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Maayos na pampublikong transportasyon, iginiit ng health workers

Ni Joseph Cuevas

Nanawagan ang Alliance of Health Workers (AHW) sa gobyerno na kagyat na baguhin ang mga batas, patakaran at alituntunin na sumasagka sa mga health worker upang mas maayos na makapagbigay ng de-kalidad na serbisyo sa panahon ng community quarantine kaugnay ng corona virus disease (Covid-19) pandemic.

Iginiit ni Robert Mendoza, tagapangulo ng AHW, na palawigin pa ng pamahalaan ang plano sa transportasyon na magbibigay-luwag sa mga manggagawang pangkalusugan upang tiyakin ang kanilang kagalingan, proteksyon, kaligtasan.

Ang panawagan ng grupo ay ipinahayag matapos may dalawang health worker na magka-angkas sa motorsiklo noong Miyerkules, Marso 25, ang hinarang ng lokal na pamahalaan ng Valenzuela City kahit nagpakita pa ng identification card na sila ay galing sa mga ospital.

Photo by Gerald Libiran.

Pinagmulta ng P5,000 si Gerald Libiran ng Philippine Orthopedic Center ang dahil lumabag umano ito sa pagbabawal sa backriding dahil sa Covid-19 lockdown. Angkas noon ni Libiran ang kanyang kapatid na empleyado rin ng National Children’s Hospital pauwi sa Bulacan.

Naiulat rin na iba pang nars ang napilitang bumaba at maglakad papunta sa kani-kanilang ospital at pauwi dahil hinaharang ang kanilang sinasakyan.

Sa kabila ng sakripisyo at paghihirap para makapasok at makapagbigay ng serbisyong medikal sa mga pasyente ay ibayong hirap pa ang nararanasan ng mga health worker dahil sa kawalan ng lohika ng patakaran sa transportasyon ng lockdown ng pamahalaan, ayon kay Mendoza.

“Wala na ngang maibigay na personal protective equipment (PPE) upang matiyak ang aming kaligtasan sa panganib ng corona virus ay panggigipit pa ang inaabot namin sa daan,” reklamo niya.

Ayon naman sa Kagawaran sa Transportasyon, nagdagdag na sila ng iba pang ruta para sa libreng sakay ng mga health workers simula noong Marso 20.

Mula sa tatlong ruta sa umpisa ng lockdown, mayroon nang 13 ruta na may 74 na sasakyan ang umiikot sa mga sumusunod:  

NORTHWEST AREA, REVISED ROUTE 1

  • Meralco (Malanday)*
  • Valenzuela City General Hospital
  • MCU Hospital (Monumento)*
  • Caloocan City Medical Center
  • Tondo General Hospital
  • Our Lady of Fatima
  • Metropolitan Medical Center
  • San Lazaro Hospital
  • Jose R. Reyes Memorial Medical Center
  • University of Sto. Tomas Hospital
  • Chinese General Hospital
  • United Doctors Medical Center (Welcome Rotonda)*

NORTHWEST AREA, REVISED ROUTE 2

  • Valenzuela Gateway Complex*
  • Quezon City General Hospital
  • Balintawak*
  • MCU Hospital (Monumento)*
  • Our Lady of Fatima University
  • Chinese General Hospital and Medical Center
  • Philippine Orthopedic Center
  • United Doctors Medical Center (Welcome Rotonda)*

NORTHWEST AREA, REVISED ROUTE 3

  • SM City SJDM (Bulacan)
  • Dr. Jose N. Rodriguez Memorial (Caloocan)
  • SM Fairview*
  • Diliman Doctors Hospital
  • Veterans Memorial Medical Center
  • Lung Center of the Philippines
  • Philippine Heart Center
  • East Avenue Medical Center
  • Philippine Children’s Hospital
  • Centris Station (EDSA / Quezon Ave.)*

EAST AREA, ROUTE 4

  • SM City Masinag*
  • Marikina Valley Medical Center
  • Amang Rodriguez Memorial Medical Center
  • BFCT East Metro Transport Terminal*
  • Quirino Memorial Medical Center
  • Araneta Center Bus Terminal
  • Robinsons Galleria*
  • The Medical City – Ortigas

EAST AREA, ROUTE 5

  • Ortigas Hospital & Healthcare (Cainta)*
  • SM City East Ortigas
  • Pasig City General Hospital
  • The Medical City Ortigas
  • Robinsons Galleria*
  • VRP Medical Center
  • St. Luke’s Medical Center*
  • Rizal Medical Center

CENTRAL AREA, ROUTE 6

  • Centris Station (EDSA / Quezon Ave.)*
  • Providence Hospital
  • Capitol Medical Center
  • Philippine Orthopedic Center (Banawe)
  • United Doctors Medical Center (Welcome Rotonda)*
  • National Children’s Hospital
  • De Los Santos Medical Center
  • St. Luke’s Medical Center (E. Rodriguez)
  • UERM Memorial Medical Center
  • MRT-3 Cubao / Araneta Center*

CENTRAL/EAST AREA, REVISED ROUTE 7

  • Pasig City General Hospital
  • Immaculate Concepcion Cathedral*
  • Pasig Rotonda
  • Rizal Medical Center
  • The Medical City (Ortigas)
  • Robinsons Galleria*
  • Cardinal Santos Medical Center
  • VRP Medical Center
  • National Center for Mental Health
  • Makati Medical Center*

