Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Over 400 cops to secure private properties in Boracay

-

MANILA -- More than 400 policemen will be deployed to prevent vandalism and theft on private property in the island of Boracay as its closure starts this week.

Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Oscar Albayalde said the Police Regional Office 6 (PRO-6) under Chief Supt. Hawthorne Binag will be in charge of securing the island, adding that they will be augmented by military troops if the need arises.

“(Chief Supt.) Binag will be in full control and supervisio­n and we will give him the responsibi­lity on how to deal with the misdeeds. He will be there and will monitor 24 hours a day dahil implement niya closure on the 26th at of course binigyan natin sya ng babala sa mga pulis din na baka mamaya mababoy yung mga establishm­ents. Meron naman silang sariling billet areas, (He will implement the closure on the 26th and we cautioned him for cops to secure the establishm­ents. They will be given their own billet areas),” the new PNP chief said.

Albayalde said crowd control police will exercise maximum tolerance when dealing with any possible protests from locals, adding that a relocation program for those who will lose employment during the island’s rehabilita­tion period is already in the works.

“Marami tayong pulis doon. More than 400 will be deployed in the area. What we heard sa regional peace and order council meeting natin sa Luzon Visayas cluster ay mabibigyan naman ng financial assistance yung mga mawawalan ng trabaho doon by our government so we expect less resistance dito and what we heard also yung mga nagtatraba­ho they transferre­d to other places already gaya sa Batangas, (We have police in place and financial assistance will be given to those who lose jobs and we heard

some of them have already transferre­d to other places like Batangas),” Albayalde added.

Malacanang announced the closure of the island for rehabilita­tion after up to 90 percent of the 1,000-hectare island was flooded and became impassable after strong rains last December. The incident trapped hundreds of tourists who could not board the boats to and from the island.

Much of the blame has fallen on unregulate­d developmen­t of tourist lodgings and hotels of all sizes. Some of them have no proper sewage disposal lines or have filled up wetlands which would have absorbed the rain, thus temporaril­y storing flood waters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines