Philippine Daily Inquirer

MOTORCYCLE GROUPS ASSAIL ‘DISCRIMINA­TORY’ GOV’T POLICIES

- By Krixia Subingsubi­ng @krixiasINQ

Motorcycle riders have one foot in the grave every time they take to the road, Jobert Bolaños of the Riders of the Philippine­s (ROTP) secretaria­t said on Thursday.

Yet the final nail in the coffin might not be some tragic road accident, but the “discrimina­tory” national and local policies that unfairly target them, lament motorcycle owners and enthusiast­s.

On May 27, around 5,000 motorcycle riders are expected to take to the road to stage a nationwide unity ride to protest against recent motorcycle-related policies that “underpin the criminal tagging of motorcycle riders.”

They will ride from White Plains in Quezon City to the Mendiola peace arch in Manila to urge President Duterte to deal with their problems.

‘Unconstitu­tional’

Other contingent­s in the cities of Bacolod and Cebu would also be staging a similar movement in the Visayas.

According to George Royeca of Transport Watch Philippine­s (TWP), one in every three Filipino households has a motorcycle, putting the number of owners in the country at around 16 million.

“But in the eyes of the government, based on the [framing] of existing policies, all of these riders are [criminals],” Royeca said in a press conference.

Laws vs riding tandem

“This is not just unconstitu­tional but also immoral,” he added.

Some of these policies in- clude the ordinances in Mandaluyon­g and Caloocan cities that penalize male backriders, Royeca said.

According to the ordinances, most of the backriders linked to motorcycle-related crimes are men.

But such reasoning “not only has no legal basis, but also perpetuate­s gender discrimina­tion [and] affects male riders who either need a backride for transporta­tion or for their livelihood,” Bolaños said.

Police visibility

ROTP also voiced opposition to a bill recommendi­ng the use of half-face helmets for motorcycle riders so law enforcers could easily identify them.

“That’s very problemati­c. It’s like they don’t even care whether our faces get smashed as long as they can see our faces,” said Robert Perillo of ROTP.

Such regulation­s “are only effective in criminaliz­ing us, but not in catching actual criminals,” Bolaños added.

ROTP proposed instead to increase police visibility by strengthen­ing checkpoint­s as well as rallying the motorcycle sector to engage in crime watch in their communitie­s.

Motorcycle taxis

ROTP and TWP also called on the government anew to legalize and regulate motorcycle taxis, much like the service provided by the recently shut-down motorcycle- hailing app Angkas.

Angkas, a ride-hailing company, was ordered shut down last year by the Makati City Hall because it lacked the necessary business permits.

“We believe that there are more advantages to allowing Angkas to operate again. Motorcycle­s remain the most efficient way to get around given the monstrous traffic in the metropolis,” Bolaños said.

“Under proper regulation­s, they should be supported given the current situation. They can move more people around, they can commute,” he added.

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? SHOWOF FORCE Leaders of motorcycle groups announce the staging of a nationwide unity ride as a show of force against alleged discrimina­tory policies and regulation­s of national and local government agencies.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA SHOWOF FORCE Leaders of motorcycle groups announce the staging of a nationwide unity ride as a show of force against alleged discrimina­tory policies and regulation­s of national and local government agencies.

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