SOUTHEAST AREA, REVISED ROUTE 8

  • Starmall – Alabang*
  • SLEX Sucat Exit*
  • Bicutan Exit
  • Makati Medical Center*
  • St. Luke’s Medical Center – BGC*

SOUTHWEST AREA, REVISED ROUTE 9

  • Vista Mall, Daang Hari*
  • Perpetual Help Medical Center (Las Piñas)
  • Las Piñas General Hospital
  • Baclaran Market*
  • San Juan de Dios Educational Medical Center
  • Pasay City General Hospital
  • Adventist Medical Center
  • Makati Medical Center*
  • Philippine General Hospital
  • Manila Doctors Hospital
  • United Doctors Medical Center (Welcome Rotonda)*

SOUTHEAST AREA, ROUTE 10

  • RITM*
  • Asian Hospital and Medical Center
  • Muntinlupa City Hospital
  • Starmall – Alabang*

SOUTHEAST AREA, ROUTE 11

  • Starmall – Alabang*
  • SLEX Sucat Exit*
  • Bicutan Exit
  • San Juan de Dios EFI – Hospital
  • Gil Puyat Station LRT-1*
  • Philippine General Hospital
  • Manila Doctors Hospital

SOUTHEAST AREA, ROUTE 12

  • SM Molino
  • Imus Transport Plaza
  • Las Piñas General Hospital and Satellite Trauma Center
  • Baclaran Market*
  • San Juan de Dios Educational Foundation Hospital
  • Gil Puyat*
  • Adventist Medical Center Manila
  • Philippine General Hospital*
  • Manila Doctors Hospital*

SOUTH AREA, ROUTE 13

  • Seaoil Imus Daang Hari/Aguinaldo
  • Imus Transport Terminal*
  • Las Piñas General Hospital
  • Perpetual Help Medical Center
  • RITM*
  • Asian Hospital and Medical Center
  • Muntinlupa Hospital
  • Starmall Alabang*

*Pick-up/transfer points

Ang mga doctor, nars, at iba pang kawani ng mga ospital ay makakasakay sa mga oras na 5 a.m., 7 a.m., 1 p.m. 3 p.m., 5 p.m. and 7 p.m., alinsunod sa iba pang patakaran katulad ng tamang pag-aagwat at pagkuha ng temperatura ng mga pasahero.

Photo by Joseph Cuevas.

Health workers package hiling sa kaarawan ni Duterte

Hiniling rin ng AHW sa kaarawan ni Pangulong Rodrigo Duterte kahapon, Sabado, Marso 28, na bigyan sila ng “Health Workers Package” bilang pagtupad sa pangako nito sa mga manggagawang pangkalusugan at mamamayan.

Kabilang sa pakete ang kagyat na paglalaan at pagbibigay ng sapat at de-kalidad na mga PPE para sa mga health worker sa mga pampubliko at pribadong ospital, regular na empleyo at hindi boluntarismo sa mga pampublikong ospital ngayong panahod ng Covid-19 at kalaunan.

Dagdag rin sa pakete ang hazard pay at sapat na kompensasyon sa mga health worker, pagtaas sa pambansang badyet pangkalusugan at mass testing para sa lahat ng mga pasyenteng may sintomas ng COVID-19, gayundin sa mga frontline health worker at hindi VIP testing sa mga politiko. #

Groups urge Covid-19 testing in prisons, release of political detainees

Families of political detainees urged the government to follow World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines and start mass testing in prisons after receiving reports that some prisoners are showing symptoms of the corona virus disease (Covid-19).

The group KAPATID said that mass testing should start immediately as it has received reports that more inmates are getting sick despite denials by prison agencies and the Department of Interior and Local Government of confirmed cases.

Marami nagkakasakit, inuubo at nilalagnat,” KAPATID said, citing a report from relatives of political prisoners at the New Bilibid Prison (NBP), the national penitentiary at Muntinlupa City. (Many are getting sick, coughing and getting fevers.)

The group said three political prisoners are now reportedly ill with fever at the political prisoners’ wing at the Metro Manila District Jail-Annex 4 (MMDJ-4) at Camp Bagong Diwa in Bicutan, Taguig City.

KAPATID said the three unnamed political detainees are showing common Covid-19 symptoms like fever, headaches, cold, cough and body weakness—the same symptoms for the respiratory disease which has already killed 45 people in the country as of March 25, including nine doctors.

“KAPATID cannot emphasize enough why mass testing is imperative and why it must include the whole prison population comprising both inmates and prison personnel. Reports by other countries such as China and the US indicate that prison guards brought the sickness into prison facilities even with lockdowns in place and stricter health measures, including a forehead thermal scan of persons entering jail premises,” KAPATID spokesperson Fides Lim said in a statement

Lim cited scientific researches that early action through widespread testing has proven effective in controlling the rapid spread of the disease in South Korea and Germany which have managed to keep the Covid-19 death rate relatively low through extensive testing.

“Mass testing of both symptomatic individuals and all those who came into contact with them was crucial in catching the disease, isolating the carriers before they could pass it on, and providing more accurate figures of how many are really affected and how and where to limit contamination,” Lim said.

