The Philippine Star

DOT orders foreign offices to stop promoting Boracay

- By ROBERTZON RAMIREZ and JENNIFER RENDON

More than a week before the six-month closure of Boracay, the Department of Tourism (DOT) has issued a memorandum order asking its central and foreign offices to stop promoting the island. The order obtained by The

STAR yesterday said Boracay should be excluded from all the promotiona­l campaigns of the DOT following President Duterte’s order to shut down the island for six months starting April 26.

The island will also be secured heavily during its closure to stop people from sneaking into the area while rehabilita­tion efforts are ongoing.

The Police Regional Office 6-Western Visayas (PRO 6) said

over 600 police and military personnel will secure Boracay along with the Philippine Coast Guard.

But some of the rules were relaxed for the sake of the residents, allowing them, for instance, to fish anywhere in the island.

The DOT said the central and foreign offices should instead “strongly” endorse the many alternativ­e Philippine tourist destinatio­ns, “particular­ly emerging attraction­s in the Mindanao regions.”

However, Jose Clemente III, president of the Tourism Congress of the Philippine­s, cried foul over the DOT’s order, saying the government should not stop the marketing strategies to promote Boracay even with its closure to maintain its name in the world market.

Clemente said it is important to keep promoting Boracay and retain its good reputation internatio­nally in time for its reopening.

Earlier this month, Duterte approved the recommenda­tion of the inter-agency task force to close the island for six months after he called it a cesspool.

Select tourism stakeholde­rs and the inter-agency task force met on Tuesday to discuss the developmen­ts on the rehabilita­tion program, but Clemente said that “there was no take away during the meeting.”

The government did not consider appeals to rehabilita­te the island by phase instead of shutting it down, saying the degradatio­n entailed closure.

In Boracay, Lt. Commander Ramil Palabrica, chief of the PCG-Caticlan station, said they are considerin­g people’s complaints and pleas, thus they are allowing residents to fish beyond the 15-kilometer radius from the shoreline during the shutdown.

But to ensure that only Boracay residents could fish in the area, Palabrica said they would enforce the safety, security and environmen­tal numbering system – meaning the PCG will issue an identifica­tion number for each vessel.

Palabrica said they have also agreed to bend the rule on “no floating structures” from 15 kilometers to three kilometers from the shoreline.

Palabrica said such rule would only be applicable to members of the Boracay Boat Associatio­n.

The swimming area for Boracay residents was also transferre­d from Angol Beach in Station 3 to Station 1, Palabrica said, adding markers will be installed for the purpose.

Palabrica said they changed the venue because corals might be destroyed if Angol Beach, which is not accessible to vehicles in case of emergency, will be made as the swimming area.

But still, swimming will be allowed from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. only.

The adjustment­s were discussed during the Save Boracay conference Tuesday night with representa­tives from the inter-agency task force composed of the DOT, Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, Philippine National Police (PNP), PCG and other government agencies.

Chief Supt. Cesar Hawthorne Binag, PRO 6 chief and chairman of the Regional Peace and Order Council, said the adjustment­s are proof that the government is listening to suggestion­s and that “we are working to make the transition smooth and the rehabilita­tion process as peaceful as possible.”

Binag said the rules might evolve as the shutdown nears.

No protests

Binag said authoritie­s are likewise preparing for the meddling of militants, who might egg residents and people in the area to stage protests against the government’s rehabilita­tion efforts. At present, teams from the PNP, Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP), PCG and other law enforcemen­t units are providing security in the area. Binag said they added Civil Disturbanc­e Management or anti-riot police personnel as part of the contingenc­y plan in case protesters are able to slip in.

PCG spokesman Captain Armand Balilo said the agency will be deploying two ships – the BRP Davao del Norte that will come from Iloilo and the BRP Cabra that will come from Manila – to guard the island alongside the Philippine Navy and the PNP.

Balilo said there will be medical and dental missions in the poorest communitie­s in the area during the closure to ensure the welfare of residents.

There will also be marine studies and a check on the safety of transferri­ng petroleum from Caticlan to Boracay.

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