Gulf News

Filipinos are tired of corruption

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ice-President Maria Robredo is speaking for herself alone and she does not represent the people of the Philippine­s (“Philippine Vice-President slams drug war”, Gulf News, March 15). We have the best president ever now who is building a nation and protecting the future generation­s. Those killed were criminals, drug syndicates or rapists. They deserve to be punished rather than multiplyin­g and victimisin­g innocent children! We are tired of corrupt government officials. Filipinos love the Philippine­s and we have already chosen Rodrigo Duterte for a change. From Ms Corazon Ante Dubai Facebook comment

Drugs no more

As a Filipino working in the UAE, I need to defend our president and his fight against drugs and corruption. Drugs in the Philippine­s are already rampant and people know who the drug lords are, who are supported by the government officials. Only President Duterte has the courage to fight and stop it and, based on what I noticed on my recent vacation, the country is way much better now than before. From Ms Mah Belle Abu Dhabi Facebook comment

Mission to clear

T he Philippine­s president is on a mission, which no state leader has dared. He knows that his life is in immediate danger and he can be attacked at any moment by the powerful drug cartels, still he is standing strong and firm for the future of the country. Best wishes to him to remove every single remaining drug dealer or peddler in the Philippine­s. From Mr Nasir Khan UAE Facebook comment

The good fight

F ilipinos have never been this hopeful before. We now have confidence and trust in our government and authoritie­s. We are slowly taking down corrupt and power-hungry politician­s and fighting for democracy and for our rights, which were being controlled by politician­s for the longest time. They don’t want to stop without a fight. Trading government positions and seizing power is their business so they do not easily back down, especially as playing with the country’s money is on their agenda! But Filipino spirits around the world are the strongest and we will never give our country back into their hands again. This fight is for our children’s children. We want

to give them a great and prosperous country. I feel Filipinos are fighting their greatest war in the Philippine­s — not the war on drugs, but the war against oligarchs, who were using the poor as their shields and as collateral to take down the government of the people led by Duterte. From Ms Zherra Kristel Ann UAE Facebook comment

Hopeless ambition

I t is beyond many people’s wildest imaginatio­n that decades of dominance by the Liberal Party have ended in one snap. Robredo is their last hope to get back in power. They can’t even get support from their people in destabilis­ing the current Philippine­s government, so I would expect more noise in the internatio­nal arena. Hopelessne­ss is eating the Liberal Party alive. Their game is over. From Mr Zu Baynosa San Juan, Puerto Rico Facebook comment

Change has arrived

I n the Philippine­s, every family that has seen a loved one battling with drug addiction has long been helpless and hopeless, because the drug problem has been rampant. Now, we are blessed to have a president who truly wants to save our country from the evils of drug addiction and get rid of corruption. Not only that, rehabilita­tion centres are being built for those who want to be treated, and government officials in the current administra­tion are working hard to help and give genuine service to poor Filipinos, fisherman, farmers, and minority communitie­s. From Mr Cycy Hortelano Abu Dhabi Facebook comment

Be vigilant, everyone

G reed is a strong to anything motivator else (“Be compared careful of fraudsters on social media”, Gulf News, March 15). Those fraud emails and scams circulated for years in Europe and the USA. Maybe awareness campaigns could help educate the people here. From Mr Zors Jolanda UAE Facebook comment

Lesson learnt

P eople don’t learn! These fraudulent emails and scams have been circulatin­g for many years. You cannot trust a stranger over the internet, phone or even Facebook or any other social network. Sometimes, we don’t trust people who we have personally known for many years, so why should we trust complete strangers? From Mr Fadi Hajjaj Ottawa, Canada Facebook comment

Don’t be easily fooled

T rust has to be earned. You cannot start chatting with someone and just trust everything he/she says, no matter what. This report said the woman was trying to increase her income and help raise and support her children. Her desperatio­n put her in this position of trusting a complete stranger, but she was taught a bitter lesson. Whenever I am chatting with a new person who has either sent me a request on Facebook or other groups on social media, and money issues happen to enter the conversati­on, I immediatel­y press either the ‘block’ or ‘delete’ button. From Mr Manfred Anwanda UAE Facebook comment

Didn’t fall for it

T he same thing happened with me. I received the same message on LinkedIn and a user called Monica, who was supposed to be a US army officer, approached me. But I searched for her on the internet and came to know it was a scam. I shared this informatio­n with my friends on LinkedIn so they would be aware of it. People like these seem to be collecting personal data from others. So, be aware and careful. Let the authoritie­s take serious action against them. From Mr Murtaza Ali UAE Facebook comment

Be kind to every living thing

M eting out cruelty to animals is too appalling (”Police arrest man who fed cat to dogs”, Gulf News, March 13). People who commit such inhumane acts are heartless and devoid of humanity. Animals are man’s best friends and have to be treated with love and care. Kindness begets kindness. I hope doing community service will make them realise the importance of kindness and compassion. From Ms Jayashree Kulkarni UAE Facebook comment

Suicidal tendencies

A person suffering from extreme depression — jobless, penniless, homeless, heavily in debt, no communicat­ion with their families back home, family problems — leads him to commit suicide (“Man climbs roof of Abu Dhabi petrol station and threatens to kill himself”, Gulf News, March 16). From Ms Becky G. Villafuert­e Manama, Bahrain

Don’t be fooled

D oesn’t matter if the truth is out, people will still be wary as they don’t know when a cut-out might be replaced with real car and a hidden camera — a good idea — inside the cut-out (“How UAE police use a fake cop car”, Gulf News, March 16). From Ms Eva Singh UAE Facebook comment

Cutting crime

A small town in England tried this in 2012 for a different reason — they did not have the budget for the real thing! I read that it cut crime by half. I am sure it will be the same case here in the UAE. From Mr Noel Shami UAE Facebook comment

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