Free political detainees

Earlier, KAPATID called for the release of political detainees in line with reports that backchannel meetings between Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) representatives and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) in The Netherlands have been discussing the matter.

The NDFP urged the GRP to release all political prisoners and a general amnesty be issued “as a matter of justice and necessity.”

The NDFP made the appeal when the Communist Party of the Philippines declared a unilateral ceasefire last Tuesday, March 24, in response to the United Nations appeal for all warring parties to temporarily lay down arms to concentrate on responding to the pandemic.

Kapatid cited the move made by Iran and Egypt to release tens of thousands of prisoners, including political detainees, in a bid to decongest their prisons and prevent Covid-19’s spread through overpopulated jail facilities.

“KAPATID continues to press the humanitarian release of prisoners in line with the new UN (United Nations) call as the most expedient solution to protect and save lives. Tao rin sila,” Lim said. (They are also humans.)

The National Council of Churches of the Philippines (NCCP), the largest group of mainline Protestant churches in the country, also urged the government to release all political detainees following the appeal by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on March 26.

“Let’s take it from the UN. There is an urgent need to address the catastrophic risks in prisons by releasing prisoners, especially now that the country is confronting numerous challenges due to this pandemic,” Bishop Reuel Norman Marigza, NCCP General Secretary, said.

“As the number of positive COVID-19 cases spike up, the most Christian thing to do is to leave no one behind. Don’t forget those in prison, especially human rights defenders facing trumped charges, who have staunchly worked for social justice and human rights. They need compassion, they need justice and they need protection. They should be released under humanitarian grounds,” Marigza said in a statement.

“In many countries, detention facilities are overcrowded, in some cases dangerously so. People are often held in unhygienic conditions and health services are inadequate or even non-existent. Physical distancing and self-isolation in such conditions are practically impossible,” Bachelet said in her appeal for political detainees’ release.

Karapatan poster.

Meanwhile, human rights group Karapatan announced it will lead an online campaign on Facebook and Twitter  to urge the freedom of prisoners with light sentences as well as political detainees on March 31, Tuesday, at seven to eight o’clock in the evening.

Citing the congestion of Philippine jails at 450%, Karapatan said the government must free the elderly, sick, pregnant and nursing women, those who are due for parole or pardon, at least one spouse each of political prisoner-couples, and “accidental victims” of political arrests. # (Raymund B. Villanueva)

“Babangon Tayo (We Will Rise)”

by Concerned Artists of the Philippines

https://www.facebook.com/artistangbayan/videos/2494585867469199/

Official lyric video for “Babangon Tayo (We Will Rise),” an original composition of the Concerned Artists of the Philippines released in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, March 2020. This song is a tribute to our frontliners, and the power of the Filipino people.

Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP) is a Filipino organization of artists and cultural workers committed to advancing freedom of expression and the people’s movement for justice, nationalism, and democracy.

Subscribe to CAP on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoLbDUeKtQwRSzRkNH1l_UQ/…
Follow CAP on Facebook: http://www.fb.com/artistangbayan
Follow CAP on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/concernedartists_ph/
Follow CAP on Twitter: https://twitter.com/artistangbayan

Babangon Tayo (We Will Rise)
Words: Joel C. Malabanan, Edge Uyanguren, Karl Castro
Music: Mrk. Estandarte
Vocals: Jessa Mae Gabon, Pia Pimentel, Edge Uyanguren
Violin and additional backing vocals: Jing Reyna Jorge
Acoustic guitar: Pats Loquinario
Recording: #StayAtHome

Video by Pao Sancho and Maria Estela Paiso
Animation by Jether Amar
Special thanks to Jewel Maranan and Cinema is Incomplete

Download chords (PDF) here

Ang lockdown at ang Barangay Pinyahan

Ikinwento ng ilang mga residente ng Brgy. Pinyahan, Quezon City ang kanilang sitwasyon ngayong may lockdown sa buong Metro Manila.

Ang tatlo sa kanila ay solo parent, dalawa rito ang manggagawa. Habang ang dalawa naman ay parehong may sakit. Hiling nila na tulungan ang lahat ng Pilipino sa ganitong sitwasyon.

Marso 26, 2020

Bidyo nila Jola Diones-Mamangun, Arrem Alcaraz, Jo Maline Mamangun, Sanafe Marcelo, at Reggie Mamangun

Music Info: AShamaluev

Music – Nostalgy. Music Link: https://youtu.be/_DA0mdtL-jI

‘An example across the world,’ UN says of CPP’s ceasefire order

The United Nations (UN) welcomed the temporary ceasefire order of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), saying the group’s positive response to the call for a global ceasefire in the face of the corona virus disease (Covid-19) pandemic “will serve as an example across the world.”

In a statement, Stephane Dujarric, spokesperson for UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, said they welcome the truce order issued by the CPP last Tuesday, March 24, against Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) armed forces.

“The Secretary-General (Guterres) encourages the parties to reach a lasting political solution and end this longstanding conflict,” Dujarric added, referring to the 51-year revolution led by the CPP.

The CPP is the first belligerent force in the world to respond to Guterres’ appeal issued last March 24.

UN’s statement on its website.

