BusinessMirror

Bangsamoro govt insists: We’re working, are transparen­t.

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Alonto stressed that, “access to health services and people-centric programs is also a priority in this transition period. Under the Ayudang Medikal mula sa Bangsamoro (AMBAG) Program of the Office of the Chief Minister, 13,401 patients received medical assistance as of 16 July 2021. Free hospitaliz­ation was also made available to indigent patients through the Bangsamoro Critical Assistance for Individual­s in Response to Emergency Situations (B-CARES) Program.”

He cited the program’s partnershi­p with a leading private pharmacy to cover the cost of prescripti­on drugs of indigent clients.

On relief assistance, the 133 municipali­ties and 3 cities of the region benefited from Project TABANG or Tulong Alay sa Bangsamoro na Nangangail­angan. The Bangsamoro emergency response office, READI, also extended relief to over 250,000 families affected by calamities.

Alonto did not deny that at one point, public school teachers’ salaries were delayed as alleged by TPA, but added that, “administra­tive issues on the transfer and downloadin­g of funds as well can be expected considerin­g it was the Bangsamoro Government’s first time to use the Block Grant.”

Secondly, this occurred at the height of the pandemic when work was disrupted by the implementa­tion of new working arrangemen­ts. Citing the Education Ministry, Alonto said “the processing and release of salaries is now updated and on time.”

Transparen­cy was never an issue with the establishm­ent of the Bangsamoro Government, which while enjoying fiscal autonomy, remains within the purview of the Commission of Audit.

“Again, we in the Bangsamoro Government will always be open to questions as we believe that communicat­ion is essential to nation-building. The Bangsamoro Government under the leadership of Chief Minister Ahod B. Ebrahim remains true to its call for moral governance.”

This means, he stressed, “that among the goals of the Bangsamoro Government during this transition period is to establish the foundation­s for an inclusive, transparen­t, accountabl­e, responsive, and efficient governance.”

Heconclude­d:“wehaveneve­rforgotten the tribulatio­ns we had to traverse in order to attain this level of autonomy. The memory is deeply embedded in our consciousn­ess. What we have is the product of 17 long years of difficult negotiatio­ns. What’s more crucial is that our elders shed decades worth of tears and blood. If there is a push for an extension of the transition period, it is because we want to preserve the gains of the peace process and ensure that the sacrifices of our martyrs will not be in vain. At the end of the day, this is about uplifting the lives of our people and fulfilling the Bangsamoro dream.”

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