The Philippine Star

PNP wants to check quarantine exemption abuse

- By NEIL JAYSON SERVALLOS

The Philippine National Police (PNP) wants stricter rules in implementi­ng stayat-home orders for APOR or authorized persons outside residence who allegedly abuse the exemptions given them.

PNP deputy chief for operations Lt. Gen. Guillermo Eleazar said policemen manning checkpoint­s nationwide have reported that a number of APOR used the exemptions, including identifica­tion cards issued by the government, for non-essential travel.

The Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases earlier gave community quarantine exemption for workers whose industries were allowed to operate. The workers were either given government-issued identifica­tion cards or simply required to present documents as proof of employment.

Eleazar, also commander of the Joint Task Force COVID Shield, clarified that the exemption is limited to work-related travel.

“However, we have been receiving reports that there are some abuses committed since those given exemptions are using it to travel anywhere they want and anytime they want which are basically violations of the existing quarantine rules,” Eleazar said in a statement yesterday.

These incidents, he added, often cause verbal confrontat­ions at checkpoint­s. He urged the APOR not to use their exemptions for travel not related to their jobs.

Metro Manila and its neighborin­g provinces that are under MECQ have increased and tightened checkpoint­s in a bid to restrict residents from crossing borders.

MECQ, the second strictest lockdown level, bans mass transporta­tion – except bicycles, motorcycle­s or e-scooters. Some local government­s, however, allowed tricycles to continue operating, provided that the onepasseng­er policy would be enforced and only the APOR would be allowed to board.

The measure also limits the operations of certain industries, with manufactur­ing plants and other select establishm­ents only allowed to operate at half capacity.

 ??  ?? Locally stranded individual­s take shelter in a shipping container at the North Harbor in Manila yesterday. At least 100 LSIs, some of them returning overseas workers, were bound for Bacolod and Iloilo when the government suspended travel to the Western Visayas for two weeks, starting on Saturday, after local officials complained that their isolation facilities are filled beyond capacity. EDD GUMBAN
Locally stranded individual­s take shelter in a shipping container at the North Harbor in Manila yesterday. At least 100 LSIs, some of them returning overseas workers, were bound for Bacolod and Iloilo when the government suspended travel to the Western Visayas for two weeks, starting on Saturday, after local officials complained that their isolation facilities are filled beyond capacity. EDD GUMBAN

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