NDFP Negotiating Panel chairperson Fidel Agcaoili said the revolutionary forces in the Philippines deeply appreciates the UN recognition.

“We deeply appreciate the recognition extended by the UN Secretary General for the initiative of the revolutionary movement and the CPP to respond to his call for a global ceasefire in humanity’s common fight against the Covid-19 pandemic,” Agcaoili told Kodao in an online interview.

The CPP’s unilateral ceasefire order to all units and commands of the New People’s Army and the People’s Militias took effect starting midnight of today, Thursday, March 26 and ends on 23:59 of April 15.

The GRP earlier said NDFP chief political consultant Jose Maria Sison’s advise for the CPP and its forces to observe its own ceasefire during the pandemic “is a positive development.”

The GRP earlier declared a unilateral ceasefire against the CPP, the NPA, and the NDFP effective 00:00 hour of March 19 to 24:00 hours of April 15, Presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo announced Wednesday evening, March 18. # (Raymund B. Villanueva)

Groups hold noise barrage calling for mass virus testing

by Sanafe Marcelo

Various organizations held noise barrages in several communities around Metro Manila Thursday, March 26, demanding free mass testing for health workers and patients with corona virus disease (COVID-19) symptoms.

Ilang residente ng Brgy. Holy Spirit, Quezon City

In Barangay Holy Spirit in Quezon City, Gabriela Women’s Party member Tess Arboleda said their noise barrage inside their homes and through social media are in support of calls for mass testing of so-called frontliners in the fight against the pandemic.

The activity also demanded food and financial assistance to poor families and workers who could no longer work because of the government-imposed lockdown.

Arboleda added that the poor are already worried because their resources and savings are fast running out two weeks into the island-wide lockdown.

Alliance of Concerned Teachers Philippines also participated in the noise barrage and in the “Tiktok” online dance challenge to call for more government support.

The teachers also called for “emergency assistance, not emergency power.”

Congress has passed bills granting President Rodrigo Duterte so-called emergency powers to realign funds to address the pandemic, among other special powers.

Members of Confederation for Unity, Recognition and Advancement of Government Employees (COURAGE), Bayan Muna, and Sama-samang Artista para sa Kilusang Agraryo (SAKA) also participated in the noise barrage. #

In Metro Manila, Fighting COVID-19 Requires Helping the Poor—Now

Old methods of emergency response no longer apply.

BY ICA FERNANDEZ & ABBEY PANGILINAN WITH DR. MIGUEL DOROTAN, NASTASSJA QUIJANO, PATRICIA MARIANO, ZAXX ABRAHAM, CLARA BUENCONSEJO, BENEDICT NISPEROS, DAVID GARCIA, & MIRICK PAALA. MAPS BY JR DIZON/MAPADATOS. PHOTOS BY KIMBERLY DELA CRUZ. (URBANISMO/Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism)

A SURGE of COVID-19 cases is expected to hit Metro Manila in the coming weeks and the city is grossly unprepared.

Home to nearly 13 million, Metro Manila is the epicenter of the COVID-19 outbreak in the country. Despite the government’s aggressive efforts to contain the pandemic by sealing off the capital and shutting down businesses and transport, the contagion is likely to spread and worsen. 

The hard facts

Data scientists from the Asian Institute of Management estimated 26,000 COVID-19 cases in the Philippines by end-March. Many, if not most of these cases, will be in Metro Manila, which has accounted for more than half of the 636 recorded COVID-19 cases as of March 25. Most of the 38 recorded COVID-19 deaths were also in the capital. 

As the table below shows, there are not enough doctors and nurses to cope with the projected surge in cases. Moreover, most health care workers are employed in the private healthcare system, which caters to only about a third of the population. Nearly 70 percent of some 1,500 hospitals in the country are privately owned.

There is already a shortage of doctors and nurses. In a recent Senate hearing, Philippine General Hospital Director Dr. Gerardo Legaspi said there should be at least 44 doctors, nurses, midwives, and medical technologists for every 10,000 Filipinos. The ratio is currently at 19 per 10,000.

Table 1. Distribution of Health Workers in Government Hospitals


 DoctorsNursesMidwivesDentists
Philippines10,44730,36816,6101,812
Metro Manila3,890 (37%)8,161 (27%)1,947 (12%)599 (33%)

Source: Department of Health, 2018

To date, two major hospitals in Metro Manila, the Medical City and the University of Santo Tomas Hospital, have had to quarantine 674 exposed health workers. Four high-end private hospitals— St. Luke’s BGC and Quezon City, Makati Medical Center, and The Medical City in Pasig City—have now said that they are unable to attend any more COVID-19 cases

Equally worrisome, a recent Philippine College of Physicians survey revealed only 1,572 ventilators are available in the country, 423 of them in Metro Manila. Global estimates show that 3 to 5% of COVID-19 patients require mechanical ventilation, crowding out others like stroke and heart attack patients who need intensive care.

Even as the Department of the Interior and Local Government ordered local governments to set up isolation facilities for milder COVID-19 cases that do not require admission to hospitals, not all barangays have been able to comply. 

“Flattening the curve”—keeping the infection growth rate down—and protecting hospital frontliners means keeping people at home so the virus doesn’t spread. While at home, people must be fed and their health and sanitation needs must be provided for right in the places where they live.

