutuwa nating lahat.

Binago niya ang rules of the game. Kahit magtatapos na ang termino niya, lalo pang namayagpag ang kanyang mga numero sa gitna ng palpak na pamamalakad sa pandemya. Hindi siya naging lame-duck president. Dinurog niya ang oposisyon noong midterm elections ng 2019, bagay na huling nangyari noong panahon ni Pangulong Manuel L Quezon!

Pero ang maglalatay ay ito: Niyanig ni Duterte ang pundasyon ng ating national values:

  • OK lang pumatay. Iniroll-back niya ang pagrespeto sa buhay ng tao at karapatang pantao sa ilalim ng kampanya laban sa droga kung saan tinatantiyang nasa 27,000 ang namatay. Naging katanggap-tanggap ang manawagang barilin ang mga pasaway, barilin ang mga babaeng rebelde.
  • OK lang mambastos ng babae. Saan ka nakakita ng pangulong humahalik sa mga babae sa entablado at kinakandong sila sa publiko? Rape jokes? Keri lang ‘yan. Kahit madre ang ni-rape keri rin. Minanyak na kasama sa bahay? Lalong keri.
  • OK lang na balasubas ang pambansang ehemplo ng kabataan. OK lang murahin ang Diyos, ang Santo Papa, at ang mga lider ng ibang bansa tulad ni Barack Obama. Walang sinasanto. Lahat binabalahura. 
  • OK lang magpakalat ng panlilinlang at kasinungalingan. Kung tutuusin, si Duterte ang father of disinformation sa Pilipinas. Sa pagkapanalo niya, napatunayan na puwedeng mahalal ang isang pulitiko sa lakas ng social media. Sa ilalim niya, sinalanta ng bayarang mga troll ang mga bumabatikos sa gobyerno at nagmistulang sementeryo ng diskurso ang online platforms.
  • OK lang makipagmabutihan sa Tsina kahit binabastos nito ang ating kasarinlan. Duterte loves Xi. OK lang kahit itinataboy at pinapalubog ang barko ng ating mga mangingisda.

At ang hindi maitatatwa, lumala ang quality of life natin sa ilalim ni Duterte. 

  • “Warak” ang ekonomiya. Mananatiling mataas ang unemployment at mas maraming taong nasa ilalim ng poverty line hanggang 2022, bilang epekto ng pandemya sa ekonomiya. 
  • Mismanaged ang paglaban sa pandemya – wala halos contact tracing, walang mass testing, at reactive ang mga retiradong militar na namumuno sa problemang hindi naman peace and order na problema, kundi health problem. 
  • Siyam na bilyon ang hindi nagamit sa Bayanihan II funds na malaki sanang tulong sa mahihirap at sa mga frontliner na kapos sa benepisyo. 
Incompetence, cronyism, korupsiyon

Hindi lang COVID-19 ang nakamamatay – deadly rin ang incompetence, cronyism, at katiwalian. 

Kamakailan, napag-alaman ng Rappler na ang pinakamalaking supplier ng administrasyong ito ng mga personal protective equipment – ang Pharmally Pharmaceutical – ay dikit sa dating economic adviser ni Duterte na si Michael Yang. Ito rin ang kumpanyang nakakopo ng P480-milyong kontrata para magsuplay ng test kits.

Bakit iginawad ang bilyon-bilyong kontrata ng Department of Budget and Management sa isang bagong tatag na kumpanya na P625,000 lang ang assets?

Si Michael Yang ba ang katumbas ngayon ni Danding Cojuangco at Roberto Benedicto noong panahon ni Marcos? Siya na ba ang top crony ni Duterte?

Bakit bumili ng overpriced na mga face mask at face shield si DBM undersecretary Lloyd Christopher Lao – ang dating alipores ni Senador Bong Go? Unqualified daw siya sa posisyong budget undersecretary, sabi ng mga senador. Bakit inappoint?

‘We don’t need another hero’

Didiretsuhin na namin kayo: Bayani ba si Duterte? Siya na laging umaatras sa hamong siya naman ang nagsimula – tulad nang hinamon niya si dating senior associate Supreme Court justice Antonio Carpio sa debate tungkol sa West Philippine Sea. Siya na laging bahag ang buntot kapag encroachment ng Tsina sa mga karagatan natin ang usapin?

Sa katotohonan, siya ang anti-hero ng ating henerasyon. Siya ang simbolo ng incompetence, impunity, at kawalan ng dangal.

Tigilan na natin ang paghahanap ng bayani. Sa katunayan, ang National Heroes’ Day ay pagpaparangal sa “Sigaw ng Pugad Lawin,” ang sigaw na naging hudyat ng simula ng Rebolusyon ng 1896. Hindi ito araw ng mga pinuno – araw ito ng mga karaniwang taong nagpunit ng sedula sa Balintawak.

Araw ito ng mga overseas Filipino worker at frontliner – ang nameless, faceless na mga kababayan nating araw-araw nagtataguyod ng tumatagilid na ekonomiya at papaguhong health system.

Iwaksi ang mga huwad na bayani.

Araw ito ng mga taong nagpapanatiling nakasindi ang kandila ng kalayaan sa kanilang mga puso. Araw natin ito. – Rappler.com