The Star Malaysia

Police draw flak over plan to monitor social media

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PHILIPPINE police drew criticism from netizens and activists for a plan to monitor social media to enforce quarantine rules, with critics accusing the authoritie­s of authoritar­ianism and double standards.

National Police Lt-Gen Guillermo Eleazar, head of a task force enforcing quarantine protocols, warned of fines and penalties of community service for people violating precaution­ary measures, while violators of liquor bans will face “additional charges”.

“Police could use public postings on social media as leads, and these will be over and above the police visibility operations we are conducting and will complement tips we get from the police hotline,” Eleazar said by phone.

Manila ended a second round of strict lockdown measures on Aug 19 to boost business activity, but people still must wear masks in public and observe one-metre distancing, while children, the elderly and pregnant women are urged to stay at home.

The plan to monitor social media, announced on Saturday, seems to show the police agency “wants to use the pandemic to turn us into a police state, where every action is being watched by the authoritie­s,” Renato Reyes, secretary-general of left-wing activist group Bayan (Nation), said on Twitter.

Critics said the plan shows a double standard after a police chief was allowed to keep his post despite flouting a ban on social gatherings in May.

Photograph­s on the police force’s Facebook page showed Debold Sinas, chief of the National Capital Region police, celebratin­g his birthday along with dozens of people without masks sitting close together, with beer cans on their tables despite an alcohol ban. Sinas apologised.

Eleazar said criminal and administra­tive cases have been filed against Sinas for the incident. — Reuters

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