The COVID-19 battleground, therefore, is not just hospitals, but the poorest communities that lack the means to feed and protect themselves. Protecting these communities means protecting everyone else. 

The issues: Poverty and density

Metro Manila is one of the densest cities in the world, outstripping Delhi, Paris, or Tokyo. It  produces 70% of the country’s economic output and is the center of political, cultural, and economic life in Luzon. But it also has one of the largest concentrations of poverty.  Some 2.5 million of the city’s nearly 13 million residents live in slums, while 3.1 million are homeless. 

This map shows the poorest areas of the capital (the darker the color, the larger the percentage of poverty in the area) and their proximity to hospitals and COVID-19 cases. 

Map by JR Dizon/Mapadatos
Note: The poverty numbers in the map above refer to the number of poor households in each barangay that have been identified through the National Household Targeting System for Poverty Reduction, the government’s primary database of who and where the city’s poorest and neediest are. The numbers indicate families that have been targeted by the Department of Social Welfare and Development for social protection programs such as conditional cash transfers. These families are the poorest of the poor but their numbers do not include the homeless and the so-called “near-poor,” who are equally vulnerable.

In these poor communities, families are packed in small shanties with 4 to 6 children plus several  extended family members, including grandparents, sharing small spaces. Social distancing in these cramped places is difficult, if not impossible. 

The Issues: Access to health, sanitation, mobility, and food security

Even without COVID-19, poor living conditions trigger various health issues related to overcrowding and WASH (water and sanitation, hygiene), the most important factor in the spread of infections. This is particularly true for the elderly population and the young. 

The poor have limited access to health or other basic social services, like public transport. In dense settlements in major cities like Pasig, Mandaluyong, Quezon City, and Manila, looban communities deep in packed slums are accessible only by three-wheelers or habal-habal motorcycles that fit the narrow alleys.

A woman washes the dishes outside her home in Brgy. Piñahan in Quezon City on March 25, 2020.

Those with private vehicles are allowed to use them for urgent trips, but day laborers, frontline nurses, and poor dialysis patients reliant on public transport have been forced by the quarantine to walk for kilometers through multiple checkpoints. Everyone must now show a pass, whether one issued by the barangay government or the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID). This limits the ability of residents of poor communities to get food and urgent health care, making them more vulnerable to the spread of infection.

All of these create situations we’ve already seen, like ailing grandparents from the city’s slums braving checkpoints and possibly contracting COVID-19, to get food and medicine; otherwise, their children and grandchildren will starve to death. Once infections spread in these dense communities, it will be impossible to manage and contain.
 
Hot Spot: Quezon City 

Quezon City is the largest and most populous city in the Philippines, home to over 2.9 million people living in 175.33 square kilometers.

Its large land area eases overall population density pressure. Based on 2015 data, Quezon City’s population density is at 17,759 residents per square kilometer. In contrast, eight of the other 15 cities in the National Capital Region surpassed the region’s average population density of 20,785 persons per square kilometer.

Table 2. Most Densely Populated Cities in Metro Manila


City
Population Density
1. City of Manila71,263 persons per km2
2. Mandaluyong City41,580 persons per km2
3. Pasay City28,815 persons per km2
4. Caloocan City28,387 persons per km2
5. City of Navotas27,904 persons per km2
6. City of Makati27,010 persons per km2
7. City of Malabon23,267 persons per km2
8. City of Marikina20,945 persons per km2

Source: Philippine Statistics Authority, 2015

Although it is one of the least dense cities in Metro Manila, a 2015 analysis from the World Bank shows that more than a third of the total slums in the capital region can be found in Quezon City. The second ranking city, Taguig, hosts 10% of the total slum area of the region.

The largest clusters of the Quezon City slums are in Batasan Hills and Payatas, but informal settlements can be found in the borders of universities, beside affluent gated communities, and in the shadows of high-rise malls and high-end mixed-use developments, as in the case of Sitio San Roque. In these slums, daily-wage-dependent families do not always have access to water or soap. These families also do not have the luxury of space as they live in shanties too warm, packed, and uncomfortable to stay in for long periods of the day. This makes it impossible to follow the recommendations of the quarantine: social distancing of at least two meters between persons. 

As of March 23, 42 of Quezon City’s 142 barangays have COVID-19 cases. Of these, 12 are under “extreme enhanced community quarantine.”

Table 3. Quezon City Barangays under Extreme Enhanced Community Quarantine

DistrictBarangay
1Maharlika
Ramon Magsaysay
San Isidro Labrador
2Batasan Hills
Bagong Silangan
3Masagana
4Damayang Lagi
Kalusugan
Tatalon
Central*
6Pasong Tamo

Source: Quezon City Government, March 23, 2020
Note: Brgy. Central has no COVID-19 cases as of March 23, but has been placed under extreme quarantine due to its proximity to major hospitals.

According to the health department, there are 66 hospitals within Quezon City’s borders; 15 are government owned and 51 are private. Only 20 are categorized as Level 3 hospitals that have intensive care units, with some 7,500 beds. 

Key hospitals serving COVID-19 cases include the Lung Center of the Philippines, which is one of the six hospitals in the country with testing capability and has dedicated one wing with 40 beds for COVID-19 patients; and the Philippine Heart Center, where over 20 health workers were exposed to the virus after a patient withheld travel information. 

