The Manila Times

The fault is ultimately with the President

- ANTONIO CONTRERAS

THE urge to write something positive and inspiring about President Rodrigo Duterte is strong, after weeks of being so overly critical of him. But it is difficult, PARTICULAR­LY WHEN ONE IS confronted with the series of missteps THAT HE, HIS officials AND HIS government have made recently.

It is also uncomforta­ble to venture into the blame game. Unfortunat­ely, rooting out the problem becomes imperative particular­ly if THE GUILTY DOES NOT EVEN reflect ON the mistakes, apologize for these and try harder to do better. Thus, it becomes necessary to point OUR fingers IN THE DIRECTION OF THE President, if only to remind him that he, in the end, will have to bear the burden of responsibi­lity for the mess that we are in now as we engage in a battle with the coronaviru­s disease 2019 or Covid-19.

After all, any plea made against finger-pointing CAN ONLY BE warranted when matched by admission of guilt and acts of contrition, things that the President appears not to be keen on doing. For starters, he could very well do this by firing Health Secretary Francisco Duque 3rd, who apparently does not have the courage to resign. In more mature democracie­s, it is no longer an issue of actual guilt that one willingly steps down FROM PUBLIC office BUT A MATTER of keeping honor, saving face and SPARING THE office FROM FURTHER erosion. But instead of letting Duque go, the President even defended him and rationaliz­ed his continued stay by saying that the present state of disarray in our public health system is not his fault, as he did not import the virus.

Indeed, Duque did not. Because the one who, and by his sheer acts of omission, opened THE Floodgates FOR THE ENTRY OF the virus was the President himself. Duque was only acting as his loyal alter ego who dutifully implemente­d his wishes.

Things would have been drasticall­y different had the President acted with extreme dispatch in addressing the Covid- 19 pandemic THE first TIME WE HAD OUR first case at the end of January. But instead of taking the threat seriously, by imposing strict border controls immediatel­y, he was more concerned about not hurting the feelings of China.

Our country lost so much time in preparing for the worst; this was largely due to the nonchalant attitude of the President who once pooh-poohed the virus. Thus, instead of augmenting and fortifying our public health system, building new emergency facilities, hiring new medical personnel and procuring the necessary equipment, the President opted to wage a word war with the United States for its cancellati­on of Sen. Ronald dela Rosa’s visa. Instead of enhancing and upgrading our testing, contact tracing, isolation and treatment capacities, he spent more time quarreling with ABS-CBN Corp. and with Maria Ressa. And instead of assembling the best and brightest minds in the medical sciences of public health and epidemiolo­gy to run his anti-Covid-19 response, he placed it at the helm of retired military generals, thereby rendering our war with the virus as perhaps one of the most militarize­d in the world.

There would not have been a problem in bringing in the military, but this would have resonated more had this been in the form of mobilizing the military’s medical brigades, as well as reservists in rendering support activities, particular­ly in attending to the milder cases. This would have helped in lessening the

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