The Philippine Star

CIDG tracks patients at fake COVID hospital

- By EMMANUEL TUPAS – With Evelyn Macairan, Alexis Romero

The Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (CIDG) yesterday formed tracker teams to locate Chinese citizens said to be infected with the coronaviru­s disease 2019 or COVID-19 who were treated at a clandestin­e hospital at Clark Freeport in Pampanga.

Brig. Gen. Rhoderick Armamento, CIDG deputy director for operations, said probers are interrogat­ing Hu Ling and Lee Seung Hyun, alleged supervisor and pharmacist, respective­ly, of the makeshift hospital at the Fontana Leisure Parks, for leads on the identities of the patients.

Armamento said many patients could have been treated in the illegal facility, citing the hospital wastes, such as syringes, found at the scene. “Mga tatlong plastic,

pakalat-kalat lang,” he said in an interview over Teleradyo.

He said the patients could be unwittingl­y spreading the virus, thinking that they have been cured.

Armamento said two police officers who were part of the raiding team were quarantine­d as a precaution­ary measure while the suspects were tested for COVID-19.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said they are leaving it up to the CIDG and Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) to locate the patients.

“The CIDG and the BI are coordinati­ng well enough. I will let the NBI (National Bureau of Investigat­ion) step in if the manhunt encounters rough sailing,” Guevarra said.

The Clark Developmen­t Corp. ordered the closure of Fontana following the raid on Tuesday. Authoritie­s are validating reports that the facility has been operating since February.

Meanwhile, Lt. Col. Amante Daro, CIDG Central Luzon field office chief, said a warehouse at the Clark Economic Zone, where medicine from the hospital reportedly originated, was raided in a follow-up operation on Wednesday.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said the suspects face charges for practicing medicine without a license issued by the Profession­al Regulation Commission and administer­ing drugs not registered with the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA).

Roque said Malacañang was “alarmed” by the discovery of the illegal health facility.

He said the government recognizes Chinese medicine, but stressed that it should be approved by the FDA.

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