As of March 23, at least six doctors at the Heart Center have tested positive. Three have already died. At least 3 COVID-19 cases in Quezon City, with one from a congested urban poor community,  have been sent home for lack of bedspace. Not all barangays have been able to set up isolation tents for the sick.   

Maps by JR Dizon/Mapadatos
Note: The numbers of households in informal housing was calculated based on four variables from the 2010 census. First, we calculated the households who enjoy (a) rent-free occupation with consent of owner; and (b) rent-free without consent of owner. We then filtered those numbers based on the type of housing, specifically homes where (c) floor area is less than 5 square meters, and (d) whose outer walls are constructed of wood and other light materials.

The Department of Transportation and Office of the Vice President are running free bus services to bring health workers to hospitals, but many frontline workers live in different cities or have no access to “last-mile” transportation that can connect them from the pickup or transfer stations and back to their homes. Many nurses and other frontline medical personnel are forced to walk to work. A few have been able to obtain bicycles.

The maps also show locations of supermarkets and groceries, including major “bagsakan”’ consolidation markets like NEPA QMart and Balintawak Market. In the coming weeks, the lack of transport could endanger the food supply if produce deliveries are unable to enter the capital and if markets cannot operate at full capacity because their workers cannot report to work. 

Farms and factories suffer from the same restrictions. Farmers from Cordillera, Laguna, Nueva Ecija, Cabanatuan, and Marinduque have taken to social media to warn that thousands of tons of produce are going to waste due to transport restrictions and the lack of markets to purchase the food.

What can be done—now!

We cannot arrest the contagion without coordinated efforts to address the problems of poverty, mobility, and food security among the poorest and neediest. 

With the signing of Republic Act No. 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act on March 24, the Executive Branch now has enhanced powers for the next three months to stem the tide of COVID-19 across the country. 

For this to be effective, the national government needs to work with local governments, the private sector, and everyday citizens. 

The first two weeks of the enhanced community quarantine have seen the private sector stepping up to provide assistance to frontliners and vulnerable communities. Big brands are donating their advertising budgets and securing support for their staff and suppliers. Private companies and citizens have begun to pledge support to fundraising initiatives. 

These initiatives are also partnering with community-based organizations such as Caritas Manila and Samahan ng Nagkakaisang Pantawid Pamilya (SNPP) to reach families sorely affected by the lockdown. 

Everyday citizens, including students, restaurant owners, and vendors alike, are donating what they can, including time, food, and bicycles for frontline workers. Citizen information drives such as @CureCovidPH and #PHCAN are now preparing information materials in vernacular languages for community use.

Many local government units have also begun distributing food packs to their barangays and have tapped into their Quick Response Funds to produce more in the coming weeks. But these efforts are not enough. 

Old methods of emergency response no longer apply under the conditions of COVID-19. The checkpoints and other mobility restrictions mean that all efforts must be hyper localized, building on human resources and social capital within these respective cities for months to come.

These efforts should focus on:

1. Finding ways to increase community access to water and basic sanitation, particularly with increasing water shortages across the Philippines. Provide soap, hygiene kits, masks, and other basic supplies particularly in dense, deprived, and informal settlements across different cities. 

a. Organize water rationing with the help of the Bureau of Fire Protection, Philippine Red Cross and other local volunteer organizations with water tanks.

b. Continue regular garbage collection and ramp up sanitation efforts across cities.

c. Set up sinks and handwashing stations in strategic common areas.

d. Repurpose clear plastic sheeting to serve as droplet shields for storefronts and other high-traffic areas.

e. Prepare methods for social distancing, quarantine, and care that uses the household and not the individual as the unit of care.

2. Providing support to the poorest families. Specifically, the civilian bureaucracy led by the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation,  Department of Social Welfare and Development and the Department of Labor and Employment, together with the Department of Transportation should  implement, expand, and augment the existing social welfare programs to assist the affected labor force, marginalized, and other vulnerable sectors. Some of these programs include:

a. Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps), Modified Conditional Cash Transfer Program (MCCT) for homeless street families, and Unconditional Cash Transfer (UCT)  under DSWD. However, packages for families not included in Listahanan must also be considered.

b. PhilHealth, where coverage of  all costs should be increased to include testing, consultation and hospitalisation related to COVID-19.

c. Pantawid Pasada (DOTR/LTFRB), which should be expanded to also cover other affected sectors such as tricycle, jeepney, bus, AUV, and taxi drivers

d. TUPAD (Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged /Displaced Workers) under the Department of Labor and Employment

3. Ensuring food security during the duration of the enhanced community quarantine.

a. The IATF-EID, Department of the Interior and Local Government, Department of Agriculture, and the Department of Trade and Industry must ensure that the strict quarantine guidelines will not disrupt the food supply chain. The DA assured the public that there is enough food for everyone. However, despite clear statements from national government that the delivery of food, agricultural products, and essential commodities should remain unimpeded, this has not been clearly applied across all local government units, many of which have installed their own checkpoints with varying interpretations of the rules established by the IATF-EID.

b. Local government units must start innovating in order to ensure that the people will have access to basic food necessities. Pasig City is presently implementing mobile markets to bring food closer to where people are, as is the Lanao del Sur provincial government. Mandaluyong is including fruits and vegetables in their food packs, while Baguio and Laguna are distributing vegetable seeds for ‘survival gardens’.

4. Ensuring that daily wage earners are not forced to leave their homes to feed their families by providing food aid and other incentives for the duration of the lockdown. The government must collaborate with private sector employers to assuage fears that they will lose their jobs if they are unable to physically report for work.

5. Supporting the mobility of frontline services and health workers, and ensuring that even citizens without private vehicles will have unimpeded access to health facilities, particularly those who are pregnant, undergoing dialysis or radiation, and in need of other essential health services. Options such as sanitized buses and bicycles can be provided for frontline workers.To the extent possible, provide options for temporary housing for front liners by coordinating with real estate developers, schools, and dormitories. Above all, efforts should be made to ensure that the implementation of checkpoint protocols are done in a humane, respectful, and non-arbitrary fashion, putting the health and safety of citizens first.  

6. Supporting the health sector and local scientists to ramp up free testing capability across the Philippines, including for the poorest of the poor. With the absence of adequate laboratory facilities and trained personnel across the country, some of the PHP 27.1-billion package released by the Department of Finance should be channeled towards innovative solutions for addressing testing and the logistics thereof.

7. Sharing accurate and timely information both at the national and grassroots level, iand in local languages and channels. Consolidate communication channels for clear messaging and information dissemination and take advantage of existing communication platforms such as the government’s text alarms to provide more useful information, not just brief regular reminders to the public. Data sharing of anonymized information to protect patient privacy can also help in scientific and policy work in the long run.

8. Encouraging businesses to support the above mentioned efforts and coordinate with the government to create a singular, streamlined response.

9. Extending the deadline of tax collection in consideration of the logistical hurdles posed by the quarantine, and call on banks, businesses, and property owners to extend and/ or defer deadlines of bill and rental payments.

While these measures are focused on the experience of Metro Manila, quarantined communities in the rest of Luzon and in Visayas and Mindanao must also take steps to support the poorest and most vulnerable. 

[Note: This is a popular version of a longer paper prepared by members of UrbanisMO, a group of urban planners and development professionals, in cooperation with the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. The papers in ENGLISH and TAGALOG are available on urbanismo.phfacebook.com/urbanismoph, and twitter.com/urbanismodotph.]— PCIJ

Kalampag sa gobyerno ng mga taga-Brgy. Holy Spirit, Quezon City

Naglunsad ng noise barrage ang isang komunidad sa Brgy. Holy Spirit sa Quezon City bilang pakikiisa sa sabayang protesta na “Kalampagin ang Gobyerno”, Marso 25, 2020.

Panawagan nila ang agarang ayuda para sa mga nasalanta ng pandemya na CoViD-19 at pagsasagawa ng sistematiko, libre at malaganap na mass testing.

Tinututulan din nila ang emergency powers na ibigay ng Kongreso kamakailan para kay Pangulo Duterte na anila ay sobra-sobra na at tanging aksyong medikal ang solusyon laban sa CoViD-19.

Bidyo nila Jola Diones-Mamangun, Jek Alcaraz at Joseph Cuevas/Kodao

Pimentel’s caper and this administration’s true legacy

A senator of the Republic is currently reaping the whirlwind after announcing he learned he is positive of the corona virus disease (Covid-19) while accompanying his wife to a hospital delivery room. The Makati Medical Center is livid with Senator Koko Pimentel for what it described as a breach of Covid-19 home quarantine protocols. Pimentel is also being pilloried online, and understandably so.

Pimentel’s ill advised caper followed widespread denunciation of reports that senators, other high government officials and their families pressure the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine to have their test kits processed ahead of everybody else’s, including those who display symptoms of the dreaded disease. Resentment is strong among the people who are being forced to observe the lockdown imposed by President Rodrigo Duterte despite the lack of a logical plan on how the lockdown should be implemented, save for the deployment of police and military personnel with assault rifles on checkpoints throughout Luzon island.

Pimentel’s gambol is not helping the government convince it is doing a good job in containing the spread of the virus. Aside from the utter lack of mass testing to pinpoint where the virus is spreading the fastest, what Pimentel and fellow senators Francis Tolentino, Imee Marcos, and others have demonstrated is their utter disregard for the people, particularly the poor, sick, elderly, and the frontline health workers who need to be tested first with the limited kits that are available.

This has led the people (at least those who have internet connections at home) to launch trending tweet campaigns that demand accountability, such that even this government’s well-oiled troll armies could no longer cover up. President Duterte’s obvious absence isn’t helping his spin doctors any. If he does go on television (often at ungodly hours of the evening) he could only manage rambling speeches that help very little in calming the nerves of an already nervous populace.

The populace’s nervousness is understandable. In communities, the people are afraid whether they would be able to feed themselves or whether there are still food items to be bought until the month-long lockdown ends. The fact that they are also humiliated—such as in Parañaque where those suspected of violating the so-called community quarantine are tortured by being forced to sit under the heat of the unrelenting sun or are harshly and publicly berated—contribute to the growing resentment.

