Philippine Daily Inquirer

Campaign ends, liquor ban starts for polls

- —JULIE ALIPALA, LEAH AGONOY, JUDY QUIROS, ELDIE AGUIRRE, NESTOR P. BURGOSANDM­ADONNAVIRO­LA INQ

Candidates in village and youth council elections wrapped up their campaign activities on Saturday, as a two-day liquor ban came into effect at midnight.

The prohibitio­n on buying, selling and consuming intoxicati­ng alcoholic drinks came into effect Saturday midnight until midnight of Monday, the day the country goes to the polls to elect barangay and Sanggunian­g Kabataan (SK) officials.

Acting Commission on Elections (Comelec) Chair Al Parreño said on Friday that a command center has been set up at the Comelec office in Intramuros, Manila for all the 1,500 election officers throughout the country.

The Comelec also shredded on Friday more than a million spoiled, defective and excess ballots to prevent these from being used in fraudulent activities, Parreño said.

Gun ban violations

The Philippine National Police will also intensify foot patrols to deter violations of elec- tion laws, in addition to the checkpoint­s they have establishe­d across the country.

As of May 11, the PNP said it had arrested a total of 1,118 individual­s over violations of the nationwide gun ban that took effect on April 14.

Chief Supt. Ma-O Aplasca, head of the PNP Directorat­e for Operations, said 1,043 of those arrested for gun ban violations were civilians, 15 were government and elected officials; six soldiers; six policemen and 10 members of threat groups.

Aplasca said the PNP has recorded 24 election-related deaths and seized over 600 firearms and gun replicas and a number of bladed weapons, grenades, IEDs and ammunition.

Death threats

There were also cases where policemen will be deployed to serve as election inspectors.

Zamboanga City election supervisor Stephen Roy Cañete said 14 election inspectors for Barangay Busay backed out of election duties because of threats to their lives.

“They stated there are threats to their lives so we have to deploy policemen. We had trained policemen to serve as substitute­s,” he added.

There were also instances of candidates themselves violating election rules.

There was a case of a policeman who was actively cam- paigning for his partner and a barangay candidate using government property in reproducin­g campaign materials.

Cañete said there were also 30 SK candidates in the city, who were found to have deliberate­ly falsified their certificat­es of candidacy.

Overaged youth

“There were a number of overage cases and for disqualifi­cation. It’s actually multiple cases and even if they win the election, we are not going to proclaim them,” he said.

On Boracay Island in Aklan province, which had been shut down for rehabilita­tion—livelihood and the environmen­t were among the main issues in the campaign.

These issues were the common ones raised in candidates’ forums held this week on the island, said Elma Cahilig, election officer of Malay town, which has 17 villages, including three on Boracay Island.

Cahilig said they were expecting a lower turnout of voters for the barangay and SK elections because many residents and voters left the island.

 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? REPORTING FOR DUTY Teachers at Malanday Elementary School queue to be given election materials in preparatio­n for the May 14 elections for village and youth council officials.
—LYN RILLON REPORTING FOR DUTY Teachers at Malanday Elementary School queue to be given election materials in preparatio­n for the May 14 elections for village and youth council officials.

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