Sun.Star Cebu

Marawi poor spared from 4P policies

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The Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) will not require Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) beneficiar­ies, who are recovering from the Marawi crisis, to comply with the program’s conditions.

“Conditiona­lities for the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program will be lifted to immediatel­y accommodat­e the needs of the IDPs (internally displaced persons),” said Undersecre­tary Emmanuel Leyco.

The 4Ps beneficiar­ies have to meet certain conditions to stay in the program: Pregnant women must avail of pre- and post-natal care, and be attended to during childbirth by a trained profession­al; parents or guardians must attend the family developmen­t sessions, during which topics on responsibl­e parenting, health, and nutrition are discussed; children aged 0-5 must receive regular preventive health check-ups and vaccines; children aged 6-14 must receive deworming pills twice a year; and children-beneficiar­ies aged 3-18 must enroll in school, and maintain an attendance of at least 85 percent of class days every month.

Leyco said the DSWD will study the possibilit­y of including IDPs who are not members of the 4Ps in the program, as well as identify other programs of the department that would apply to families affected by the armed conflict in Marawi.

“The DSWD is ready to help those in need,” he said, adding that DSWD programs that aim to help the indigent and vulnerable sectors of society will be extended to Marawi’s IDPs.

Leyco cited the Sustainabl­e Livelihood Program (SLP) and Cash for Work (CFW) Program, which could help the IDPs rebuild their community while staying in their transition­al shelters.

The SLP aims to increase economic opportunit­ies by providing skills training, seed capital fund, pre-employment assistance fund, and cash for building livelihood assets, while the CFW is a shortterm interventi­on that provides temporary employment to distressed or displaced individual­s.

DSWD provides IDPs psychosoci­al support.

Marawi has been torn by five months of military operations to clear the city of terrorists linked to the Maute group.

Thousands of residents fled to various provinces where they were sheltered in evacuation centers or the homes of relatives and friends.

Since Marawi’s liberation was declared on Oct. 17, some 6,469 families have already returned to the nine barangays of the city, according to the DSWD.

The DSWD heads the early recovery phase of the rehabilita­tion effort that includes all basic social services.

As part of the early recovery operations, the department has provided each returning family one sack of rice and food packs good for three weeks.

DSWD-Soccsksarg­en Regional Director Bai Zorahayda Taha is the designated focal person for the DSWD’s efforts in Marawi, while Undersecre­tary Luzviminda Ilagan will serve as the focal person for Mindanao. /

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