I was in Switzerland and The Netherlands when the Covid-19 pandemic shifted to the region as its new epi-center earlier this month. Countries were also closing their borders and lockdowns were imposed one after the other. But there are no checkpoints in communities and the police do not carry assault rifles to terrorize the people into staying indoors. Only food stores and pharmacies are allowed to remain open but, pretty much, the governments rely on their citizens to comply with self-quarantine requests without unnecessary force. When I arrived back here, all I saw is the overwhelming exercise of state power through the police and the military. Even those who need to be at work because they are real frontliners in the fight against the virus are finding it hard to do their jobs because of the overly-strict and illogical edict of banning all forms of transport.

The Covid-19 crisis is the Duterte government’s Mamasapano and Hello, Garci crises of the past two administrations. If it slides through this one, it would only be through the heroism of the frontliners (doctors, nurses, hospitals, relief and emergency workers, and others) who battle through despite lack of supplies, absence of clear directions and plans, and even through thick-headedness and cheekiness of the likes of Pimentel. How this administration runs around like a headless chicken, albeit full-battle geared, in one of the country’s direst moments is turning out to be its true legacy to the people. #

CPP orders nationwide ceasefire in response to UN’s appeal

The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) issued a unilateral nationwide ceasefire order to all commands and units of the New People’s Army (NPA) as well as the people’s militias Tuesday night, March 24.

The order, published on the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) website, says the ceasefire will take effect from 00:00 of Thursday, March 26 and ends on 23:59 of April 15.

The CPP said the order is upon the recommendation of the NDFP Negotiating Panel by way of direct response to the call of United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres for a global ceasefire between warring parties for the common purpose of fighting the corona virus disease (Covid-19) pandemic.

“As advised by the NDFP Chief Political Consultant [Jose Maria Sison] and relayed by the NDFP Negotiating Panel to the NDFP National Council, the broad masses of the people themselves need to refrain from launching tactical offensives to gain more time and opportunity to fight the Covid-19 pandemic and to look after the health and over-all welfare of the people in both urban and rural areas,” the order reads.

The underground party said the purpose of its unilateral ceasefire is to ensure and facilitate necessary, unhampered and immediate medical, health and economic assistance, support and movement of the people brought about by the exigencies of the current Covid-19 worldwide pandemic.

“This ceasefire is also a gesture towards national unity and based on humanitarian principles in the context of the serious public emergency to ensure the health, safety and welfare of all, the CPP said.

“This ceasefire order shall take effect immediately and is not dependent on the issuance of the Suspension of Military Operations (SOMO) and Suspension of Police Operations (SOPO) issued or to be issued by the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP),” the CPP said.

Not a reciprocal truce order

Earlier today, NDFP Negotiating Panel chairperson Fidel Agcaoili formally recommended to the NDFP National Council the declaration of a ceasefire, clarifying however that their truce order is not reciprocal to the GRP ceasefire declaration effective March 19 to April 15.

“As in the past, the [Rodrigo] Duterte government cannot be trusted in any mutual or unilateral ceasefire agreements, as the bombings of communities, harassment, abductions and killings perpetrated by its armed forces continue unabated. Thus, even while respecting and following the unilateral ceasefire order, the New People’s Army and the people’s militia must be alert and act in self-defense against any offensive by hostile forces,” Agcaoili said.

Agcaoili’s recommendation followed Sison’s advise that the NDFP Negotiating Panel may ask its principal, the NDFP National Council, to heed Guterres’ call for a global ceasefire.

Malacañan Palace for its part welcomed Sison’s advise for the NDFP forces to observe its own unilateral ceasefire amid the pandemic.

Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said Sison’s advise is “a positive development.”

“It is about time they join the collective efforts of the nation to fight the spread of the coronavirus,” Panelo told reporters.

The CPP however said that long before the GRP’s quarantine declarations and “repressive measures”, NDFP forces have been informing, training and mobilizing the people on how to fight the pandemic.

‘Active defense’

In its ceasefire declaration, the CPP ordered all NPA units and people’s militias to cease and desist from carrying out offensive military operations against the armed units and personnel of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), the Philippine National Police (PNP) and other paramilitary and armed groups attached to the GRP.

“All units of the NPA must be vigilant and be ready to act in self-defense against any tactical offensives or any hostile actions or movements contrary to the ceasefire order launched by any enemy force against the people and revolutionary forces in the guerrilla fronts of the people’s democratic government,” it warned.

The CPP further clarified that “active-defense” operations by the NPA shall be undertaken only in the face of clear and imminent danger and actual armed attack by hostile forces.

“All branches and committees of the CPP, units of the NPA and people’s militias and revolutionary mass organizations should closely monitor any hostile actions being carried out by the armed units and personnel of the GRP or of any act or omission inconsistent with the intent and purpose of this ceasefire. Such information should be reported to the concerned commands of the New People’s Army and leadership of the Communist Party of the Philippines,” it said.

The CPP said that with both the NDFP and the GRP declaring their unilateral ceasefire orders, the situation may potentially contribute “towards a positive atmosphere conducive to the eventual holding of informal talks preparatory to the formal meeting to resume the peace negotiations.”

Backchannel talks between GRP representatives and the NDFP Negotiating Panel have been ongoing since December last year.

The NDFP also urged the GRP to release all political prisoners and a general amnesty be issued “as a matter of justice and necessity.” # (Raymund B. Villanueva)