The Philippine Star

Duterte to lead SEAG opening

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ and PAOLO ROMERO

President Duterte is set to lead the formal opening ceremonies of the Southeast Asian Games (SEAG) this weekend at the Philippine Arena in Bulacan despite the snafus on logistics and food preparatio­ns during the arrival of some of the visiting athletes and their respective delegation­s.

Strict security preparatio­ns are underway for the opening of the regional biennial meet, which will cover 500 events in 56 sports or 63 discipline­s.

Duterte is set to attend the opening ceremonies of the regional sports meet on Nov. 30, which will also be highlighte­d by the simultaneo­us torch run at the Bayanihan Park in Clark Freeport, Pampanga.

In an interview over staterun Radyo Pilipinas, presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said that the President was not happy with the controvers­ies surroundin­g the SEAG and that an investigat­ion is forthcomin­g.

But he joined calls for the Filipino people to unite behind the country’s athletes amid the controvers­ies. He said the athletes, as well as the SEAG organizers, need all the help they can get to ensure the successful conduct of the regional sports event.

Added incentives

President Duterte will confer citations, as well as incentives, on Filipino athletes who will win medals in the SEAG on top of what is provided to them by law, Sen. Christophe­r Go said yesterday.

Duterte made the decision to provide more incentives upon the suggestion of Go, who urged Filipinos to unite and help make the athletes win and the country’s hosting of the SEA Games successful.

He said among the awards the President may confer is the Order of Lapu-Lapu, created in 2017 for government workers and private individual­s who provide “invaluable or extraordin­ary service” to the nation.

“We can’t afford to fail, we’re the host, we cannot be embarrasse­d. Tell them (athletes) to do what they’re supposed to do,’” Go quoted Duterte as saying when they met on Tuesday night.

He said Duterte asked the country’s athletes and the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee (PHISGOC), the Philippine Olympic Committee and the Philippine Sports Commission to focus on the competitio­ns and “bring in the medals.”

‘Blunders are common’

The foreign SEAG athletes now are better treated than Filipinos who have participat­ed in sports competitio­ns in other countries in the past, Senate President Vicente Sotto III said yesterday.

Sotto called for an end to the bickering and criticisms in connection with the country’s hosting of the SEAG, saying there will be a time for accounting for the reported lapses as well as wrongdoing that may be discovered after the competitio­n.

He said glitches and blunders in any hosting of internatio­nal sports competitio­ns, including the Olympics, are common, as he cited his experience, as well as other members of his team, when they competed in bowling and golf in the Asian Games and other matches in the 1970s and 1980s where they emerged as champions.

“Even before, we had complained but they (host) will just nod and tell us ‘OK, we’ll look into it.’ But no, they won’t do that – they’re looking at their gold medal. So I think our focus now, of the athletes, is to win the gold and not listen to the complaints of whoever,” Sotto told reporters.

He also chided the coaches of football teams for holding a joint press conference and complainin­g about the reported delays in their hotel accommodat­ions that raised suspicions that the move was meant to weaken the resolve of Filipino athletes.

The senator recalled when he, and world bowling champions Rafael Nepomuceno and Bong Coo, competed abroad, they also encountere­d many problems in food, accommodat­ions and training, that they ended up paying for.

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