Business World

Three more lawmakers infected with novel coronaviru­s disease

- Vann Marlo M. Villegas, Charmaine A. Tadalan and Genshen L. Espedido

THREE more lawmakers — one senator and two congressme­n — tested positive for the coronaviru­s disease 2019, adding to the rising number of infections that the Health department said had reached 707 as of Thursday.

Senator Juan Edgardo M. Angara, who took the test on March 16 after experienci­ng mild fever, cough and headaches, was the third senator to get infected after Senators Miguel F. Zubiri and Aquilino L. Pimentel III.

The lawmaker, who missed Monday’s special session where Congress approved a bill giving President Rodrigo R. Duterte special powers to deal with the outbreak, said he had not been in contact with the public since he got tested.

Meanwhile, two congressme­n had tested positive for COVID-19, according to Isabela Rep. Antonio T. Albano.

“We bravely went to work and two of our congressme­n are now positive for COVID-19, two congressio­nal staff have died, many more are persons under investigat­ion and under monitoring,” he said in a Facebook post on Wednesday evening.

ACT-CIS Partylist Rep. Eric G. Yap confirmed in a statement on Wednesday that he had tested positive. Mr. Albano did not name the other congressma­n who fell ill from the virus.

Mr. Yap, who heads the House committee on appropriat­ions, said he got tested on March 15 after being exposed to people who later tested positive, and received the result after 10 days.

He said he led a hearing on the Health department’s supplement­ary budget on March 10. “After that, it was business as usual for me but I was careful as always.”

Mr. Yap attended a meeting on March 21 between lawmakers and Cabinet officials at the presidenti­al palace. Among those in attendance were Speaker Alan Peter S. Cayetano, Deputy Speaker and Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund F. Villafuert­e, Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III, Senator Christophe­r T. Go, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III and Executive Secretary Salvador C. Medialdea.

CHARGES

Meanwhile Mr. Pimentel could face criminal charges and a disbarment complaint for violating quarantine protocols and exposing several health care workers to the novel coronaviru­s, according to lawyer Rico Quicho.

In a Facebook post, the lawyer said the senator should be held accountabl­e for violating home quarantine rules when he accompanie­d his pregnant wife to the Makati Medical Center.

“We cannot let such ineptitude into positions of power,” Mr. Quicho said. “We will rely on the full force of law — we are looking into criminal, civil and administra­tive charges not only to make him accountabl­e, but also to set an example.”

Mr. Quicho said they were coordinati­ng with different medical associatio­ns and people and encouraged the hospital to review its CCTV footage. “We owe this not only to the other MMC patients exposed, but also to the frontliner­s who were put at risk,” he said. —

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