Khaleej Times

Manila to deploy riot police for Boracay tourist closure

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manila — The Philippine­s is set to deploy hundreds of riot police to top holiday island Boracay to keep travellers out and head off potential protests ahead of its six-month closure to tourists, the government said.

President Rodrigo Duterte has branded the tiny central island and its world-famous white-sand beach a “cesspool”. He has ordered visitors be kept away from April 26 so facilities to treat raw sewage can be set up and illegal structures torn down.

On Tuesday, authoritie­s laid out a lockdown plan to keep out all foreign and Filipino tourists using more than 600 police, including a 138-member “crowd dispersal unit”.

“In any transition, especially for a drastic action such as this, there is always confusion, uncertaint­ies, and low morale,” the regional police director, Chief Superinten­dent Cesar Binag said.

“What we did was to identify the sources of confusion, sources of uncertaint­y and sources of low morale that might result to agitation and eventually into a security issue,” he added. Boracay residents will be obliged to carry new identifica­tion cards and will be banned from boating

What we did was to identify the sources of confusion, sources of uncertaint­y and sources of low morale that might result to agitation and eventually into a security issue.” Cesar Binag, regional police director,

and night swimming, he said.

Entry to the 1,000-hectare island, located 300 kilometres south of Manila, will be limited to a single small sea port. Island residents’ new identity cards are expected to be distribute­d three days before the shutdown, and security forces will conduct a “capability demonstrat­ion” next week, Binag said.

Businesses in the area, which previously lobbied for a phased rehabilita­tion, have warned that an abrupt shutdown could lead to bankruptci­es and job losses for many of the island’s 17,000 hotel, restaurant and other tourism workers, plus some 11,000 constructi­on workers. —

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