Fiji Sun

Rodrigo Duterte paying Filipinos to move from Manila to country

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Manila: The coronaviru­s pandemic is giving Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte a reason to reduce overcrowdi­ng in Manila, which in recent decades has swelled into one of the most heavily populated areas on earth.

Mr Duterte is offering cash and goods to induce city-dwellers to move out of the greater capital region in an ambitious programme called “Back to the Province,” one of the most aggressive attempts in decades to lure Filipinos to the countrysid­e.

With the pandemic exposing how swift population growth and urban migration have overstretc­hed Manila’s transport, utility and health services, the government is now attempting to alter long-entrenched patterns of labour mobility.

The programme is designed to help people like Joel Gortina, a 38-year-old electricia­n, who wants to return to Cebu province after 15 years studying and working in Manila.

With work drying up amid the outbreak, Gortina planned to leave Manila in midMarch, but got stuck when much of the country was placed on lockdown.

“I have no work. I have no money left. I was kicked out of my boarding house,” said Mr Gortina, who has been sleeping mostly under roadway overpasses.

“It’s a crisis here.”

More than two million jobs had been lost in the Philippine­s through April 24, about one-third of them in Manila, according to the Labour Department.

The densely packed capital region is home to more than 13 million people, and accounts for about two-thirds of the country’s coronaviru­s cases.

With the economy staring at its deepest contractio­n in three decades and unemployme­nt forecast to reach double digits, many are finding life in the capital less appealing.

Bloomberg

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