The Philippine Star

Still no going home for 127,000 stranded

- By ROMINA CABRERA

At least 127,000 locally stranded individual­s (LSIs) in Metro Manila are still waiting to be sent home to the provinces following the moratorium on local repatriati­on, with the government requiring them to undergo swab testing for coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19), Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said yesterday.

Lorenzana said the spike in the number of COVID-19 cases in the provinces has been blamed on the repatriati­on of stranded travelers.

“The problem is that the first batches of LSIs who returned to the provinces were tagged as the source of infections. That’s why local government units are reluctant to receive them,” he said. “It is unfair for the LGUs to be overwhelme­d because they do not have the quarantine facilities.”

Earlier, National Task Force Against COVID-19 chief implemente­r Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. said the government would ensure that the LSIs on the list were genuinely stranded travelers, adding that some had taken advantage of the government’s repatriati­on program.

Some provinces and regions have asked the national government to suspend local repatriati­ons as their isolation and healthcare facilities were already full.

The Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) has approved a 14-day suspension of local repatriati­on in Negros Occidental, Iloilo and Eastern Visayas.

Some islands, including Camiguin and Basilan, have informed the national government that their quarantine facilities are being overwhelme­d

following the surge of returning LSIs to their provinces.

President Duterte earlier ordered Interior Secretary Eduardo Año to gather all stranded people and that the government would pay for their food and accommodat­ion.

Thousands of LSIs have been camping outside Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport and the Port of Manila in the hope that they would be able to return to their provinces.

Some are being housed at temporary shelters put up on the grounds of the Philippine Army in Pasay City.

The government is still ironing out protocols for the mass testing of LSIs following the surge in COVID-19 infections.

According to Lorenzana, the government has “exceeded expectatio­ns” in controllin­g the pandemic during the first phase of its plan.

The Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority (MIAA) alerted its intelligen­ce network for the entry of LSIs while waiting for their flights to the provinces.

MIAA general manager Ed Monreal said he instructed Romeo Labador, who heads the Security and Emergency Services, to coordinate with the Philippine National Police Aviation Security Group in monitoring the movements of passengers at the NAIA for security purposes.

Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade, who inspected NAIA Terminal 3 on Wednesday, asked NAIA officials to accommodat­e LSIs and allow them to seek shelter at the airport when their flights are cancelled.

“I asked airport authoritie­s to give them food until such time they can board their aircraft bound for their respective provinces,” Tugade said.

He instructed Monreal to open the domestic VIP lounge and other spaces at the NAIA for the use of the LSIs.

Tugade said the Department of Transporta­tion or the MIAA would shoulder the accommodat­ion and food expenses of the passengers.

He also ordered airport officials to prepare for the resumption of internatio­nal flights.

On Monday, President Duterte ordered Tugade to open to the public some of the restaurant­s at the NAIA terminals that are not in use to provide more space for passengers whose flights were cancelled.

Duterte said he was bothered by the photos and videos of stranded airline passengers sleeping in waiting sheds and sidewalks near the airport.

He directed Tugade to terminate the contracts of restaurant­s at the NAIA serving expensive food and taking advantage of the stranded travelers during a national health crisis.

2,379 returning OFWs infected

Over 2,000 repatriate­d overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) have tested positive for COVID-19 after they underwent swab testing upon arrival in the country, the Department of Health (DOH) said yesterday.

Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said 2,379 OFWs were found to have contracted the virus with one death and 1,690 recoveries.

DOH data showed that as of June 30, a total of 92,967 OFWs have returned home after they were displaced by the pandemic. Of the number, 39,643 were land-based while 53,324 were seafarers.

A total of 84,729 OFWs have been released from quarantine facilities.

The DOH said only 28 cases of OFWs with the virus were recorded from March to April.

Vergeire attributed the increase in COVID-19 cases to the expanded realtimepo­lymerase chain reaction testing of returning OFWs.

She said the OFWs have to undergo the mandatory 14day quarantine while waiting for the test results. If they turn out negative for the virus, the OFWs will be allowed to proceed to their provinces.

Vergeire said some repatriate­s may have to undergo another 14-day isolation, depending on the policy of local government units.

 ?? RUSSELL PALMA ?? About 180 locally stranded individual­s take shelter in a multi-purpose hall of the Philippine Ports Authority in Manila after their ferry trips for the Visayas were cancelled.
RUSSELL PALMA About 180 locally stranded individual­s take shelter in a multi-purpose hall of the Philippine Ports Authority in Manila after their ferry trips for the Visayas were cancelled.
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OCEAN ADVENTURE FACEBOOK PHOTO Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque poses with dolphins at the Ocean Adventure park in Bataan. Roque apologized if he offended netizens, explaining it was a side trip while checking on personal businesses. Story on Page 5.
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